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Wendy

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Last week my husband came home from Costco with huge boxes of:

  • Caramel s’mores (milk chocolate, caramel marshmallows and graham crackers)
  • Girl Scout thin mints bites (“crispy center with mint and dark chocolate”)
  • Girl Scout thin mint pretzels): crunchy pretzels double dipped in mint flavored 100-percent real dark chocolate.

So, you see my problem.

I know that many of you have a scarfer of your very own and want to learn how to lose after-age-50 and preserve forever even with a scarfer underfoot.

In the beginning of my weight loss and forever-preservation, I’d assumed that my scarfer would happily come along for the ride because he wanted to start eating better too. It would be so fun to do this “smart eating” thing together. I’d hoped we’d work together cheering each other on.

That was a massive fail.

So I headed out on my own trek. I did all the things like: ask him to hide the treats well so that they weren’t always in front of me, Eat Before I Eat, you know the basics.

You know how teenage girls in cliques want to be like each other: “OMG! I have same purse!” Being part of a group is super important to teens.

As we mature, over time we individuate: we start identifying specifically who we are distinctly from mom and dad, sister, the kids in high school and so forth.

Individuation happens throughout our lives, but knowing about the idea and how to work with it are key to a successful loss.

Here’s what I mean.

Journal-write about what makes you you. Go for it! Write about what you love, and what you don’t care about. Write about what gets you really excited and what leaves you bored. Ask yourself questions like how do I talk to myself? Do I have my own back?  What happens inside if my feelings get hurt? What happens inside when I’m angry? When I’m bored? When I’m grieving?

What makes you distinct from your sister? Your coworkers? Your husband?

Just write and write and write and let your unconscious speak.

Being able to define who you are without your partner is a critical part of living with a scarfer.

There’s no end game to losing and maintaining after 50. We have today, this hour, this minute to make our smart eating choices.

Because you and I will forever be beautiful works in progress.

I try to remember this thought throughout my day. Let’s remember it together.

  • Situation: (something concrete) Dad died last August in his sleep.
  • Thought: What?! He wasn’t even sick! Now I won’t be able to say good-bye.
  • Feeling:  Extremely sad.
  • Action: Ice cream of course.
  • Result: Try to get work done but give up and scroll Instagram.
  • Situation: (something concrete) Dad died last August in his sleep.
  • Thought (that I’ve purposely chosen): Dad was in his own bed next to Mom, and died peacefully in his sleep. A beautiful way to pass.
  • Feeling: I’m so happy for dad. (No endless hospital visits and medications etc.)
  • Action: I return to what I’m doing in my own life.
  • Result: I’m meeting deadlines, but we always grieve.

Do you see how the “new sequence” can go in about a billion different direction? Please send me your situations and I can sequence it and use as an example – totally anonymous of course!!

Books love us and want us to be happy

Holy-guacamole. I just read the best book. It’s scary, but in a good way. The author was an African safari guy for eons and tells many stories in an hilarious, next door neighbor kind of way. Every chapter has a very big story. The book starts off with a bang and ends beautifully. Highly, highly recommend. (Unless you’re one of my sons. If you are,  this is a terrible book, why not play in the sponge beds? That’s where I would play.)

Whatever You Do Don’t Run: True Tails of a Botswana Safari Guide by Peter Allison. I just realized that he wrote a sequel Don’t Look Behind You. I’m ordering it right now. (Excellent. Highly recommend.)

Failed plans should not be interpreted as a failed vision. Visions don’t change, they are only refined. Plans rarely stay the same, and are scrapped or adjusted as needed. Be stubborn about the vision, but flexible with your plan. – John C. Maxwell

I LOVE hearing from you guys!!!

Have a wonderful weekend All!

Today’s pearls one and two are perfect examples. For the first time I bunched two pearls together and you’ll soon see why. I could have written a book on this topic.

Congratulations, B, on maintaining a “controlled” home. That’s huge all on its own.

Today we’re looking at how to travel and be far from your own kitchen, yet not go Cookie Monster on yourself.

Probably the most significant mind-shift any human being can ever make is to shift from an external locus of control to an internal one.

An example:

Let’s say you’re at a bash. It’s New Year’s Eve and the champagne is flowing.

A partier with an external locus of control might think: “I have one-year sobriety with AA, but it’s – come on – New Year’s and everyone is holding a flute. Just one won’t be a problem.”

But another person with an internal locus of control will tell herself, “After the year I’ve had devoted to staying clean and sober, there’s no way I’m drinking tonight.”

The internal locus is essentially about keeping your own council; not going with the herd; blazing your own trail.

I’ve mentioned that I’m a freelance travel writer and I’ve been asked whether I’m “good” or “bad” on cruises or trips in general.  

It’s a perfectly valid question, but it harkens back to the yo-yo dieting of old. Living the Smart Eating Lifestyle is about strengthening habits or weakening them. We’re watching ourselves from a meta-view and making corrections as we go. So, I take my habit’s with me no matter where I am.

It’s a foundational mind-shift to take yourself from “I’m externally motivated” to “When it comes to eating, I have an internal locus of control.”

If you haven’t yet become friends with food-planning, let me introduce you to her. I’d be nowhere today without her constant support.

Take a look at the micro-steps I use before and during trips. There’s an “after” too, but we’ll save it for the next pearls.

A week in advance of a trip, I plan on my laptop where I’m likely to find obstacles and – after giving it a lot of thought — how I will deal with each challenge. I write it all out.

So, B: you might write “when my grandson is out with friends, I don’t have much to do and get bored.” Plan exactly what you’ll do in each boredom situation you identify. Remember, you’re not trying to lose weight on your grand kid trips, you’re maintaining/preserving.

I plan down to the detail like, “it’s a five-hour drive to the grand kids. On the way over, I’ll eat a sliced-up apple and a peanut butter and jelly sandwich from my cold-tote. To be safe, I’ll bring two peanut butter sandwiches and a baggie of baby carrots too.” Then I plan when I’ll eat each on the car-ride. Usually having one food item every hour keeps me in a good place hunger-wise.

