Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | RC 552 .C65 P44 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5143882 |
RC 552 .A5 H69 2009 Biting anorexia : a firsthand account of an internal war / | RC 552 .B84 B84 2003 Bulimia / | RC 552 .B84 B8412 2008 Bulimia / | RC 552 .C65 P44 2012 The hunger fix : the three-stage detox and recovery plan for overeating and food addiction / | RC 552 .C65 R655 2003 Breaking free from emotional eating / | RC 552 .E18 C37 1994 The encyclopedia of obesity and eating disorders / | RC 552 .P67 B656 2021 The end of trauma : how the new science of resilience is changing how we think about PTSD / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 326-336) and index.
"The author of New York Times bestseller Body-for-Life for Women presents a groundbreaking, neuroscience-based program to rewire your food-addicted brain and get the body you deserve. The bodys' built-in reward system, driven by the chemical dopamine, is a fascinating adaptation: It tells us to do more of the things that give us pleasure. Creative energy, falling in love, entrepreneurship, and even the continued propagation of the human race are driven by this system . . . just as is, unfortunately, the urge to overeat. In The Hunger Fix, Dr. Pamela Peeke uses the latest neuroscience to explain how unhealthy food and behavioral "hooks" have gotten us ensnared; indeed, she shows that dopamine rushes in the body work exactly the same way with food as with cocaine. Luckily, we are all capable of rewiring, and the very same dopamine-driven system can be used to reward us for healthful, exciting, and fulfilling activities. The Hunger Fix makes this possible by laying out a lifelong, 3-stage plan that starts with a 3- to 4-week jump start to break so-called destructive fixes and replace them with healthier actions. Fitness guides, meal plans, and recipes are constructed to bolster the growth of new neurons and stimulate the bodys' reward system. Gradually, healthy fixes like playing games, meditating, having sex, going for a run, laughing, and learning a new language will replace the junk food, couch time, and other bad habits that leave us unhappy and overweight"-- Provided by publisher.
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