Josie in Kathleen's '53 Chevy Truck
Welcome to Radiant Recovery®
 
March 12, 2018

Hi {!firstname_fix},
   
    This issue of the Radiant Recovery® Newsletter is brought to you by all of the mentors who volunteer their time and energy to help keep our community running smoothly and safely. 
   We all wanted you to know that Kathleen DesMaisons was experiencing uncontrolled atrial fibrillation, which is an irregular, rapid heart rate that can cause poor blood flow, and went into the hospital last week. She’s receiving excellent care and should be back home within the next week. 
    If you have sent her messages during this time, please be patient while she gets settled back in at home next week and catches up with everything. 
    Radiant Living and YLD chats will be held as usual this week. However, the scheduled class, Serotonin, that was to begin this Wednesday, March 14, 2018, will be postponed. 
    We mentors are sending Kathleen much love, light, and prayers, and invite you to do the same should you wish to join us.

Warmly,
Mentors of Radiant Recovery


Check the classes section for our new schedule for the first half of the year. I will be doing one regular 2 week class each month. I will also be introducing a new special series on focused topics. The topics will include things like migraine, reflux, diabetes, and depression. Rather than being an on-going class, we will have special readings, and then a 2 hour chat to discuss the material. These chats will be highly focused and information based, and it will give you a chance to get your own personal questions answered.

Remember if you have ideas or input for us on what you would like to have available, share them on the Community Forum. We do listen and are very interested in your ideas.

​​​​​​​
 
 Support for Your Program

COMMUNITY FORUM
Share with others, ask questions, explore everything and anything about your program without a charge.
Share

GROUPS
Learn the steps, get fit safely, learn creative program cooking, learn about depression, learn with other men, learn with parents, share in local areas. There is no charge for groups.
Sign Up for Groups

CLASSES

I will be offering one 2 week class per month. Registration will be limited to 20 per class. If more sign up, I will open a second section. Classes are done by email, so there are no specific time constraints to be present. If you are new to the community I strongly recommend you take the brain chemistry classes.

Starting Wednesday, March 14 This class has been postponed.
Serotonin
Learn all about the “Just Say No” chemical. Learn how your depression may be affected by your diet. Learn how to manipulate serotonin levels safely and with tenderness. A real hands-on lesson in feeling better.  I will be adding a lot of the new things I have learned about ginger and serotonin, and referencing the serotonin/migraine connection. Even if you have taken this class before, this is a great opportunity for an update. Lots of NEW information for you.
Signup


WORKING WITH KATHLEEN

I feel very strongly about offering you a way to work with me directly. I have set up a whole range of options for you to do that - going from private coaching to being involved in small groups. This link will show you all the choices. Please note that Coaching Apprentice is open to people starting or restarting. Coaching Skilled is for people who are settled with their steps and want to look at other issues more in-depth. Signature Coaching is for those who want an individualized program support.

And you can always call 505-345-3737 and ask me about how each one works.

Learn More


 
"Doing the food will balance you, and you will know exactly what to do to heal yourself."
 
Testimonial of the Week
I have spent a lot of time in the quest for ultimate knowledge and understanding, only to find that my thinking was convoluted beyond any prospect of a definitive answer being circuitous and tortured.

Simplicity really is key for me now.

However expansive Kathleen or anyone gets, the message is the same once you can hear it.

I might agonize through the intellectual contortions we are prone to and I'd produce a long and deep and heartfelt post only to get a brief reply cutting through all my largely tangential concerns.

Believe me, the *stuff* that makes up the majority of any of my lengthy expositions is resistance. It's *yeah but yeah but* all the way and the words smother and comfort in their poetic validations.

*Just do breakfast* doesn't quite do us justice. It's too easy for us. We want to go into fantasies about it and set up adversaries including ourselves to do battle over it.

The struggle ends as soon as we get the one liners. Honestly!

Mel
 
Finding A Safe Place Meditation CD
Finding A Safe Place Meditation CD

Come visit our STORE. Call 505-345-3737 if you have questions.
David, the store manager, is always happy to help. 

$12.95 / $11.95 (subscription)
Buy now
Kathleen has been using this meditation with her clients for more than 25 years. She uses it as the center of her own spiritual practice. Like her food program, it is deceptively simple. Kathleen takes her listeners to a place of safety.

Use this CD over and over to train a response that is immediate and fully relaxed. Teach your deepest self to be quiet and still. 
 
Green Bean Casserole
Green Bean Casserole
This lovely and easy recipe for green bean casserole will keep you filled up and feeling steady. 

Come to our recipe blog for all the details.
Get the Full Recipe
 
Radiant Living
    I have changed the rules about Radiant Living and Your Last Diet Chats. If you are a member of either program, you may attend the chats for both Living and YLD. If you would like to attend 2 chats a week, you are more than welcome to do so.
    We are now using our new chat room. I have posted the logistics of getting into the room on the Living List and Steph posted them at YLD. Please go over and practice before chat. Read the room instructions and the guides for chatting. Begin at the landing page.  But remember you will need the password to access the landing page.​​​​​​​ We will not cross post the transcripts though.

Find Radiant Living here
 
Your Last Diet!
Your Last Diet Book Cover

Do I have to be on step 7 to join YLD?
No. In fact, it is great to join right at the beginning. YLD gives you a whole level of support you can't find anywhere else in the community.


I am ready to lose weight now! Is this the right place for me?

Maybe, maybe not. Depends on whether you are willing to explore our philosophy which is to heal your biochemistry before you just start another diet.


I don't need to lose weight. Is there any point in joining?
Absolutely. The chats alone are worth the price of joining. It is where you can actively participate in shaping the vision of the community, learn about the latest trends, and have a terrific time with other members from around the world.


