9781439181072 |
(hardback) |
1439181071 |
Contributor biographical information http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy1109/2011008429-b.html
Publisher description http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy1109/2011008429-d.html
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Library | Material Type | Call Number | Shelf Location | Status | Item Holds |
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Searching... Fountain Library | Book | 616.85223 W283L | Nonfiction | Searching... Unknown | Searching... Unavailable |
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Summary
Summary
Priscilla Warner has had a great life: a supportive husband, a flourishing marriage, two loving sons, and a bestselling book, The Faith Club. Despite all her good fortune and success, she suffers from anxiety and panic attacks so debilitating that they leave her unable to breathe. She's tried self-medicating--in high school, with a hidden flask of vodka--and later, with prescription medications--daily doses of Klonopin with a dark-chocolate chaser. After forty years of hyperventilating, and an overwhelming panic attack that's the ultimate wake-up call, Warner's mantra becomes "Neurotic, Heal Thyself." A spirited New Yorker, she sets out to find her inner Tibetan monk by meditating every day, aiming to rewire her brain and her body and mend her frayed nerves. On this winding path from panic to peace, with its hairpin emotional curves and breathtaking drops, she also delves into a wide range of spiritual and alternative health practices, some serious and some . . . not so much.
Warner tries spiritual chanting, meditative painting, immersion in a Jewish ritual bath, and quasi-hallucinogenic Ayurvedic oil treatments. She encounters mystical rabbis who teach her Kabbalistic lessons, attends silent retreats with compassionate Buddhist mentors, and gains insights from the spiritual leaders, healers, and therapists she meets. Meditating in malls instead of monasteries, Warner becomes a monk in a minivan and calms down long enough to examine her colorful, sometimes frightening family history in a new light, ultimately making peace with her past. And she receives corroboration that she's healing from a neuroscientist who scans her brain for signs of progress and change.
Written with lively wit and humor, Learning to Breathe is a serious attempt to heal from a painful condition. It's also a life raft of compassion and hope for people similarly adrift or secretly fearful, as well as an entertaining and inspiring guidebook for anyone facing daily challenges large and small, anyone who is also longing for a sense of peace, self-acceptance, and understanding.
Reviews (1)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Warner (The Faith Club) suffered her first panic attack at age 15. This debilitating condition resulted in self-medication with nips of vodka, using prescription drugs, and visits with a counselor. By middle age, Warner embarked on her "panic to peace project," a valiant attempt to cure herself with various relaxation techniques. This standard recovery memoir traces her hands-on journey through meditation with Buddhist monks, eye movement desensitization and reprogramming, guided imagery, Trager body therapy, a Jewish ritual bath, Jewish mysticism, yoga, and ayurvedic oil treatments, to name a few. Woven throughout is the backstory about her troubled family and its effects on Warner. The author also struggled with her feelings toward her mother, who suffered from Alzheimer's: "I was forced to move her to a nursing home, a fact that haunted me, because, in her more lucid days, she had told me I'd be murdering her if I ever did that." Warner deftly describes her various treatments. She delves into painful family memories and recounts her panic attacks in detail. For those readers who've experienced this debilitating condition or have family members who have, Warner's account of her yearlong therapy trek will be insightful. Those not affected by panic attacks might want to search for enlightenment in other corners of the bookstore. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Excerpts
Excerpts
1 Takeoff Slumped in my airplane seat, I could barely see enough of Tulsa, Oklahoma, to say goodbye to it in the early morning darkness. The plane took off and I was headed home to New York on the last leg of an intense three-year lecture tour. I opened a magazine . . . and there were the monks--yet again. Dressed in crimson robes, their heads shaved, serene Tibetan men stared out at me from a photograph. These same men had been inadvertently haunting me for years, because they had found an inner peace that had eluded me for so long. While I'd been experiencing debilitating panic attacks and anxiety for decades, they had been meditating so effectively that their prefrontal brain lobes lit up on MRI scans, plumped up like perfectly ripe peaches. That's not precisely the way the monks' brains were described in the medical studies I'd read about, but that's how I imagined them--happily pregnant with positive energy. Unlike my brain, which felt battered and bruised, swollen with anxiety, adrenaline, heartache, and hormones. "I want the brain of a monk!" I decided right then and there. I also wanted everything that went along with that brain--peace and tranquility, compassion and kindness, wisdom and patience. Was that too much to ask for? And so my mission was born. I became determined to get my prefrontal lobe to light up like the monks' lobes, to develop a brain that would run quietly and smoothly, instead of bouncing around in my skull like a Mexican jumping bean. Some people set