This is a critical part of your planning. I also plan one fun-food that I’ll have each day. It could be a margarita at dinner when you eat at a Mexican or getting a fancy coffee drink in the mornings. Whatever the special food is, it needs to be written into your plan every single day.

Re: “but when I go to my children’s houses with food and goodies everywhere I become a hungry crazy woman. I’m hungry with the kids and I get bored because I’m out of routine from home.”

Boredom and/or being tired are both like monsters from a Stephen King horror book. Don’t take the two lightly. Not having a solid plan for boredom takes me down every time.

Plan a list of what’s fun for you. I take tennis shoes so that I can walk, I listen to playlists I made in advance, I might sign up for Netflix or Hulu for just for the week. (Only don’t forget to unsubscribe once you’re back home.)

I make sure that I have a lot of my favorite foods within easy reach. I shop in advance or sometimes at the destination, but either way, I shop for the food I LOVE.

I also always bring my food tracking notebook and track my eating, just like I do at home.

But the key to making anything work is don’t let yourself get hungry. Ever.

This is definitely meant for journal time. We could ask ourselves this question for the rest of our lives.

Journal-write to the question: “why?”

Why in the world are you on this trek at all? And why now? Ask yourself to write answers to why? at least three times or more.

In response you might write:

Why? Well of course I want to reach my preferred weight. I don’t want to get lectures from my doctor anymore. And I want the best health I can manage to have.

Another might say, “Because I want to be included in family activities, I want to be a fun grandma. Not the worrying-about-how-gross-she-feels-in-a-bathing-suit grandma, I want to feel good in my own skin.”

Still another might say, “Because I was lonely as a kid, and I wished my grandma had had more energy. I just seemed to tire her out.”

Your brain is watching you. Every time you use smart planning and strong mind-sets. Your brain sees when you sees what you’re doing and thinks, “wow, she’s really serious about this losing weight thing.”

Last week a thriver sent in a tasty idea for a crunchy (high-fiber, low calorie) snack:

Set your oven at 400 degrees.

Drain a can of garbanzo beans, and pat them dry with a paper towel. Place them on a cookie sheet using parchment paper. The garbanzo beans need to lay flat, and not on top of each other.

Spray the beans with olive oil. Let them bake in the oven for 20 minutes: pull the beans out and sprinkle with garlic and smoked paprika powder. Back into the oven they go for 10 minutes.

These spices work well too: Ranch, cinnamon and sugar, rosemary and chili powder. Thanks to Pound Dropper.com and the wonderful thriver who sent this tasty (MS) idea in!

I’m a cruncher; I love most anything when there’s a crunch. My review: so good! Especially with ranch.

So, here’s the thing. I had two books I thought would be awesome enough to be called a book-dessert, but when I tried to get interested in each one, they both fell flat.

So, I’m suggesting the book that I’m suggesting today is top-notch based solely on reviews.

About this book Stephen King said, “I would defy anyone to read the first seven pages of this book and not finish it.” John Grisham said, “It’s been a long time since I turned pages as fast as I did with American Dirt.”

The book was an Oprah Book Club pick and on Amazon it’s received 4.5 stars from 165,094 people.

 American Dirt by Jeanine Cummins .

“Have a bias towards action – let’s see something happen now. You can break that big plan into small steps and take the first step right away.” – Indira Gandhi

I know what I’m doing this weekend: reading American Dirt. Have a great weekend Everyone!

Success is wonderful, but remember: Smug goeth before a fall.

I’m hearing from so many of you guys that you’re about to or already have reached your preferred-weight!!

Congratulations and confetti to your success!!

I know, it feels amazing to be at the number you most want to see when you look down at the scale.

In our past this was the moment to party! Chips and margaritas, here I come!

But this is not our present or our future.

Look at it like this: getting to your preferred weight is like the house falling on the Wicked Witch of the East.

Like Dorothy, you’re at the beginning of the yellow brick road.

So, give yourself a high-five or even gift yourself something that will remind you of this day like jewelry or planting a tree in your yard.

Then get back to it like this:

Your part-time job is preserving your loss. It’s important to continue to call it a part-time job because it elevates preserving your loss as one of your top priorities. About ten years into preserving my loss, I started calling the work and mind-sets involved “my hobby.”

Strengthen your smart eating habits. Journal-write about which habits are the strongest and which the wobbliest? What can you do to strengthen your wobbly habits? Be honest with yourself. If you write, “I rarely use my cold-tote. If I’m out doing errands, I’ll stop for a Big Mac and fries. What’s the big deal? I’m at my preferred weight, a Big Mac won’t be the beginning of the end for me.”

Tough love: yes, it will be.

If the cavewoman in you gets French fries one time, you’re starting the downhill toboggin ride. Hope you brought your helmet.

So, make the habit of packing your cold-tote the night before so it’s easy to grab in the morning. (A habit requires 66-days to embed, but only the first two weeks are rough.)

Have a daily talk with yourself. I gave myself a loving, but strict order to never, ever get smug thinking, “I’m on fire. I’ve so got this.”

I said it to myself every single day: don’t be smug (about your amazing weight loss). Reestablishing bad habits is right around the corner for those of us that succumbs to being smug.

Stay committed to your eating plan. For years after I reached my weight-window, I continued to live on my eating plan; I continued asking my husband to hide food so that it wasn’t staring at me, I always ate before I ate and so on. And I discovered the age-old eating plan of breakfast like a king, lunch like a princess and . I was sold. Ate ever since.

I’m on my eighteenth-year of preserving my original loss. But I remember the first year of preserving I colored within the lines. (Not to be annoying, but I helicoptered my eating for a solid ten years where I might have a bite of donut, but never went beyond that.)

My thought is that there are stages to preserving our loss. And together we’ll figure out what those stages are!

So please email me Wendy@theInspiredEater.com or leave a comment below. I’d love to hear how many months or years you’ve been preserving. What didn’t help? What did help? How quickly did you adopt the habits? Do you have a favorite?

