The blog that connects you with boomers!

Book Reviews

Book Recommendations

BLOGGER:  Deborah Heiser

How often have you wished you had a good source for finding a good read?

Let’s all share our favorites!  Send in your book recommendation by commenting below.  I’ll add your review to the posting.  In the meantime, start reading the reviews we have so far…

You can start by reading Arin Goldman’s blog about getting her Kindle.  Arin includes some good recommendations.

here we go…

__________________________________________________________________

Recommendations by Debbie Heiser

1) Just started “The Help” by Kathryn Stockett – great recommendation from Jackie and Laura! The book takes place in 1962 Mississippi – follows the lives of three women, a 22 year-old women and two maids. (read Laura’s more descriptive review below). Haven’t gotten far enough to say much, but so far it is well written and I can’t wait to read more.
2) Finished “To My Dearest Friends” by Patricia Volk. Good read about women in their 60’s – the only down side is that they spoke about being 60 as if it is old. I choose to think of 60 young, but other than that – it was a good read.
3) Finished “Sleeping Arrangements” by Laura Shaine Cunningham.  It is a memoir – about a girl being raised by her uncles on the Grand Concourse after her mother dies. It is not a “downer” as my one sentence description would make one believe.
4) Started “Eclipse of the Sunnis” by Deborah Amos. This is a great book – It is well written, and it is thought provoking. About “power, exile, and upheaval in the Middle East”. Not a beach book – a book to make you think.

5) Finished “Snow Flower and the Secret Fan” – thanks for the recommendation, Laura!  A great read (see Laura’s review below for a description).  A definite recommendation!

Happy reading everyone!!!

__________________________________________________________

A great self-help read:  Recommended by Debbie Heiser

OBESE FROM THE HEART by Sara Stein, MD

As my all male family (including the bird) watched the football game I read a great book: Obese from the Heart by Sara Stein. Dr Stein writes about herself as an obese woman who has struggled with weight all her life. What struck me about this book, what makes it so different from so many other books, is that it does not apply only to obese or overweight individuals. Although I’m constantly saying I want to lose the last 5 lbs. of baby fat I gained from having my children (now 4 and 5), I’m not obese and have never been. This book resonated with me because Dr. Stein talks not as a doctor, but as a person, about so many of the issues that plague us and that can lead to obesity (among, I must say, other issues as well – such as depression and anxiety). Overwork, stress, bottling up our emotions, are things so many of us can relate to. This book doesn’t preach about eating, not eating, doing or not doing. Dr. Stein writes from her heart in a way that makes obesity understandable, personal, and completely relatable. I would heartily recommend reading this book, whether obese or not.

To find out more about how to buy the book, ebook, and kindle editions go to  http://obesefromtheheart.com

__________________________________________________________

A novel recommended by Laura Nolte Cirincione:

The Help is a 2009 novel written by American author Kathryn Stockett.  It is also available in audiobook.

I read The Help and it was really good. It was about Mississippi during the 1960s and the relationships between “the help” and their white employers. Enjoy!

__________________________________________________________

A novel recommended by Clive Priddle:

Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel. It’s The Tudors meets Game Change

(I’m not recommending that, using it as a referent!): C16th England, awash with political uncertainty, religious confusion, and treacherous loyalties. What could be more fun? It’s a long book, so save it for a vacation or long trip. But if you like it she’s at work on a sequel or prequel or whatever. And she’s a terrific understated but very skilled writer. Not flashy but very acute. She deserved her Booker prize…

__________________________________________________________

Novel recommendations by Vivian Weinberger:

I am currently reading a Pat Conroy book called South of Broad.

I enjoyed 2 other books by him, Beach Music and a book he wrote about teaching black children who lived on a Hilton Head type of Island in dire poverty.  I may be partial because I know the area he writes about, South Carolina, and particularly in this book, Charleston..  ( I’m still short of halfway thru).  Vivian

__________________________________________________________

Novel Recommendations by Dawn Eig:

I second Clive’s recommendation Debbie. I have it on my list at the moment. For something a little more light, check out The Last Samurai by Helen De Witt. Its about a single mom in England with a 6 year old child prodigy. funny, clever and interseting.

