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Paperback The Pleasure Trap Book

ISBN: 1570671974

ISBN13: 9781570671975

The Pleasure Trap

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

This startling book focuses on a problem that permeates modern life: that the abundance and ease of 21st century living is a mixed blessing. The authors offer unique insights into the movtivational... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Skip it.

I expected great things from this book since it has Goldhamer as one of the authors. I've enjoyed a lot of his videos but this book was disappointing to say the least. It felt so basic and uninformative. I've done a fair amount of reading, watching, and actual fasting and have been on my own health journey for 20 years. To me this was a complete waste.

highly recommended

I wanted to give this book to everyone on my Christmas list. It's an excellent read for anyone interested in psychology or health. This book sheds light on human nature, why we do what we do, and how our behaviors have evolved. We have created for ourselves a life of ease and excess, which, unfortunately, has lead to our collective demise. Because of the way we are hard wired, it is understandable why we eat the way we do (cooked, refined, processed "foods"), for example, but it is very self destructive and goes against our better judgement. We as a species have set up a huge trap for ourselves and we are suffering as a result. It seems the only way to avoid the misery that is inevitable as a result of the diseases of affluence, is to go against the grain, back to what's natural and logical, back to eating what we were designed to eat: raw plant based foods. It's not a matter of chance. If we keep doing what we have been doing, it's not a matter of IF we will get a disease, it's WHEN. Disease as a result of eating garbage has become so commonplace we accept it as normal, but it hasn't always been that way, and it doesn't have to be that way now. It's not enough just knowing what to eat, and that we should exercise, drink water and get a good night's sleep. The Pleasure Trap explains why it's so hard for us to follow our own common sense, why we keep backsliding into counterproductive habits and how we can reverse the downward spiral of our own making. I learned a lot about myself and human kind, and I now have a better understanding of why I ate two bean and cheese burritos tonight after nearly 70 days of eating mostly raw plant based foods. I decided not to give this book to anyone after all. The sad fact is, few people care about these matters. They just want to loose weight as fast as they can while still eating the same stimulating "food" and wallowing in the same poor habits. We want to keep our cake and eat it as well. It's sad. This book will tell you why, for those of you who really care to understand yourselves and improve long term. This book is very easy to understand and the concepts are easily applied. I particularly liked the section on how to deal with people who sabotage our efforts to improve ourselves. For example, there are those who may criticize your new, healthy way of eating out of simple ignorance. They don't mean any harm, and have your best interests in mind. They probably just think you are misinformed and want to make sure you aren't being an extremist. Sadly, eating raw plant based foods is considered extreme these days. Never mind it is how humans have been eating since our appearance on this planet thousands of years ago (and have only recently managed to completely mess up when we learned how to plant food and domesticate animals). Then there are the people who know you are doing the right thing for your health but they go out of their way to tempt you or make you feel bad because deep down, they are embarras

Pleasure Trap Review

This book provided me with an excellent understanding of how the Western World fell into the patterns of eating that are causing our modern diseases (obesity, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, etc.). It also explains how our taste buds can be changed to actually prefer the foods that our bodies are designed to eat to stay healthy(which I tested and found to be true). Armed with this knowledge, I have successfully cured my acid reflux and lost weight while eating foods that I now prefer over the burger and fries norm of the American diet.

The how and why of making a dietary change

Although the evidence supporting a healthy diet and lifestyle is now becoming well established, many people find it difficult and sometimes impossible to do so. There are reasons for this. Some are a matter on convenience, some involve a perception of financing, some involve cultural and family tradition, but few are more important than the issue of taste preference. The Pleasure Trap is very cleverly and professionally articulated by 2 experienced and professional authors to show that dietary change is a matter of our being prisoners to our perception of cultural preferences. We make right choices and suffer--so we believe--while we make the wrong choices and believe that it is pleasure. Such behavior is a trap that is not in our best interests. It's also a matter of becoming addicted to our felt need for instant pleasure while sacrificing long term health and happiness. This is a crucial element of our behavior that many would like to understand and to put to good use. Read this book and you will get a good insight into what otherwise might appear to be a complex network of organic and social factors that, in reality, can really be quite simple. Reading this book could be your ticket to a better life--all the way around!

Even Better Than Expected

This slender little volume surprised me. I purchased it after seeing that it was recommended by Dr. Joel Fuhrman (the author of Eat to Live, a perfect companion to this book). Fuhrman's book explains the hard science behind eating a healthful, fresh, green, vegetarian diet. This book is broader in its scope (hence the reason the two books complement one another so well). The authors persuasively explain the evolutionary reasons why our natural desire for dense foods is out of sync with the modern world. In nature we lived in a condition of scarcity; hence, it was to our advantage to seek out calorically-dense foods and eat as much as we could find. For every day of feast there would likely be many days of famine. This otherwise healthy instict is sabatoged by the modern environment of plenty. Now we merely feast -- all the time! This key insight -- that our biology is ill-equipped to deal with the plentifulness of modern life -- can be applied to other areas of life, too. The book is both scientific and historical, and as a whole very compelling. Every person who cares about making rational decisions with regard to eating and living should read it. This book explains what many other books about diet and health leave unsaid. It filled a lot of gaps in my understanding of healthful living.One observation: some reviewers have indicated that this book advocates moderation. That is false. Indeed, a whole chapter is dedicated to exploring how the myth of "all things in moderation" is dangerous in the modern world. This book is about thinking before acting and about rationally understanding the motives of our actions so that we may make better decisions.

Wake Up Call

I grew up in the Midwest, land of fast food, animal and dairy products - caught in the 'Pleasure Trap' like so many others. I carried these habits with me when I moved to California and always wondered why I didn't feel quite as energetic as I should in my 30's.After reading this book, I was convinced that I needed to change my eating habits, or I would surely continue upon a path toward disease. It's not easy giving up the convenience and, quite frankly, the taste of these foods. But it surely must be easier than dealing with the consequences down the road of a life of high-fat foods concentrated with animal proteins. I highly recommend this book. If it changed the life of this corn-fed Midwesterner, it should change anybody's.
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