Keep daily notes on living on the Smart Eating Lifestyle, because one day somebody will say to you, “what are you doing to maintain for so long?”

And by sharing the ins and outs of smart eating, you’re illuminating a very dark path for someone else.

I’m turning the big 6-0 soonish so I’m using Pearl Two as an example of sequencing in my own life.

  • Sequence: I was born in July, 1964.
  • Thought: a huge part of my life is over. My dad is gone, my Mom has Alzheimer’s and my sister sold our family home.
  • Feeling: Very down, very blue.
  • Action: I get a lump in my throat and tears in my eyes and I can’t see my laptop’s screen anymore.
  • Result: I eat sherbet if we have any. (Two big bowls.)
  • Sequence: I was born in July, 1964.
  • Thought: Turning 60 is great given my blog’s topic. Now I can say that women over 60 absolutely can lose weight and maintain the loss. For a lifetime.
  • Feeling: happy, enthusiastic
  • Action: I recommit to this blog, the Inspired Eater.
  • Results: A better, more in-depth blog for you, the thriving reader. 🙂

I didn’t use a “bridge” sequence because having done them forever, can usually switch from old to new fairly quickly, but I’ve written sequences for years.

The hearing aides came in the mail!! I’m wearing them now to see how well they work. I’m not sure how many feet the aides extend in helping to hear, but they’re wonderful for conversation and hearing the TV. And – you might want to sit down – they cost $349 total. The landscape of hearing aids costing your first born are over!! The company: Ceretone.

“Masterpiece . . . Such masterful strokes seem to qualify Small World as the quintessential great American novel, as Evison eloquently shows that perhaps the most authentically American ideal is the ongoing, blended palette of stories.”—Booklist (starred review).

I literally had to leave this book downstairs so that I wouldn’t stay up so late reading.

One way I rate whether a particular book can be called a “book- dessert” is whether I get pulled into the story fast enough. This book had a slowish start, but by chapter two I was loving every minute of it and I stayed up reading this one late into the night totally messing up my sleep schedule.

It has multiple story-lines with one theme being wanting to escape a certain situation. Super great.

Authors who can write like this author just seem like aliens to me.

Small World: A Novel by Jonathan Evision.

You must have a level of discontent to feel the urge to want to grow.”
― Idowu Koyenikan

If you’ve liked this post, I would love it if you’d share it with fifty of your closest friends. Word of mouth is the best way to grow and and thank you!

Hi Thrivers!

The time-change hit me harder this year. My sleep schedule is way off.

Let’s go:

At this moment, there are four different kinds of ice cream in our freezer.

You see my problem.

Back when I ate right along with my scarfer – and ballooned to my highest weight because of it – I had to put serious planning into how to coexist with someone who eats like a fifth grader.

I often think about Elizabeth Kubler-Ross’s grief scale.

You can use her scale on large sweeping topics like overeating:

It’s fine to eat two chocolate croissants. There’s no problem. Everything will work out in the end.

I was angry with him for not being willing to change his scarfer-ways.

I tried to talk my scarfer into joining me on the smart eating plan If we were both into smart eating our kitchen wouldn’t be full of junk-food.

I’m fat and ugly and I cannot seem to make living with him and his food habits work for me.

Acceptance isn’t about liking the reality; it’s about coming to terms with what-is. Its when you realize that he’s committed to the scarfer lifestyle and isn’t going to change any time soon.

I understand that as I go further into the smart eating world, my scarfer won’t be joining me. In fact, he’ll always have junk-food at the house. That’s just how he rolls.

Bargaining: I overeat ice cream, but I work out like a wild-woman!!

Acceptance: It’s a high fat, high calorie, high sugar food. Most importantly, ice cream is at the very top on the “soothing” scale. Ice cream is a comfort-food. Nevertheless, I need to figure out how I’ll manage when my scarfer brings ice cream home.

In the beginning I asked my scarfer to buy flavors I didn’t like. And also asked him to put the ice cream on the bottom shelf – in our freezer, it’s kind of dark and I don’t tend to bend down low – maybe wrapped in a brown bag or something like it.

Some women ask their husband to keep the ice cream out of the house, and eat it on his own time.

Eighteen years into the maintenance/preservation stage, I still ask my scarfer to keep it as out of sight as possible.

Speaking of ice cream, in the last few days I’ve struggled with, “oh, a bowl of ice cream sounds good right now.” (Say it in a whiny tone to really immerse yourself in my experience.)

In response to finding that I was looking long and hard at the freezer door, (yes, it happens). I realized that I needed a new reframe asap. One day it just magically appeared. I know where milk comes from, but when I said to myself that milk and all milk-products – ahem, ice cream? – are meant to fatten baby cows, now you’ve got my attention.

I love baby cows. I just don’t want to look like one.

The upkeep on this 59-year-old body is getting kind of pricey. Either that or I’m falling apart faster than everyone else. Yesterday I went to an ENT (ear, nose and throat doctor), but before they’d do my audio test, they had to first clean out my ears. Which sounds gross, but apparently everyone needs their ears cleaned.

It was scary when the doctor started sticking things into my ear, but happily no pain. So, guess who needs hearing aids? No surprise there, my hearing has nosedived over the last two years. I’m so tired of saying, “excuse me, can you repeat?” all of the time.

I have to keep reminding myself, “We are not our bodies. We have a body” and we need to take care of her.   

As you go forward remember: never starve your body. Don’t call yourself mean names. And don’t put off the important health appointments (she writes as she puts off her mammogram and colonoscopy.).

All the Broken Places by John Boyne (love this author) details the lives of a mother and older daughter, Gretel, fleeing Germany immediately after WW2 ended.

The high-ranking SS husband/father has already been hanged.

In the beginning, we meet Gretel at the age of 91 living in a tony end of London in current times. In a parallel story we see a young Gretel who at aged 20 is trying to come to terms with feeling complicit in the war crimes. While her mother seems to have learned nothing, Gretel was waking up to the horror that, was their lives.

This is the same author who wrote, Boy in the Striped Pajamas.

Perfect book-dessert. This is an amazing writer not to be missed.