__________________________________________________________

Recommendations by Laura Traynor:

Here are a few:

Recently finished Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See; set in remote 19th-century China. It’s a lifelong story about two women who became laotong or “old sames” (aka BFFs) at age 7 and the rigid codes that governed their lives despite two very different paths.

Last year’s favorite was Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout, which is 13 short stories, connected by, Olive and those characters she comes to know and love in a rural coastal town. Speaks to lives lived, regrets and joys along the way.

Am currently reading A Year in Provence, probably 10 years behind everyone else but it’s a lovely respite on a cold winter’s day.

Another favorite is The Working Life: the promise and betrayal of modern work by JoAnn Ciulla; speaks to the meaning and place of work in our lives and how ” pressures of our consumption-driven, global economy frequently lead to the compromise of individuals’ ‘higher’ values when making decisions affecting the overall quality of their lives.”

More to come as I think of them!

____________________________________________________________

Thomas Matlack gave a recommendation of a book he read on Twitter:

TMatlack Just finished The Girl Who Played with Fire (Vintage) by Stieg Larsson and loved it. Perfect antidote to Tiger Woods.

He also has his own book which Lisa Hickey, who worked on the project describes…

The Good Men Project: Real Stories from the Frontlines of Modern Manhood

How often does a book actually change you? Once, twice a year, max? Well, when it does, hold onto it tight.

FULL DISCLOSURE: I helped publish The Good Men Project. The book – and the 31 stories in it, might now be turned into a Broadway Play, a movie, a tv show, a magazine. And yes, I might profit from some of those things if they happen. Just to be clear.

But…for the record….the book changed me before any of that. It changed me when I read the half-finished manuscript in my car one rainy afternoon in Boston. It changed me because it was guys, telling stories, of defining moments in their lives. Telling those stories with truth and insight and wit. And as one of the founders of The Good Men Project, Tom Matlack, says “it’s the stuff guys don’t usually talk about.”

From the photojournalist in Iraq who helped me realize that bearing witness to atrocities of war has a grace all it’s own to the dad who watched his son succumb to a drug overdose, to the guys who talk about sex and racism and failed marriages  along with beautiful, poignant, second-chance marriages, The Good Men Project opened my eyes to a world that had been around me all the time but I just never before was able to see.

__________________________________________________________

Comment below if you’ve read any of these books or if you have any others to add to the list!

ia_logo_button3

To receive updates from ImagineAge, enter your email in the “subscribe” box on the left side of the screen.  Your email will NOT be sold!

To become a Fan of ImagineAge on Facebook, click here!

To join the ImagineAge Group on Facebook, click here!

If you enjoyed this, click the button below to share it with others!

  • Share/Bookmark

Posted 6 months, 1 week ago at 12:08.

4 comments

How to Manage Your Grouchy Guy

How to Manage Your Grouchy Guy

BLOGGER:  LAWRENCE JOSEPHS

            You thought you fell in love with a wonderful guy and you thought you would settle into a comfortable easy going relationship once the honeymoon phase of the relationship was over. But instead you find yourself living with a first-class grouch and you don’t know what to do about it. What is a grouchy guy? These are the defining characteristics of a grouchy guy:

1)    His mood tends to be chronically irritable and cranky. He responds with annoyance to minor frustrations.

2)    He is faultfinding about stupid little things and prone to starting arguments about trivial matters. He makes mountains out of molehills.

3)     He blames you for everything as though every minor frustration he suffers is your fault. He implies or says outrightly that you are ruining his life.

4)     He treats you like you’re an idiot if you don’t immediately get something he is saying.

5)    He gets annoyed and pushes you away when you reach out affectionately to him looking for some love and attention as though you’re a pathetically needy person.

6)    He has a generally contemptuous attitude towards you though he’d deny it if you confronted him. He’d claim you’re too being too sensitive.

