Chocolate Rehab a book aimed at helping chocolate addicts take their addiction seriously so as to indulge less in chocolate and more in life!
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Carrie Eddins openly discusses her serial addiction to chocolate of over a decade in her book 'chocolate rehab,' after checking herself into her own 'chocolate rehab clinic,' in early 2004, after being fed up with not being able to overcome her addiction, she finally took it seriously and began her research.
Carrie looked deeply into this socially-acceptable addiction on a mental, emotional, nutritional, lifestyle, sexual, energetic and spiritual level as her addiction had often been laughed off by many, which however had nearly eaten away her spirit! In so doing, what Carrie discovered was just how deep her addiction went, from being a child of divorced parents, to having seriously low self-esteem, and in fact hating herself and hating men, and not even considering how she could be attractive to them nor even considering herself to be remotely intelligent, hence she devoured more chocolate and more chocolate!
This perpetual, often daily consumption of chocolate kept her depressed, lonely, and very fed up, until she decided to finally take her addiction seriously once and for all, which is the message of her book, that addiction to chocolate is not taken very seriously as it is so socially-acceptable, hence the title.
Her journey led to her facing up and letting go of her parent's divorce, and the pain she had felt from it, to learning to become her own best friend as opposed to her own worst enemy, to having colonics and seeing how she could balance her body out nutritionally, to starting to view men in a much healthier and more balanced way. She also looked at other options of having that 'orgasmic feel,' of a chocolate bar, to really looking at what she really wanted out of life and how she could contribute her gifts to the world. Essentially, Carrie in her own 'Chocolate Rehab clinic,' looked at her addiction to chocolate on a mental, emotional, nutritional, sexual, energetic, lifestyle and spiritual level which eventually once those aspects of her life were balanced, proved to provide her with her successful outcome of finally overcoming her addiction, after nearly three and half years of research.
In her book, 'Chocolate Rehab,' Carrie writes about some of te touching, poignant, and often embarassingly honest aspects of her journey in an effort to really see how she could help to inspire other women to do the same, to take their addiction to chocolate seriously so as to learn how to indulge less in chocolate and more in life! * This book is aimed at women, but some male choc addicts might like it too.
Website: http://www.chocolaterehab.com |