“The most common approach is very seldom the most effective and most efficient.” Tim Ferriss

If you missed last week’s post it’s right here. And I’d love a follow on Instagram and Facebook.

Art flourishes when we live out of the box.

Hello Thrivers!

Let’s jump right in!

Pearl One

Every year my town center displays the most beautiful Christmas tree I’ve ever seen. It’ s made from various-sized, all white-lit globes with the largest globes sitting at the bottom, getting smaller as they ascend into a traditional shape.

It’s a work of art. Every year I’m surprised to see the tree because — in my mind — a bureaucracy is about long lines, initialing twenty-thousand forms and hearing, “we don’t do it like that. Next!”

But turns out, my assumptions about government weren’t keeping with the times. I forgot to factor in the baby boomers who’ve – in my town’s case – installed wondrous and/or super cool art in all five parks. These are some forward thinking people. And I know that other towns and cities are going all-in on art too.

Photo courtesy City of Suwanee

Why Group-Think is a Liability

I don’t know how I knew, but something inside told me that (in this case)the herd was wrong; a slow weight loss – a pound here, half a pound there — took me to my preferred weight. Keep in mind that I only weighed myself when I had the boys at the pediatrician’s office.

Otherwise, I put my scale away and focused only on building strong habits.

Funny enough as you begin to notice more of our culture’s “truths” about weight loss and develop your own, the quicker you’ll actually lose weight.

Keep your eyes peeled for the automatic assumptions that are rife in the weight loss culture.

(p.s. I know that many, many women love decorating their Christmas tree creating their own works of art. I was using the white tree as an example.)

Pearl Two

To engage with your unconscious, journal-write to these questions:

• what do I automatically think when I hear, “tiny wins really do add up?”

• How can I break though this vintage thinking and give “lose slow” a try?

• What worries me about thinking differently about weight loss?

• Has the herd’s understanding of weight loss impacted my success?

• What are my automatic assumptions around weight loss? (You may need to journal-write to this question a lot: it’s hard to see our assumptions.)

• How can I reframe old assumptions into fresh and new thoughts and habits.

Consider that the “experts” in weight loss don’t really know why one woman is 20-, 60-, or 400-pounds over a healthy weight. (Although they’re certainly trying.)

You know how some people are the “but why” folks? And no matter the situation they’re usually playing devil’s advocate?

Well, you and I need a bit of their fairy-dust starting with: weight loss only works with a scale and at a fast clip loss.

A great example of vintage thinking. ♥

Pearl Three

I’m keeping pearl three for something fun that I want to share

Have you heard of a “food-puzzle” for cats? Omg, I love the food puzzles!

Max is – let’s just say – well-insulated. The vet gets on my case about his weight every time.

We use two food-puzzles: a puzzle-ball that Max rolls around to get food to appear.

He also has what they call a Tower food-puzzle which Max loves too. Like the ball-puzzle it slows down his eating.

Pearl Four

I know that I’m probably one of the last on the planet to read this marvel of a book, but I finally got to The Book Thief by Markus Zusak. This book spent ten years on the New York Times best seller list who called the book, “brilliant. . . it can be the type of book that’s life-changing.”

It’s set in 1939 and we meet a very poor German family. I tried to skim-read the conclusion so that I could recommend all of it to you, but every time I tried skim-reading, the book wouldn’t let me. I kept getting drawn into the story.

If you love historical fiction, you’re probably already read this book. But if Nazis and concentration camps upset you, there’s not a lot of typical Nazi stuff here. The relationship of the characters with each other makes it work so well.

Loved this book. Total Book-Dessert.

Pearl Five

There was a calling to my life and I responded to the call.” — Oprah

If you missed last week’s post it’s here.

If you have family and friends who might like the Inspired Eater, it would be wonderful if you’d send them my way.

Have a beautiful weekend, everyone!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

Our habits are so valuable they’re like jewels

Pearl One

Hello fellow thrivers!

Several thrivers have let me know that they’re at their preferred weight and now what?

Well, in the bad old days, our default would’ve been, “I’ve lost all my weight! I’m officially off the diet! Bring on the weekend’s pizza and beer party!!”

But in 2024 we know better; because there is nothing “to go on” or “off.”

This is the moment when I stay super real with you: maintenance/preservation for me means checking my scale in the mornings to see if I’m staying within the four-pound window I’d set for myself when I first started preserving.

I had a friend who would stay on the WW’s points plan during the week, but allowed herself “to pig out” as she put it, on Saturday night. Her thinking was black and white.

But in our new default; there’s no “good” or “bad.”

There’re just choices: some better than others.

Here’s what I put into place for my first ten years of preserving:

First

Choose a four-pound weight-window that feels comfortable to you. Weight naturally fluctuates so be kind to yourself when you pick your range.

Second

Work with yourself gently, but consistently to breathe in about eight times a day: “I’m at my preferred weight and it’s okay. I can do this.”

Here the prefrontal part of your brain is soothing your inner cavewoman. You’re overcoming many years of unconsciously and consciously thinking, “I’ll always be fat and ugly.” So, breathe in: “I feel really comfortable at my new weight” often. I can’t underline this step enough.

Three

Habits are like precious jewels: lose one and it may be lost forever. You wouldn’t toss a ruby or emerald into the bushes. Revere your habits, they are valuable.

No matter what, don’t say to yourself, “oh, just this once.” “Just this once I’ll throw this diamond, it’ll be fine.” Cherish and keep your habits safe.

I learned this the hard way when I lost my giant-salad-for-lunch habit because of my new braces. It’s been difficult getting that salad-habit back in place. (I’m working on it, I’ll get there.)

Four

Make peace with the truism that staying on your eating plan is how a forever-loss works. When I first started maintenance there was no way I’d let myself (my cavewoman) ruin all my hard work (prefrontal). So, I stayed on my eating plan and just deviated a bit here and a skosh there.

Make your new mantra, “a bit here and a skosh there.”

Small bites work.

