join now2

 

Social Media

A Life Unburdened by Richard Morris PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 24 August 2006 20:10

book-thumbup

A Thumbs Up Book Review

A Life Unburdened: Getting Over Weight and Getting On With My Life
by Richard Morris
Miralibri Press
Review by Sally Fallon

What happens when a fat man who should have been a stand-up comic loses over 150 pounds and then writes about it? You get a book that is funny, sad, insightful, interesting, readable and inspirational.

What happens when a fat man who’s failed at all the diets stops blaming his lack of willpower and figures out that all the expert advice on dieting is wrong? You get a truly practical road map to successful weight loss.

What happens when a fat man wakes up to the fact that the only way to achieve real health is to eat real food? You get stunning, inspiring life-style transformation.

A Life Unburdened is a myth-breaker. Richard Morris demolishes them one after one: the myth that eating fat makes you fat, the myth that no food is better than any other food, the myth that junk food in moderation won’t hurt you, the myth that all calories are the same, the myth that no one has time to cook, the myth that losing weight will automatically make you healthy, the myth that exercise will cure disease. Morris sheds myths the way he has shed pounds, emerging as a new man from the fog of misinformation.

His program is simple. . . and absolutely radical: don’t eat processed food. Ever. Eat only real food and only when you have prepared it yourself.

And what is real food? All the foods the experts have told us not to eat: butter, lard, beef, whole raw milk, eggs, liver, coconut, cream.

His message is absolutely liberating: the only way to lose weight and be healthy is to eat foods that are satisfying. Satisfying foods are foods that contain the F word—fat, old-fashioned fats, which our ancestors ate. Satisfying foods are foods prepared the way your grandmother made them, with soup bones and love. Satisfying foods are foods that give your body what it needs, so you're not hungry an hour later. Satisfying foods grow in gardens nearby, not monocropped furrows in far-off places. Satisfying foods come from animals that live outdoors, not in factories. Satisfying foods have not been adulterated, embalmed, emulsified, sterilized, pasteurized, irradiated, manipulated or standardized.

Morris arrives at his breathtaking epiphany by asking the right questions. Why were the members of his family getting fatter, and fatter sooner, with each generation? Why were they dying so young when his grandparents lived so long? Why did he keep hearing that food should be convenient? Why did dieting make him depressed and lethargic? Why did the "experts," the MDs, PhDs and RDs, keep promoting the same dietary advice when it obviously was not working?

Morris does not have a bunch of letters after his name but he has a different kind of credentials--he’s been there, been in the trenches. He has lived the physical and emotional agony of being fat. He has lost weight on all the diets--before gaining it back and more. And he has achieved the supreme accomplishment of transforming himself from an obese to a normal man by making one revolutionary change: real food instead of processed food. Everything else followed from there--slow and steady weight loss, a rebirth of optimism, the end to cravings, resolution of health problems, enthusiasm for exercise, new goals, improved family life, hope for the future.

A Life Unburdened is more than just a diet book, it is a saga, and more than a saga of one man only, but of a couple and a family, a saga in which the discerning and supportive role of Richard’s wife Mary emerges as an example of quiet heroics. It is a modern epic of self-transformation, one that unfolds with suspense and drama, as one suburban family replaces commercialism with wise principles. It begins in despair and ends in triumph.

Read, learn and enjoy!

 

This article appeared in Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts, the quarterly magazine of the Weston A. Price Foundation, Winter 2005/Spring 2006.

About the Reviewer

[authorbio:fallon-morell-sally]

Comments (6)Add Comment
Weight Loss, Low-rated comment [Show]
The biggest myth of them all
written by George M, Sep 12 2010
"the myth that all calories are the same"

This is one I hear circulating around all the time. When I try to explain differently, some people are very adamant to disagree. It might be one of the most 'stubborn' myths.

Thanks for the review. I'll definitely check it out!
Emilia
written by Emilia, Jul 10 2010
A God-send! I was researching for a genetially perfect diet and found this site.After browsing through many diet this is the balance I am searching for in my weight loss goals! All the misinformation we dieters must wade through has only served to confuse us and when applied upset our metabolisms. What I am seeing here is a very reasonable and attainable goal for healthy eating. Thank you!
Rescuing A Dream
written by Robert Hodgson, Jun 08 2010
I came across this amazing website while doing research into green tea and fluoride. I have a friend who has been overweight for years and now suffers from a hernia. This book review is just what she needs to perk her up and give her the confidence to make similar changes. I totally agree, healthy fat burns fat and saturated fats can be very healthy! I was overjoyed to learn also on this site that lard is rich in the vital vitamin D. Because of your review which is also verified by those readers on Amazon, I am going to recommend that she reads your review and buys this great book! Thanks for this great tip!
Organic Wholefoods
written by Deby, Mar 29 2010
Ditto Bruce smilies/smiley.gif I have found that since I went "completely organic" eating "whole" foods only (as in NO pkts, tins etc my health and fitness has improved two fold ... I shed 3 kilo's without even trying and I am still losing weight (healthy amount) It's not that I am greatly overweight either I only have 6 kilo's to shed and I am already halfway there in 6 weeks with the only change being no pkt, tin, pre made food (including bread) I have been organic for a while but still incorporated some organic pkt/tin/premade stuff. The one thing I have noticed is that I do not have any little aches or pains, my allergies are subsiding and my health overall is excellent. I feel alot happier in myself because for a change I am doing something for myself and not running around worrying about my kids etc ...Gotta say tho the amount of people that think I am just wasting my money buying Organic is unbelievable ...but when I offer them a food and then offer to spray it with some pesticide (fly spray ... not that I have any lol) they funny enough don't want it with fly spray ... funny really cause that is how they normally eat it lmao ...soooo funny to watch their faces.... So much info on the net it is a shame that more people do not use it for their benefit. I have studied Nutrition and that's when I decided to go Organic so I suppose I have an unfair advantage smilies/smiley.gif
A Roadmap to health
written by Bruce Prochnau, Mar 02 2010
Stunning. Not only is this a road map to weight loss, it's a road map to health, and healthy aging. Processed food is the problem, manufacturing dead devitalized and dangerous substances that a more advanced society will look back on in disbelief, that an entire people sat back and allowed this to be done to them.

Write comment

busy
Last Updated on Monday, 26 March 2012 20:42