7)    He may make sarcastic or belittling comments towards you, even in front of other people. If you confront him on it, he will claim he’s just kidding around and will ask incredulously what’s wrong with you that you can’t you take a joke.

8)     If you sympathetically ask your partner what’s bothering him, he will deny that anything is wrong and will respond as though that’s an irritating question.

9)    He demonstrates diminished interest in sex with you but claims everything is just fine if asked.

            You know what it is like to live with a guy like this. You are angry all the time because he treats you in such a hostile rejecting manner. But because he denies everything, he makes you feel that it’s all in your head and you must be crazy. It’s not good for your self-worth because he is making you feel like he finds himself trapped living with a person he finds absolutely insufferable. He acts like he is just staying with you out of some misguided sense of begrudging obligation. And when you finally lose your patience with his chronic but denied grouchiness and you lose your temper, he looks at you with utter disgust as though you are the biggest bitch in the entire world! Then you feel guilty as though you have probably deserved to be treated poorly all along. You can’t imagine why in the world he stays with you and why he just doesn’t go out and immediately replace you with someone nicer. You might even begin to think that maybe you should feel grateful that he puts up with you at all.

Or maybe you are wondering why you put up with him at all and maybe you should just dump the jerk and find somebody nicer, somebody who is lower maintenance.

But if at least for the time being you are sticking with your grouchy guy and trying to figure out what to do with him, I can give you some advice about how to try to make the best of a bad situation. First, I have to give you some advice about what not to do because it’s very easy to make a bad situation a whole lot worse than it already is. Firstly, you have to learn how to restrain yourself from reacting defensively to the hostile and rejecting way your grouchy guy treats you. Understandably, you feel hurt and angry and want to express your hurt and anger openly. Unfortunately, grouchy guys don’t know how to deal with women’s feelings and just become more antagonized the more you try to force them to understand how you really feel. Grouchy guys, especially when they are angry are empathy impaired. They get freaked out by a crying woman who seems wounded by their abrasiveness. Crying just makes a grouchy guy feel guilty and when he feels guilty he either becomes even more argumentative or withdraws in anger. Grouchy men see crying women as weak and then have contempt for them. Appearing hurt and wounded doesn’t get you anywhere with a grouchy guy. They think it’s manipulative.

            Maybe you get angry when your grouchy guy isn’t being nice and to assert yourself you express your anger. But the next thing you know you are have a screaming match on your hands and things are getting pretty ugly, maybe even in front of the kids. Getting angry doesn’t get you anywhere because then you turn into his scolding mother. If you get angry he will no longer see you as the sexy romantic partner he once loved because you have morphed into his disciplinarian mother who is trying to force him to be obedient. Naturally, he will become only more rebellious. You might get him to begrudgingly submit out of guilt but he will hold it against you and get even with you one way or another, perhaps even by cheating on you with someone at work who seduces him by seeming more indulgent and accommodating than you are.

            Of course, you could just try to ignore his grouchiness and try not to let it bother you and try to learn to live with it. But because he is a grouchy guy and is trying to get a rise out of you, he’s just going to drive you crazy until you lose it. If you try to ignore his chronic irritability and constant put downs, you are just going to build up resentment like a pressure cooker until you finally explode. So what do you do if you can’t just ignore him, can’t express your hurt feelings openly, and can’t express your angry feelings openly? What options are left?

            Fortunately, there are two good options left which are more likely to be effective with a grouchy guy: 1) Good natured teasing and 2) Firm limit setting.