Of course today I wouldn’t eat a skosh when in a Mexican restaurant, but I’d take half of my Mexican plate home in a doggie-box. Re: the chips. I literally eat five or six. My habits are strong enough to eat only half of the meal, to eat just a few chips. If there are certain foods that you’ve learned trigger you to overeat, steer clear. Even in preservation-mode: steer clear.

I’ll write more about preserving/maintaining. These are the four pillars that I’d journal write about. Explore your feelings, thoughts and assumptions around these four ideas for preserving. And congratulations!!

Pearl Two

As I head into my eighteenth year of preserving my loss, I should tell you that I talk to myself all day and evening long.

Drench yourself in these powerful thoughts.

“This time I’m protecting and preserving my loss.”

“Oh, hell no! I won’t eat so much that I’m outside of my weight-window.”

“Do I want those cookies or do I want to fit into a size-eight jeans?”

“Food is not my entertainment.”

“Great food choice!! “(When I choose smart food.)

“No ma’am, that food is not for us.” 

And of course, “a bit here and a skosh there.”

I love in Miley Cyrus’s song Flowers she has a line, “talk to myself for hours, say things you don’t understand.”

See? Talking to yourself is super power!

Pearl Three

I’d love your input. And that’s not just blog-talk; I’m actually wondering how I should go forward. It appears as if Oprah and WW are cutting ties because she said in a People Magazine interview that the new “diet drugs” are good for maintenance. I guess that didn’t go over so well with WW.

It’s my thought that the new meds treat the symptom and not the cause. But I know how much we want to be slim, and I wouldn’t blame anyone wanting to give the med a try (to be clear, I’m not recommending meds). I mean, back in the day at my heaviest, I’d have taken out a small loan to try these new weight loss meds. (That said, I’ve of some really awful side effects, so proceed with caution.)

I’d love to hear what you think: in the comments below or to Wendy@theInspiredeater.com. And thank you!

Pearl Four

I don’t mean to brag, but I’m getting much better at finding a rock-star book to recommend. Today’s beauty of a book is Yellowface by R.F. Kuang. I’d seen Yellowface on lists and Goodreads etc, but for some reason I thought it was sweeping epic type book.

Boy, was I wrong. I opened Yellowface, and was immediately pulled into the story. Two women go to Yale and both exit college planning to create a huge earthquake of an appearance into the literary world. One soars to the stars and lands on the best-seller lists, is showered with awards, Netflix deals and money. The other one tanks. The tank is jealous of the star and the story proceeds from there. Super good, you have to read it.

Yet another exceptional book worthy of book-dessert status.

Pearl Five

Patience is waiting. Not passive waiting. That’s laziness. But to keep going when the going is hard and slow — that is patience.” — Leo Tolstoy

If you missed last week’s post it’s right here. And I’d love a follow on Instagram and Facebook.

Have a wonderful weekend, everyone!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

The car pertains to my fun day this week, but I chose the pup photo simply because he’s so adorable.

Pearl One

Hello thrivers!!

Welcome to the last Friday of February! We’re getting closer to my favorite holiday: daylight savings time when it stays light later!

Let’s go!

We’ve all said something like, “I can’t think about my fur-child who died; I’ll start crying again.” Or, “if I just think about my supervisor’s bad attitude, I get angry.” (Note: we think something and then have a feeling.)

I’ve written about sequences before and how they play out in our day to day. (Just shout if you want these two posts: Wendy@theInspiredEater.com.)

The following sequences are based on cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). I’m doing a sequence today from my own life. The main idea is to become more conscious of our thoughts, and learn to respond rather than react to the difficulty in our daily. Take a look:

My Old Sequence

  • Situation (something concrete): I had a small car accident yesterday. I ran into a sign, happily the sign wasn’t hurt, but my car is at the body shop for about a week.
  • My thought: “A week without a car?! That’s just crazy-talk!! How am I supposed to do that?!”
  • My feeling: enraged at myself and life in general.
  • My action: I called the body shop and requested a rental car and was told that they aren’t in the rental car business. I pouted. A lot.
  • Result: I was extremely “worked up.” I lost my entire day because of my irate reaction to a life incident.

My New Sequence

Now, let’s do a happier, more productive sequence.

  • Situation (something concrete): I had a small car accident yesterday. I ran into a sign, happily the sign wasn’t hurt, but my car is at the body shop for about a week.
  • My thought (that I consciously choose): “Thank the heavens that I didn’t hurt anybody. Hmm, five work days with no car? I know how to make this week fun.”
  • My feelings: Sad I had an accident, but amused at my reaction to not having a car.
  • Action: Friends drove me home and I took a hot shower and then crashed for awhile with a great book.
  • Result: After reading for about an hour, I return to my desk, and only do fun, easy tasks; nothing that requires focus or decision making.

See how the “old” sequence results in nothing good happening? While in the “new” sequence I slowed down my mind and chose my thoughts rather than allowing them “to just happen to me.”

Writing out a daily sequence for yourself is truly life-changing. Two years ago, my fur-child passed and I did a sequence that helped me so much I remember it to this day. The sequence didn’t make me happy that he passed but the new sequence eased some of the pain. Sequences work, go for it and you’ll see.

Pearl Two

If you’re thinking, “I can’t go from ‘old’ to ‘new’ that fast. No way!”

Valid point, most of us want another step in the sequence; a bridge from the “old” to the “new.”

Here’s how an example of a bridge-sequence:

  • Situation (something concrete): I had a small car accident yesterday. I ran into a sign, happily the sign wasn’t hurt, but my car is at the body shop for about a week.
  • Bridge-thought: “An entire week without a car? Well, maybe. . .”
  • Feelings: curiosity, a smidge of hope.
  • Action: I return home ready to try a different response: I scroll Instagram (remember this is the bridge).
  • Result: An hour of scrolling and I feel more like myself; ready to get on with a soft-landing day.

In your journal, write an “old” and then a “new” sequence; if you want a bridge-sequence, go for it.

Just Remember This

The “situation” has to be something tangible like “I ate the rest of the cake” or “I have two apples in the kitchen.” It can’t be, “she was yelling at me” – it has to be something we can all agree on like, “yes, the dog had puppies.”

