Inspiring, personal, and often spiritual reflections on how women can find peace, make wise choices, practice everyday joy, and step into their power from Geneen Roth—author of the #1 New York Times bestselling Women Food and God.
From the beginning, Geneen Roth was told she was too sensitive, too emotional, too curious, too demanding, too intense, and too big. Yet gaining and losing weight for decades did not improve her self-worth or reduce other people’s criticisms. Like most women who struggle with their weight, she believed that if she could resolve what seemed to be the source of her self-hatred—how and what she ate—she would be thin, happy, and free. That belief, she discovered, was false.
When her struggle with food ended—and didn’t change anything except the size of her thighs—she kept trying to fix other broken parts of herself with therapy, intensive meditation retreats, and rigorous spiritual practices. Yet it was only when Geneen stopped trying to change or fix herself—that she was at last able to feel at home in her mind, body, and life. Now, she shares the wisdom of giving up what Geneen calls “the Me Project,” and finding the freedom, peace and power that await us just beyond it.
With humor, compassion, and insight, This Messy Magnificent Life explores the personal beliefs, hidden traumas, and social pressures that shape not just women’s feelings about their bodies, but also their confidence, choices, and relationships. This provocative, enchanting, and sometimes laugh-out-loud look at the imperfect path women take to step into their own power, presence, and ownership is based on the author’s personal journey and her decades of work with thousands of women around the country.
Roth embraces everyone’s unique and often unsung potential and shows us how to be open, curious, and kind with ourselves; how to say no to people and ideas that hold us back; how to let go of grudges and anxieties; how to pick ourselves up after setbacks; how to say a resounding yes to the world; how to move from fixing ourselves to finding ourselves; how to find joy in the ordinary; and how to experience the extraordinary right here and now in our bodies.
With a foreword by Anne Lamott, This Messy Magnificent Life is a compelling and often quirky look at what it means to be an imperfect but unapologetic woman living a (mostly) magnificent life.
Geneen Rothâs new work articulates so beautifully what is true about life – living in the … Geneen Rothâs new work articulates so beautifully what is true about life – living in the present with awareness brings such perspicacity that suddenly life is in technicolor. This guide shows us how to recognize those obstacles that prevent us from being our true selves – the true self that doesnât need fixed. Thank you for writing another âahaâ filled book!
not necessarily because of her reputation for writing the truth about overeating but because of her way of synthesizing and putting into words the truth about why we continuously look for the one thing that will make us happy. Guess what I’ve been a Geneen Roth fan for many years…not necessarily because of her reputation for writing the truth about overeating but because of her way of synthesizing and putting into words the truth about why we continuously look for the one thing that will make us happy. Guess what? We already have it, and she shows us how to access it. Save yourself from all the diet hype and the refrain of, “If only I had XYZ, I would be happy.” It turns out; we have been looking for love in all the…
This book challenges you to search bravely for true freedom. Geneen provides the breadcrumbs. I have followed Green for decades, from the days in which her first book, Feeding the Hungry Heart, changed my life, my relationship with food and myself. This newest book is beautiful, insightful, funny, deeply spiritual, practical, wise. It helped me recognize growth that has happened because of the work started decades ago. I don’t have Geneen ‘s skill to write so eloquently about how the quest for thinness was a disguised search for something infinitely more complex. But I am so grateful…