Showing posts with label Rachel Black. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rachel Black. Show all posts

Cake O'Clock: An Account of one Woman's Intimate Relationship with Food, by Rachel Black


Cake O'Clock, by Rachel Black
Ever been scared to wash your jeans because you know they will no longer fit?

Since the age of 9 Rachel has struggled with chaotic eating and disordered diet. This account explores her past history from anorexia to binge eating and everything in between in an attempt to learn how to eat like a normal person. Surely, it should not be this difficult?

A fantastic follow up to 'Sober is the New Black', where Rachel began to have the opposite to a mid-life crisis and started to get her life in order by firstly ditching the wine. In "Cake O'Clock" Rachel addresses a life-time of dieting demons in a bid to stop gaining and losing the same 18 lbs repeatedly. This book will resonate with serial yo-yo dieters everywhere.

For More Info
Twitter

BUY THE BOOK
Amazon

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How To Tell Them You Don't Drink: And Deal With the Questions They Ask, by Rachel Black


***FREE KINDLE DOWNLOAD APRIL 26-27, 2014***

 (How to give up alcohol)

Giving up alcohol is hard enough without the additional anxiety of how to break the news to family and friends. What will they say? What will they ask? What will they think? Whether you choose to tell them the truth or make an excuse this guide provides examples of how you can make it easier and how to respond to the questions they will ask.

This book, like its predecessor 'How to Party Sober', is a little gem for those who choose to remain sober in a World soaked with alcohol and where drinking is the norm. Again, full of real life experience with many practical tips to guide you through tricky conversations. A must read.

Follow the Author on Twitter
https://www.twitter.com/SoberRachel

BUY THE BOOK
Amazon: http://www.amazon.co.uk/How-Tell-Them-Dont-Drink-ebook/dp/B00JSWBYS8/

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Sober is the New Black: A Then and Now Account of Life Beyond Booze, by Rachel Black


Synopsis
Do you worry you drink too much? Can't help yourself? Prefer being sober? Drinking alcohol is a normal part of life, isn't it? It is usual for thirty-somethings to collapse in the evening with a glass or two of something sophisticated to diffuse the stress of the day and calm their buzzing brains, whether they be professionals, mothers, wives or homemakers. Rachel was no different. She juggled her many roles and responsibilities well and rewarded herself with wine at the end of each day; after all, she deserved it. But, gradually her wine intake began to increase each night and soon it had gone from being a little treat to an absolute necessity. As wine invaded more and more areas of her life, it became harder to cope. In turn it meant she drank more wine, firmly believing it was the cure, never considering for a moment that it could be the problem.

Eventually, when wine was dictating everything she did and did not do, Rachel realised that something had to change. However, as soon as she attempted to restrict or moderate her drinking, she seemed to want it even more. Her best intentions fell quickly by the way side after the first bottle was opened and the first drink took control, compelling her to have more. Drinking would continue until there was none left or Rachel 'fell asleep'.

The following day consisted of a hangover, depression, overeating, remorse, worry, despair and self-hatred, until the time came around when the next bottle could be opened and these awful feelings could be blotted out. This pattern of trying and failing to control her wine drinking brought Rachel to acknowledge that it was not possible to do so, and she decided that she had to remove alcohol from her life forever. Despite being sick and tired of the drinking-hangover-drinking cycle of failure, giving up was not easy and it was only after a few more failed attempts that Rachel managed to do so.

This book details her life in that first year of going alcohol-free. It describes in detail how her everyday pursuits became challenging and changing. Her outlook on the whole point of life turned on its axis when alcohol was removed, leaving her with a whole different sense of self and being. The changes that occurred were astounding and beyond anything she believed could be possible. She thought that removing alcohol from her life was all about giving up; she had never considered what she might gain.

For More Info 
Website: www.soberisthenewrachelblack.blogspot.co.uk

Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/SoberRachel

BUY THE BOOK
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Sober-New-Black-alcoholic-drinking-ebook/dp/B00HZIGNLU/

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