Develop a daily sequence habit, and one-day you’ll be able to do them rapidly in your mind.

Pearl Three

I’m keeping pearl three for something fun that I want to share

“Well, that can’t be a good thing” is what I hear time and again when I recommend Netflix’s Love on the Spectrum.

But bring your tissues because Love on the Spectrum produces tears of joy, and is absolutely a very good thing. The three-time Emmy winning show focuses on four or five dating story-lines with people on the spectrum. Everything is handled respectfully; and the parents of the main daters are very much involved in the show. The moms talk to the interviewer on camera about having raised a child on the spectrum. Often brothers and sisters are included in the show too (along with many pups!).

As I watch the show, I’ve had the sense that the creator has experience with autism; either he or someone he loves is on the spectrum.

Give the show a whirl. Start with Love on the Spectrum U.S. season one. And then move onto U.S. season two. And report back!

Pearl Four

I don’t get it. How does a boring title: Life After Life paired with a ho-hum book cover end up as one heck of a read?

But enough of the bad news. The good news is that this story drew me within the first two or three pages (love, love, love when that happens).

I’m not alone in loving this book: Time called Life After Life “brilliant”, People “excellent”, and the Wall Street Journal “wonderful.”

This is the no-comedy, sophisticated version of Ground Hog Day, but set in England spanning the years of the two World Wars. The only thing Bill Murray’s movie is similar to Life After Life is that the main characters “keep trying” and if I say anything more: it’ll be a spoiler.

In 1910, we first meet baby Ursula born with the umbilical cord wrapped around her neck, we know the baby passes because “darkness fell.”  

But next chapter Ursula survives the cord and plays out a new timeline.

This is a book-dessert of the highest caliber think: book version of tiramisu cheese cake (made by someone who wasn’t you).

Pearl Five

The greatest discovery of all time is that a person can change his future by merely changing his attitude.” — Oprah Winfrey

Have a wonderful weekend, everyone!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

Pearl One

(Heavy sigh.)

It happened again this morning.

There I was, drinking caffeine while reading an online newsletter; minding my own business.

I began reading about a man who’d lost 70 lbs. The story was focused on the “aha” moment he’d had about his weight and how his “aha” changed his life.

All cool, right?

This man did the very strenuous work of losing weight, but at the end of the article he declared, “it was easy!”

That’s where the heavy sigh comes in.

What is it with our culture that we continue to perpetuate the myth of “easy” weight loss?

The animal doesn’t exist.

My take on the situation? In order to sell weight loss products to the public, the Mad Men of the last century had to take a seriously difficult trek (losing weight after age 50) and turn it on its head by using the magical word “easy.”

And we fell for it.

Bottom line: especially in our food-porn world of today, it’s extremely difficult to lose and preserve. As I was losing the 55 lbs, I started to call the work involved with losing weight “my part-time job.” Just those four words transformed how I engaged with the millions of micro-steps and habits that I had to internalize to lose the weight, and then to preserve the loss for almost 18 years.

Pearl Two

Do you track your food?

If you haven’t — or aren’t consistent — keep in mind that most of us have said in the past, “I’d do anything to lose weight.”

“Except for tracking my food of course.”

Think about it. Thousands of people would rather go on the new diet pills and risk scary side effects (which are, at least for now, truly horrifying), than making a habit of tracking food.

I went to the big guy: the NIH who implemented a study concluding that:

The NIH did a study with “the number of possible tracking days was divided to create the 3 groups of participants: rare trackers (<33% total days tracked), inconsistent trackers (33–66% total days tracked), and consistent trackers (>66% total days tracked). After controlling for initial body mass index, hemoglobin A1c, and gender, only consistent trackers had significant weight loss (−9.99 pounds), following a linear relationship with consistent loss throughout the year.

In addition, the weight loss trend for the rare and inconsistent trackers followed a nonlinear path, with the holidays slowing weight loss and the onset of summer increasing weight loss. These results show the importance of frequent dietary tracking for consistent long-term weight loss success.”

It’s dry reading that says: if you ate the fun-size Snickers then write the fun-size Snickers down.

See how they’re pink and spiral-bound? Make it as easy on yourself as possible.

Pearl Three

From today forward, I’m keeping Pearl 3 for something fun that I want to share with you

Last weekend, I binged a bunch of Seinfeld’s Comediennes in Cars Getting Coffee. Big deal, right? Beautiful cars, funny moments galore. In the past I’d only watched the episodes with the particular comedian I loved and didn’t watch the rest.

This time, however, I watched not caring which comedienne he had coffee with, and later, when I was getting ready for bed thought, “I feel like I’ve just watched two very intelligent people having a casual conversation.” This thought came after watching Jerry and Loren Michaels having coffee. It’s amazing that we can watch two super interesting people – tops in their field – have a real conversation.

I like seeing “how the sausage is made” and it’s so relieving to hear that these “stars” have all the insecurities we have.

Pearl Four

French Braid: the Novel by Anne Tyler. Of this exceptional read, Amazon’s description says it perfectly. “The Garretts take their first and last family vacation in the summer of 1959. They hardly ever leave home, but in some ways, they have never been farther apart. Mercy has trouble resisting the siren call of her aspirations to be a painter, which means less time keeping house for her husband, Robin. Their teenage daughters, steady Alice and boy-crazy Lily, could not have less in common. Their youngest, David, is already intent on escaping his family’s orbit, for reasons none of them understand. Yet, as these lives advance across decades, the Garretts’ influences on one another ripple ineffably but unmistakably through each generation.”

As I read, I kept thinking, “now it’ll get predictable, or maybe in the next chapter it’ll get predictable but no, Tyler twists into an entirely different direction I hadn’t anticipated at all. Over and over and over.

Count on this Book Dessert to sail you away from Freezer-Stocked-in-Ice Cream land.

Pearl Five

“The only thing that’s keeping you from getting what you want is the story you keep telling yourself.” — Tony Robbins

Have a beautiful weekend!