If you are not a YLD member, come and join us. If you are a current member and want to join us in the new chat room, come to the landing page.  I will post the page chat words on the YLD list.


If you would like to join us in YLD, come find us here.  ​​​​​​​
 
What If It Doesn't Have to be Hard
 
What If It Doesn't Have To Be Hard
Kathleen DesMaisons, Ph.D.
    As many of you know, we often talk about addiction to misery and always believing that things have to be *hard*. Here is the original reflection that started this dialogue in our community:

What if none of it has to be hard? This is the radical thought that has followed me home from Ranch. Kathleen had been talking about addiction to misery and how it seems to be one of the easier pieces of our sugar sensitive puzzle to fix - it doesn't have to be hard. And then she blurts out what if none of it has to be hard? I think most everyone's instant reaction was "huh? I don't think so," me included. But the hair on the back of my neck stood up when she said that. And I have not been able to get this idea out of my mind.

I was listening to a (country) CD in the car and it seemed every song was about some kind of "hard". And a voice in my head is saying "What if it doesn't have to be hard?" I looked at my shoes that have been by my bed for weeks now patiently waiting for me to wake, shake, walk. And the voice again "What if it doesn't have to be hard?" I came home to what could have felt like an overwhelm of laundry, no groceries, starting the potato and the need to gain weight. But what if it doesn't have to be hard? And the laundry and groceries got done. The potatoes are ready in the fridge. I'm remembering to eat a little more than usual. These are, I realize, simple things, easy to not be hard. But what if none of it has to be hard?

I've been thinking about why I am so invested in things being "hard". I was brought up in a culture that taught 'pull yourself up by your bootstraps', 'nothing worth having is easy', 'what doesn't kill you makes you stronger', 'true beauty lies in struggle and pain' and so on. And I am very attached to the idea of having been "brave" in my recovery journey. I think the dopamine boosting reward factor is in play, too, when I feel I've done something "hard".

So what happens if I let go of the idea of doing what's hard = worthy accomplishment. If it's easy, will there be that sense of accomplishment? Will the act of letting go of "hard" be the accomplishment? Maybe it is all in the re-framing. What if instead of "hard" and "how can I possibly do what seems impossible and just too difficult and where in the world do I start?" the "hard" thing becomes a challenge and the doing of it an adventure?

The feeling/idea of my life being an adventure instead of a struggle is something I have been becoming aware of as I've done my post detour work. If I stop and look at the past 7 months what started out as hard became easy. Not easy as in in being a piece of cake (sorry) but easy as in being a joy to do. I have come to think of my regular life as a grand adventure, too. It still has its moments of scary-as-all-get-out but it doesn't spook me any more. And I think maybe that is another key - seeing "easy" as joyous instead of just easy and not really valuable. So if "hard" becomes an adventure and "easy" becomes a joyous thing to do, then "what if none of it has to be hard" becomes pursuing the business of life as a joyous adventure. This idea feels incredibly real and true to me. 

Would I have been ready for it at the beginning of recovery? I honestly don't know. I think I might have said "this is nuts, I'm outta here". It's hard (no make that "it's a joyous adventure" ;-) ) to turn our long held, deeply embedded, highly invested way of being in the world upside down with such a radical thought. I am ready to give it a go. By the way, I got up and put my shoes on and walked for 20 min. this morning :-D Turns out it didn't have to be hard.

I'd love to hear other's thoughts on this idea of it doesn't have to be hard. Thanks as always for listening to my long ramble.

Janice in Maryland 
 
 

Here is the Annie Lane column that brought so many of you here.


Dear Annie: I read with interest the letter from "Weird, Stupid or Selfish?" – whose husband eats all the decorative candy she puts out. His inability to resist sugar resonated with me, as I have sugar sensitivity and have engaged in exactly the same behaviors. I simply could not resist sugar.


After years of struggling and dieting and sitting in work meetings obsessing about the doughnuts instead of the topic at hand, I discovered the book "Potatoes Not Prozac," by Kathleen DesMaisons. Her theory is that people who are sugar sensitive have brains that respond differently to sugar, alcohol and refined carbs and that what they eat and when they eat it have a huge effect on them. She shows how to rebalance blood sugar levels, serotonin and beta-endorphins through small lifestyle changes and offers the latest research, free online support and seven steps to change your life. It is not about willpower; it’s about biochemistry, which her program can slowly improve, just one tiny step at a time, with amazing results.


I have been sugar-free for six years now, lost 25 pounds and never gained any of it back. I can go to dinner with family and don’t even think twice when someone orders dessert. I don’t have cravings, and sugar is no longer on my radar. I am more focused and more tolerant, and the daily mood swings are gone. The woman who wrote to you could suggest to her husband that he check out https:// radiantrecovery.com to see whether he does have sugar sensitivity. At the very least, she would be better informed about this condition. – Happy Without Sugar


Dear Happy Without Sugar: I hadn’t considered that health issues might explain

her husband’s behavior. In fact, I hadn’t even heard of sugar sensitivity.

Thanks for opening my eyes to the condition! I’d like to encourage all readers to talk to their doctors if they find themselves compulsively eating sugary snacks.

—Email question to dearannie@creators.com


ANNIE LANE

 
 
©2018 Kathleen DesMaisons. All rights reserved. You are free to use or transmit this article to your blog or website as long as you leave the content unaltered, use this attribution: "By Kathleen DesMaisons, Ph.D. of Radiant Recovery®", and notify kathleen@radiantrecovery.com of the location. Please visit the Radiant Recovery® website at for additional resources on sugar sensitivity and healing addiction. 

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