            Grouchy guys have often lost their sense of humor. Every little thing about you is annoying to them and they have to constantly harp on the fact of how everything you do drives them crazy. The basic idea of good natured teasing is that every time your grouchy guy says something critical, insulting, or bossy, you don’t have to take it seriously, just make a joke about it. For example, your grouchy guy starts scolding you for misplacing his favorite coffee mug that he can’t find. You can argue that you didn’t misplace his coffee mug or that even if you did what’s the big deal and you’ll probably have a huge fight on your hands about a stupid little thing. But you could kid around and say something like: “I hid it on purpose because I know you can’t live without your favorite coffee mug” or “Why don’t you take care of your coffee mug yourself if you don’t like the way I take care of things around here, you’re a big boy, now so learn to take care of yourself.” To women’s ears these comments might sound too harsh, even emasculating, but this is the kind of language that grouchy guys understand. This is the way grouchy guys deal with each other, through what I call “verbal roughhousing.” Grouchy guys like to play rough, that’s the way they deal with all their pent-up aggression. Grouchy guys have to be taught a lesson: “Don’t dish it out if you can’t take it.” You have to show them that you don’t take them too seriously when they are acting like a first class jerk. You need to make fun of them when they are acting insufferably to show them that they have lost your respect. In cultures where there is very little male aggression, it is achieved because the men relentlessly mock each other when they get out of line until the men acquire better self-control of their aggressive impulses. Men respect sassy women who can put them in their place by a witty put down. Unfortunately, in our culture it is usually the men who make jokes and the women who are the appreciative audience for men’s humor. But sometimes in a marriage there has to be a role reversal and the women need to get their grouchy guys to lighten up and not take themselves so seriously.

            Your grouchy guy will really appreciate you if you can learn how to diffuse a tense situation with humor. But you have to understand that the type of humor that most grouchy guys like is rude, crude, and lewd, not always the witty repartee we see in old fashioned romantic comedies. If you can learn to amuse your grouchy guy with that sort of humor, you will have him eating of your hand and he will feel like he is the luckiest guy in the world. It will also re-awaken his waning sexual interest in you. Grouchy guys want to have sex with women who can make them laugh.

            Humor only works when a grouchy guy is mildly annoyed. Humor doesn’t work when a grouchy guy is really angry. Then he is too far gone to be reached by humor. Once he is really angry he can’t even think straight so you can’t really have a rational dialogue with him. So what women have to learn is to not even try to have a rational discussion with a grouchy guy once he has lost it. It’s better to tell him that he is out of control and out of line, that you won’t talk to him if he is going to talk to you in such a disrespectful way, and that he better go off by himself to cool down and don’t talk to you until he can talk to you in a calm and respectful way. Thus you have to set limits on his grouchiness by refusing to talk to him unless he can talk to you like a civilized and mature adult. First you try to diffuse a tense situation with a little humor but if that doesn’t work set a limit on him and tell him to get out your face until he calms down.

Once a grouchy guy cools down he will be nicer and more conciliatory. Sometimes, it’s hard for women to do this because they want the immediate reassurance in the midst of an ugly fight that everything is OK. Women hate it when men withdraw in anger because they feel rejected, if not abandoned, by the men they love. But it is better to let your grouchy guy withdraw in anger until he is ready to make nice. Forcing him to reassure you that he still loves you when he is fuming with anger is just going to result in an even bigger blow-up.

            So these are the basic tools of effective grouchy guy management. Don’t ignore him, don’t act hurt and wounded, don’t scold him, and don’t pressure him for reassurance. That will only further antagonize him and make a bad situation a whole lot worse. Use humor and good natured teasing, preferably a bit crude and lewd, to diffuse a tense situation when your grouchy guy is mildly annoyed. When he is really angry give him a time out until he calms down and sounds conciliatory. Good luck learning to manage your grouchy guy because you deserve better.

  Let me know what you think.

To read more about Dr. Josephs, click here

larryphoto

 IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SUBSCRIBE TO RECEIVE UPDATES ON BLOG POSTS, PLEASE ENTER YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS ON THE LEFT SIDE OF THE SCREEN WHERE IT SAYS “SUBSCRIBE”.

ia_logo_button3


 

 

  • Share/Bookmark

Posted 1 year, 5 months ago at 12:08.

11 comments

.

.
  • Categories

  • Recent Comments

  • Tags

    60 aging apple blog boomer boomers Caregiving dating diet economy exercise family finance fitness forty grouchy health imagineage internet iphone iPod iPod Touch IRA MAC men midlife money News psychology relationships retirement Review sex sixty stress tech technology tutorial video wall street journal weight wizard women wsj Youtube