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

There’s so many ways to embrace Valentine’s Day and have fun: table settings, door-decor, and clothes.

We have new people – and welcome!! – if you haven’t yet, I want to encourage you to first read “Begin Here” in the yellow ribbon at the top of this page. This site will make more sense if you also read Aunt Bea. If you haven’t received her I’m more than happy to send, please just shout: Wendy@theInspiredEater.com.

Let’s begin today.

Pearl One

The studies tell us that we’re a lonely planet. Fair enough. It’s likely that we’ve upgraded our lives to such an extent that we’ve lost the plot.

In today’s world, it’s the norm that family (immediate and extended) are flung far and wide.

The advent of the car replaced the horse. The advent of the plane replaced the train. And the advent of IBM (I’ve been moved) type careers . . .replaced . . . the family?

Think of it, for millions of years, we’ve walked this planet in a tribe and later in a small village. We didn’t evolve to drive into the garage, magically click the garage door shut, and walk into our home never having seen a single neighbor (black and white to my grandparents experience.

I know I’m speaking to the choir, and maybe and overstating, but it’s possible that a lack of family and community connection has given birth to our addicted planet whether we’re talking about alcohol, drugs, nicotine and/or food.

I’m suggesting is this: for a day or a week, meta-watch yourself and notice how you engage or don’t engage, notice how you react to loneliness in your big picture, but also in your day-to-day.

This is a perfect time to pull out your journal and write about what you learned after meta-watching yourself deal with loneliness. Keep notes if you can.

Pen to paper, ask yourself these questions:

Am I lonely? Is the loneliness so pervasive that it just feels normal to me? Is my life turning out differently than what I’d planned? What is my inner-dialogue when I’m feeling lonely? What do I reach for ? Am I able to take a breath and meta-watch myself as I’m lonely? What do I reach for when I’m lonely When I realize that somebody else is lonely, what does that trigger in me?

When you write, keep an eye-out for unique ways that you can incorporate tinto your life. We can’t go back in time to sit around the fire with our tribe s’mores, but we can develop a better understanding of how our culture is wanting in the loneliness-department it’s not just on us. At the end when my poor dad moved f moved out of his forever home that would only be be six months of living in an assisted living place caring my for mom who has Alszheimers. I think he was lonely. I think the feeling of loneliness will be with us for our entire lives, it’s just part of being human.]

It’s a work of a lifetime to determine how to respond to the challenge.

Pearl Two

Still thinking about loneliness. Remember talking about “sequencing?” Well I’ve decided to instead call it “the cycle” (kind of like The Cycle of Life). Update: I still call it “sequencing.”

And if anybody wants the two original two posts about the cycle and how it works, I’m happy to send it just let me know.

I’m taking a situation from my life years ago.

  • Situation (something super concrete): Fourth of July is coming up this weekend. (A “situation” is something concrete, yes, that’s a dog, yes, that’s a dishwasher, yet that’s my jacket).
  • My thought: In my brain, the Fourth of July is meant for friends or family rafting on a inner tube down the river while trying not to get sunburned, and having a blast with friends. Later — again, in my mind — we’d BBQ in the backyard of a someone’s home, and then hang out at her pool all afternoon; once it got really dark, we’d watch fireworks light up the ebony-sky (in my fantasy we could see a beautiful show from the seats of her backyard. Finally, we’d return home happy-tired and slightly sunburned, we fall asleep easily. Thinking what a fantastic we just had.
  • Feeling: Excluded, sad, and bummed about a holiday that would never include me.
  • Action: sit in my studio apartment (which was super cool) with my two cats feeling left out.
  • Result: I initiated nothing and nothing great happened for me over the holiday weekend.

I would love for you to create sequences on your own life; writing about something that’s bothering you currently is probably the way to go. You can write a sequence about something big like a cross-country move or smaller like you have ants in the house.

There’s a second piece to the sequences, but we’ll cover that next week. For now, write a sequence like mine below:

  • Thought about situation.
  • Feeling you have after your thought.
  • Action you’ve taken b/c of feeling.
  • Result of the action.

Try to write one cycle day. If you hit an obstacle, that’s a good thing; write in your journal and ask your unconscious to pour through your pen. Just start writing and the pen (our unconscious) will do the rest.

Pearl Three

From today forward, I’ll keep Pearl 3 for something fun that I want to share

This week, I found the coolest cat “toy” that you can find and use immediately online for zero dollars. Max, my kitty, was sitting on my desk so I googled “cat games” and turned my laptop so the screen sits on the desk, (so upside down) and my cat watched and loves it. Now he shows up at my desk twice a day to see the bugs, butterflies, and string show.

Does it hurt the screen? Well, my specialized IT husband (aka The Scarfer) saw Max playing with the screen and he didn’t say a word (normally he’d have a heart attack). So I asked him, and he said it was fine. Believe me, if he thinks something bad is happening to the tech in our house, he practically writes a novel to my kids and me explaining Why We Shouldn’t Do Something.

So far, Max has patted at the bugs and string a few times. Once he sat on the screen trying to get a bug. I included a picture (a tablet would work even better). He really liked the fish. I think it gets frustrating for the kitty because they can’t really catch anything, so I always drag a string toy after the who.

If you’re a doggie-girl, tell your cat friends about the cat game. It’s adorable .

Pearl Four

America for Beginners by Leah Franqui. This book is a gem. AM New York praises the author he when he says, “A funny, feel-good cross-country tale… exactly the kind of story that we could use right now — people of different backgrounds coming together and realizing that they are more similar than assumed.” — AM New Yorks

“A tender, funny, wrenching, beautifully executed tale of three lost souls who traverse the chasms of cultural, generational, and geographical divides to forge some bonds strong and true enough to withstand life’s gut punches.” — Library Journal (starred review).

Absolutely. What they said.

America for Beginners is a perfect cold winter reading inside book. Loved it. If you guys are trying these books, I’d love to hear your thoughts on them.

