Resilience Recipes


Book Description

A quick-start, evidence-based guide for finding wellbeing at home and at work. Resilience Recipes is for real people facing real-time challenges every day. Whether they are feeling overworked or overwhelmed, this book will teach them strategies to manage stress, find more balance in their life and bounce back. They need to make space for their own wellbeing to function as their best self. Starting with a wellbeing self-assessment test, readers remind themselves about what is important to them, before they are encouraged to dive into the resilience recipes that will improve their wellbeing. The chapters that follow focus on rebuilding emotional resilience, practicing mindfulness to increase mental adaptability and finish with strategies to re-energize and remain stronger going forward. The reality is that wellbeing isn't a nice-to-have &– it is a must-have. It is necessary for health, energy, connection, creativity, relationships, performance... the list goes on. Fleur Heazlewood is a leadership expert who has trained and mentored over 1000 people in positive leadership, mental health mastery and resilience.




The Resilience Recipe


Book Description

"In these changing and challenging times, giving children the gifts of resourcefulness, optimism, confidence, a growth mindset, and resilience are key. This reassuring book offers a logical, easy-to-follow plan born from scientific methods to guide kids to those goals.” —Booklist Help your child face all of life’s challenges with confidence. Based on the innovative Coping Cat program, this book offers a proven-effective “recipe” for raising resilient kids! We live in an age of anxiety. Amidst climate change and natural disasters, a troubled economy, and one of the largest global pandemics in modern history—is it any wonder our kids are anxious and stressed out? Add in the pressures inherent in social media and consumerist culture, as well as the pressure of academic success, and you’ve got a recipe for disaster. The good news is that you can help your child manage anxiety and stress—no matter what life throws their way. This book will show you how. Written by two pioneering experts in child psychology and anxiety, The Resilience Recipe offers an evidence-based plan grounded in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) to help kids build emotional resilience and adaptability, worry less, and thrive—despite the stressors of modern life. With this guide, you’ll learn to help kids feel more in control of their moods and emotions; cope with difficult experiences; and recognize the first signs of stress and anxiety in both their mind and body, so they can find quick relief. You’ll also discover a wealth of tips and strategies to help you manage your own anxiety. Most importantly, you’ll find a solid action plan to help your child feel strong and capable in the face of unprecedented challenges.




Recipes for Mindfulness in Your Library


Book Description

As more librarians commit to individual and sustained reflection and practices in their own lives, those approaches can expand to include the communities they serve. This collection offers more than a dozen in-depth examples of mindfulness in action.




The Migraine Relief Plan Cookbook


Book Description

Following the publication of her first book, The Migraine Relief Plan, a step-by-step plan to achieve a healthier lifestyle for those who suffer severe migraines and chronic illnesses, and those who care for them, Stephanie Weaver received a flood of requests from readers seeking more recipes. She spent the next few years expanding her research, meticulously testing new recipes, and interviewing a wide range of health professionals, advocates, patients, and caregivers. The result is The Migraine Relief Plan Cookbook, an essential guide to healthier eating and mindful living, which aims to help readers mitigate the symptoms of severe migraines, headaches, and other chronic illnesses. It also features a foreword by nutrition scholar Margaret Slavin, PhD, RDN, and neurology professor Dawn C. Buse, PhD. The 100 delicious, plan-friendly recipes of The Migraine Relief Plan Cookbook include foods for every meal of the day, plus snacks, drinks, sauces, and condiments, as well as serving suggestions and a chapter on preparing healthy, wholesome meals from leftovers. This robust selection of recipes, enhanced with Weaver’s favorite preparation tips and personal insights, empowers readers to create beautiful meals that support their health. Her insightful interviews with health professionals, advocates, and patients provide tips for ongoing self-care, pain management, and building resilience. This book will help readers benefit from a holistic approach to battling migraines and chronic pain. The Migraine Relief Plan Cookbook arms readers with the recipes, research, professional insight, and lifestyle tips necessary to face their symptoms head-on.




Bake it Till You Make it


Book Description

The first of its kind mental health and resilience cookbook.




The Migraine Relief Plan


Book Description

A “must-have guide” to reducing symptoms related to migraine, vertigo, and Meniere’s disease, including over 75 trigger-free recipes (Mark Hyman, MD, director of the Cleveland Clinic Center for Functional Medicine). In The Migraine Relief Plan, certified health and wellness coach Stephanie Weaver outlines a new, step-by-step lifestyle approach to reducing migraine frequency and severity. Using the latest research, extensive testing, and her own experience with a migraine diagnosis, Weaver has designed an accessible plan to help those living with migraine, headaches, or Meniere’s disease. Over the course of eight weeks, the plan gradually transitions readers into a healthier lifestyle, including key behaviors such as regular sleep, trigger-free eating, gentle exercise, and relaxation techniques. The book also collects resources—shopping lists, meal plans, symptom tracking charts, and kitchen-tested recipes for breakfast, lunch, snacks, and dinner—to provide the necessary tools for success. The Migraine Relief Plan encourages readers to eat within the guidelines while still helping them follow personal dietary choices, like vegan or Paleo, and navigate challenges, such as parties, work, and travel. An essential resource for anyone who lives with head pain—or their loved ones—this book will inspire you to rethink your attitude toward health and wellness.




Recipes Remembered


Book Description

Marcia Adams gives families a culinary scrapbook to pass on food traditions in loving detail. Combining fill-in text with dozens of blank "recipe cards," and a pocket for collecting clippings and other food-related memorabilia, Recipes Remembered helps families preserve their recipes as treasured heirlooms. Full-color illustrations.




Tears In My Gumbo


Book Description

In order to create one of life's most complex dishes, you need a recipe. Tears in My Gumbo offers the family caregiver solutions to the challenges the caregiver will face. Through heartwarming, true stories, you laugh, cry and relate. This book challenges all of us and provides the tools to make "caregiving gumbo" before we need to serve it.




Justin's Hearty Recipes


Book Description

After his heart transplant on April 27, 2018, youth Justin Wang used his wish from Make-A-Wish to create a heart-healthy cookbook. Designed to keep him on track for a healthy second chance at life, the cookbook has grown and extended to give back. As the print version of Justin's Hearty Recipes, the PDF version is completely free online on Justin's blog: My Heart Transplant Journal.




Recipes for Thought


Book Description

For a significant part of the early modern period, England was the most active site of recipe publication in Europe and the only country in which recipes were explicitly addressed to housewives. Recipes for Thought analyzes, for the first time, the full range of English manuscript and printed recipe collections produced over the course of two centuries. Recipes reveal much more than the history of puddings and pies: they expose the unexpectedly therapeutic, literate, and experimental culture of the English kitchen. Wendy Wall explores ways that recipe writing—like poetry and artisanal culture—wrestled with the physical and metaphysical puzzles at the center of both traditional humanistic and emerging "scientific" cultures. Drawing on the works of Shakespeare, Spenser, Jonson, and others to interpret a reputedly "unlearned" form of literature, she demonstrates that people from across the social spectrum concocted poetic exercises of wit, experimented with unusual and sometimes edible forms of literacy, and tested theories of knowledge as they wrote about healing and baking. Recipe exchange, we discover, invited early modern housewives to contemplate the complex components of being a Renaissance "maker" and thus to reflect on lofty concepts such as figuration, natural philosophy, national identity, status, mortality, memory, epistemology, truth-telling, and matter itself. Kitchen work, recipes tell us, engaged vital creative and intellectual labors.