up meth labs in their basements, but I wanted a Klonopin lab in my head, producing a natural version of the drug my therapist had prescribed for me several years earlier, to help me cope with chronic anxiety and panic. I had already been searching for serenity on and off for forty years, during which I'd traveled to Turkey and toured the ancient caves of early Christian mystics, read Rumi's exquisite Sufi poetry, and learned about the mysteries of Kabbalah. I regularly drank herbal tea and lit incense in my bedroom. And I'd gotten my meridians massaged while my chakras were tended to by soft-spoken attendants at occasional spa splurges. I would have loved to travel to Nepal to find inner peace, sitting at the feet of a monk on a mountaintop, but I panic at high altitudes. I didn't want to move to a monastery, but I figured there were dozens of things I could do in my own backyard that could make me positively monk-like. So I decided to try behaving like a monk while still shopping for dinner at my local suburban strip mall. And I decided to chronicle my adventures. This full-scale brain renovation would take some time, planning, improvisation, and hard work. Still, I hoped, if I exercised my tired gray cells properly, on a sustained, regular basis, and fed my brain all sorts of good things like meditation, guided imagery, yoga, macrobiotic stuff, and Buddhist teachings, maybe it would change physically. I'd heard neuroplasticity thrown around in scientific reports, a term that means that the brain is supposedly able to transform itself at any age. Perhaps mine would be like Silly Putty--bendable and pliable and lots of fun to work with. What did I have to lose? I shifted in my airplane seat, the monks still gazing up at me from the photograph. On the outside, I was functioning just fine: I was a happily married mother of two terrific sons. I'd traveled to more than fifty cities around the country to promote a bestselling book I'd coauthored, called The Faith Club. But inside, the anxiety disorder I'd battled all my life had left me exhausted, out of shape, and devouring chocolate to boost my spirits and busted adrenal glands. My body and heart ached for my children, who had left the nest, and my mother, who was in her ninth year of Alzheimer's disease, confined to the advanced care unit of her nursing home. Twenty years earlier, my father had died from cancer; but he'd been just about my age when the tumor had started its deadly journey through his colon. Clearly, I was facing my own mortality. Although I wanted to run like hell away from it. In another rite of passage, a wonderful therapist I had seen for many years had died recently, and I had attended her memorial service. When I'd arrived at the Jewish funeral home, a woman with a shaved head, dressed in a simple dark outfit, had greeted me. Although her smile was kind, her presence initially threw me off. Was she Buddhist? Was she a nun? Did her brain light up on an MRI scan, too? After greeting people at the entrance to the chapel with a calm that put everyone at ease, she conducted the proceedings with warmth, wit, and sensitivity, urging people to speak about our deceased friend. I took her appearance to be a message from my late shrink. "Go for it," I imagined her saying. "Go find your inner monk." I didn't know the difference between my dharma and my karma, but I was willing to learn. Perhaps I'd define other terms for myself, like mindfulness, lovingkindness, and maybe even true happiness. I'd try whatever techniques, treatments, and teachings I thought might move me along the road from panic to peace. His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, believes human beings can change the negative emotions in their brains into positive ones. And who was I to doubt the Dalai Lama? Maybe my journey would resemble something like Siddhartha meets Diary of a Mad Jewish Housewife. Forget "Physician, Heal Thyself," I decided as my plane landed in New York and my daydreaming turned into a reality. My new mantra would be "Neurotic, heal thyself (and please stop complaining)." © 2011 Priscilla Warner Excerpted from Learning to Breathe: My Yearlong Quest to Bring Calm to My Life by Priscilla Warner All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.Table of Contents
How to Live | |
1 Takeoff | p. 3 |
2 Bowls Are Ringing | p. 7 |
3 Panicky Pris | p. 13 |
4 My Demons | p. 20 |
5 Be Still My Brain | p. 27 |
6 The Monk Who Knew Panic | p. 30 |
7 Beginner's Luck | p. 43 |
8 In Over My Head | p. 47 |
9 The Big House on the Hill | p. 55 |
10 Joy Therapy | p. 60 |
11 Getting Grounded | p. 65 |
12 Let the Games Begin | p. 72 |
13 The Art Sanctuary | p. 80 |
14 The Long Reach of Providence | p. 87 |
15 Tinkering with My Tool Kit | p. 93 |
16 Attuning to My Tribe | p. 99 |
17 Touching a Nerve | p. 102 |
18 Smiling at Fear | p. 106 |
19 Hooked on Healing | p. 112 |
How to Love | |
20 The Lovingkindness Convention | p. 121 |
21 Magical Repair | p. 131 |
22 Reborn | p. 138 |
23 The Soul Doctor | p. 149 |
24 Breathing with a Twist | p. 158 |
25 This Is Your Brain on Love | p. 166 |
26 A Good Friend | p. 177 |
27 Finding the Golden Buddha | p. 183 |
28 Breathing Breakthrough | p. 188 |
How to Die | |
29 Learning to Die Happy | p. 197 |
30 My Religion Is Compassion | p. 206 |
31 A Lesson in Impermanence | p. 213 |
32 One More Happy Person on the Planet | p. 218 |
33 Neurotic, Heal Thyself | p. 222 |
34 Dawn | p. 228 |
35 Happy Birthing Day | p. 232 |
36 Letting Go | p. 239 |
37 Roshi | p. 246 |
38 My Safety Net | p. 251 |
39 Just Breathe | p. 258 |
40 Proof | p. 264 |
Acknowledgment | p. 268 |
Appendix: Priscilla's Plan | p. 270 |
Bibliography | p. 272 |