A lot of helpful information was packed in this whopping 631 page paperback. Unfortunately, I felt I had to do a great deal of sifting through justifications/ explanations, and the author wrote too much about his personal life and experiences when I just wanted to get to the "meat" of the book. Cut all that out and this would have been a 5 star. The Foreword was nearly 20 pages! Good grief. Just the facts, please and put the reins on the personal stories.
The author mentioned that he wanted the book to be titled, "Opening Your Heart." The publishers, however, wanted the current title. After reading it, I believe the title should have been what the author had in mind. This was about opening your heart, "A central theme of this book is learning how we can feel more free--from physical pain, emotional distress, and spiritual isolation."(page 253)
The book is divided into three parts:
Part One: Opening Your Heart
This part had a lot of justification for what was coming. I felt this was more for the author's colleagues. I had to sift through a lot of verbal diarrhea to find pertinent info. But it was there.
The importance of being a member of a club, church, etc. was stressed here. Studies show that those of us that have social connections experience less risk of heart disease. Holding feelings in puts the body in a state of stress. Social isolation ranked right up there with smoking in health! Also, athletes and others that thrive on winning keep their bodies in a stressful state--regardless of their physical fitness. "Exercise will make you fit, but fitness and health are not synonymous." (page 326)
Part Two: The Opening Your Heart Program
This held the bulk of the information with less personal stories from the author, though there were a few. Topics covered: how to manage stress, yoga (techniques with pictures), meditation, very low fat diet, cholesterol, a chapter on how to stop smoking, and how to exercise.
If a person walks 2 miles a day, 5 days a week, they can expect to burn about 2,000 calories!
There was a mention of Raquel Welch's book that talked about her yoga beliefs. :-) The overall theme in this part was the body and mind function most efficiently and effectively when a person is relaxed.
There was a great deal of information on cholesterol, heart disease, stroke, etc. Very informative. It was mentioned in several places that controlling heart disease isn't "just" about proper diet. A body has to have inner peace, too. A healthy person can die of a heart attack because of the constant state of stress they put on themselves.
Part Three: Opening Your Heart Recipes
Some great recipes here. Most seemed to have common ingredients that can be found fairly easily.
There are two types of diets:
1) The Reversal Diet, which is more strict. Vegetarian. Very little fat.
2) The Prevention Diet, which allows more fat and some meat.
I was a tad disappointed in the lack of information on cholesterol and hormone changes in women when in perimenopause.