Pearl Five

Too many people overvalue what they are not and undervalue what they are.”
– Malcolm S. Forbes

Have a wonderful weekend indoors reading, in fact, tell me what you’re reading. I’m goaling myself to not eat any candy over Valentine’s Day (unless a kid gifts it to you; then you have eat and rave. Those are the rules.)

♥, Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥

We’re certainly not hooked on All My Children watching daily with cat on lap (no offense to cats everywhere).

Pearl One

If you’re us, it’s so easy to slip into negative thinking, “been there/done that. I lose twenty, and gain thirty. That’s how the story goes.”

But it’s not “how our story goes” in this century.

Look what I found!

Last week while I was paging through the Wall Street Journal, this headline grabbed me and I haven’t been the same since.

“They’re Cover Girls. They’re in Their 70s.”

“Sky-high demand for older models—women in their 60s, 70s, 80s and even 90s—is creating a silver wave in the modeling industry. They even get stopped at the supermarket.”

The photo beneath is Elon Musk’s mom (Maye Musk,75) wearing an elegant two-piece bathing suit in violet that joins its top to the bottom on one side. We’re talking snazzy.

The article goes on to feature:

  • Frances Dunscombe, a 90-year-old who started modeling at age 82. 
  • Helen Mirren, 77 (L’Oreal).
  • Jane Fonda, 85 (L’Oréal).
  • Joni Mitchell, 70 (Saint Laurent).
  • Isabella Rossellini, 70 (Lancôme).
  • And the aforementioned Maye Musk (Cover Girl and COVER of 2022’s Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue).

Why Does This Matter to Us?

I’m not suggesting that we become models, but I am saying that when luxury brands are seeking out women over 70 and 80 for modeling-work, paradigm shifts are afoot.

The “little old ladies” from our childhood are from another era.

Today we’re in the midst of normalizing that women over fifty shedding unwanted layers is a real thing.

Still, we know it’s hard work to lose and maintain for a lifetime.

We’re up for the challenge.

Let’s go.

Pearl Two

The “Messy Middle,” how do you handle yours? I’ll go first. I’m currently managing mine badly because I’m bringing very little conscious thought to the middle of a wonderful project I badly want to see brought to life.

But, if I listen closely, I can hear myself getting critical and “bored” with the entire project. I’m great at the honeymoon, but terrible at the “messy middle.” Getting bored and feeling like “nothing ever works” are both ways that I disconnect.

I’m determined that things will be different this time around. This time I’m using the quote from an old Chinese proverb as my North Star, “The temptation to quit will be greatest just before you are about to succeed.”

I’m also meta-watching myself as I descend from the honeymoon to the messy middle. In other words, I’m not just allowing the messy middle “happen to me.” I’m noticing how I’ve given up in the past, and I’m watching what I’m thinking as I circle the drain today.

To date, I notice that I call what I want “stupid.” I say things to myself like, “this will never work.” “I’m tired of this project; it’s boring and way harder than I thought it would be; I’m ready to throw in the towel.”

I’m just a little ball of sunshine.

So, how to cheerlead myself out of ruining my project via the messy middle? I have no clue, but I do know that the solution begins with meta-watching exactly how I handle the messy middle in the first place.

How does the messy middle impact your life?

Pearl Three

From today forward, I’ll keep Pearl 3 for something fun that I want to share

I saw this fun fact-headline recently:

McDonald’s brings back beloved dessert, Strawberry & Crème Pie, for a limited time

So, here’s where my brain goes when I see this bit of marketing:

Brand: the company has cache to its name – like Disney or Coke – and is happy to lead with it (whereas when I see the name, my hackles go up).

Strawberry: a lovely word that evokes spring or early summer (they must be so happy that we’re not into rutabagas).

Crème: this word is so cool that we add it for the Parisian-flair alone.

Beloved marketing words: the item has returned!!!

Limited time only: Dear, get a move-on or you’ll miss out!!

Nutrition Summary (from McDonalds):

280 calories

  • 15 grams total fat (19 % of the pie so almost 1/5 of the treat).
  • 34 grams carbs (12 % of the pie).
  • 3 grams protein (well that’s something).

What’s not included:

25 grams of sugar (about 1/4 or more of the pie is sugar).

Bottom line: I never eat at fast-not-food outlets. It’s a habit that my mom instilled in me years ago and, while at my heaviest I often grabbed junk food in the drive-thru, I stopped the bad habit when I was losing the fifty-five pounds. Today eschewing fast-not-food completely is one way that I preserve my loss.

I always kept/keep my cold-tote with me filled with an ice pack, and — in the summer — real strawberries.

Pearl Four

Again, these aren’t book reviews, I’m only highlighting books that I truly loved reading. Keep in mind, these books have to compete with peanut M&Ms.

This book is to be read when you’re not feeling so great. It’s like hot chocolate on a cold day. The book begins with a man’s loss of his beloved wife. He waits one year, and as he’s cleaning out her life stumbles onto a part of his wife that he’d never known about.

We watch as a depressed, “life-is-over-for-me” man goes on a hero’s journey returning refreshed and ready to live a more engaged life with his children.

The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper by Phaedra Patrick.

A snuggle-read.

Pearl Five

We’re still living with the paradigm of age as an arch. That’s the old metaphor. You’re born, you peak at midlife, and decline into decrepitude.”

Jane Fonda

This weekend, I’m starting a new book that hopefully will turn into a great book dessert recommendation for next Friday!

♥ Wendy

P.S. Are you new to the Inspired Eater? Welcome!! This blog won’t make much sense until you first read the Aunt Bea post (and you’ll find Aunt Bea on this page to the right under my short bio). On your cell you’ll see it immediately following the first post. After you enter your email address, the Aunt Bea article will be sent to your email’s inbox. If it’s not there, you might check the spam folder. And always feel free to email me at Wendy@TheInspiredEater.com and I’ll get Aunt Bea right to you!

You know the scoop: I’m an Amazon affiliate. If you buy from a link in my post, I’ll receive money, but the arrangement won’t cost you a dime.

I am not an expert, a doctor, a surgeon, a nurse or a nutritionist: the information within TheInspiredEater.com is based solely on my personal experience and is not intended to be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. ♥