Why did you rewrite The Anti-Diet?
This question posed by friends and strangers can be “bookended”
by two articles from the New York Times. The first one appeared Sunday, April
12, 1992, authored by Molly O’Neill, and was titled: “A Growing Movement Fights
Diets Instead of Fat.” The story hailed a new “anti-diet” movement and featured
Jane R. Hirschmann and Carol S. Munter as founders of a group called
“Overcoming Overeating.” O’Neill focused on the failure of dieting, the dangers
of “yo-yo” dieting (including its very own addiction), and our cultural bias
against weight. She referred throughout to a new, “anti-diet movement.” I
devoured the piece hoping to find my name mentioned in it somewhere – but no
such luck. The news pages (now yellowed) got filed away, but I knew I had to do
something.
“Food for Thought,” by Jeff Gordinier appeared on February
8, 2012. I seized gleefully on his subtitle: Could relishing food more be a way
to eat less? Damn straight, I thought, and read on. Gordinier related the new,
mindful eating approach to roots in Buddhism and quoted Dr. Jan Chozen Buys:
“This is anti-diet.” His article made me feel like my moment had finally
arrived, but still no mention. So I emailed him, introduced myself and attached
the manuscript of the new edition I had already begun working on. He was very
gracious and encouraging.
Eternal thanks for that! A mere seven months later, the all-new
Anti-Diet is on sale and I’ve joined an important conversation that began as a
monologue 40 years ago.
Please click HERE to learn more about "The Anti-Diet" by Lynn Donovan McCann
Please click HERE to learn more about "The Anti-Diet" by Lynn Donovan McCann
No comments:
Post a Comment