About the author:
Francie Healey is a licensed mental health counselor in private practice in Santa Fe, N.M. She specializes in the psychology of eating, helping people with health conditions to develop conscious eating habits and understand how food contributes to healing. Using her expertise to help clients manage cognitive decline through nutrition, Francie educates them on meal planning; the creation of simple, nutritious meals; and other keys to achieving a healthy relationship with food. She holds a Master's Degree in Counseling, and is a Certified Health Counselor and a Licensed Mental Health Counselor.
Summary:
Eat to Beat Alzheimer's offers a practical guide and an empowering tool to bring nourishing, healthful, and delicious food into the lives of people concerned about Alzheimer's and other cognitive problems. Almost 9 million people in the U.S. suffer from Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia, and the toll is rapidly increasing. This book will appeal to everyone concerned about dementia and memory loss in either themselves or a loved one.
Recent research makes clear that the impact of aging on the brain can be reduced by simple diet and lifestyle modifications. The delicious food choices and easy-to-prepare recipes in this book are based on the latest findings showing that they can help slow the progression of Alzheimer's and other conditions like it, or prevent them entirely.
Readers will gain the knowledge and tools to take charge of their health by incorporating tasty, healing foods into their diet. The information in this cookbook will be as relevant and useful 20 years from now as it is today. And the recipes will still be just as delicious.
Recent research makes clear that the impact of aging on the brain can be reduced by simple diet and lifestyle modifications. The delicious food choices and easy-to-prepare recipes in this book are based on the latest findings showing that they can help slow the progression of Alzheimer's and other conditions like it, or prevent them entirely.
Readers will gain the knowledge and tools to take charge of their health by incorporating tasty, healing foods into their diet. The information in this cookbook will be as relevant and useful 20 years from now as it is today. And the recipes will still be just as delicious.
Why I published Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s
I have felt drawn to
writing a book, and a cookbook, for as long as nutrition and health has been a
passion of mine, which has been a very long time. But the seed for Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s, was planted specifically
in a conversation that I had with my step-father a few years ago.
In the book, I write about our
relationship and what he meant to me. My step-father was an important
figure in my life, and when he was very ill, and dying, I went to spend time
with him while he was in the hospital. And although he was very important
to me, I was never sure how important I was to him. In other words, he
didn’t make much effort, perhaps didn’t know how, to connect with me on a
deeper level. That is, until we were alone in the hospital. One of
the things that came up in that conversation was a kind of mutual respect for
each other. I think he really got something about me then, when he was
ill, that I understood something about health and wellness and my passion for
promoting this and sharing this with the world. He was actually the one
that suggested my focus be on Alzheimer’s, saying that it was needed. In
that moment, I felt that he was drawing a connection for me, between what I had
to offer, and where I could begin to offer it. Before then, I hadn’t been
quite so sure, or quite so specific. He helped me focus and motivate in a
way that I hadn’t been able to do until then.
So that prompted me to
research and explore the topic and when I started to look at the science on
nutrition and brain health, I felt even more compelled to write a book that
would share this education with everyone and also provide good recipes as well,
so that healthy eating for healthy brains was something accessible, understandable
and completely doable for readers.
Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s basic premise is
about prevention and self-care, right now. I think so many of us are
scared of disease and illness, especially something like Alzheimer’s, a disease
that takes away our basic capacities and memories, and our connections to loved
ones. I wanted my book to be a way through that fear, to the other side
of it, into an empowered, educated and action-oriented state with our health
and wellness. I believe that the more people understand about our brain’s
health, or decline, and the effect of our diets and lifestyle on our brains
that they are more likely to make informed choices and have a positive impact
on the trajectory of their lives.
Essentially, the root causes
of brain decline come down to inflammation and toxicity in the body and brain.
It’s true, that there are a majority of culprits contributing to this,
many of which we can’t necessarily control right away. However, what we
eat plays a powerful role, and is something that we can manage. The
standard American diet is loaded with high sugar foods, highly refined foods,
and high levels of omega-6 fatty acids (too much creates high levels of free
radicals, or toxicity). It is my sincere hope that Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s can be a way out for people from the
standard American diet, into a way of eating that incorporates unrefined,
nutrient dense, medicinal, whole foods. In my work as a health and
wellness counselor, so much of the process around diet change is about clients
feeling empowered enough to make the necessary changes they need to for their
own health. Part of the empowerment process is definitely about
education.
Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s is
first and foremost, a nutritional science text, outlining why diet changes are
important and necessary for overall health and the prevention of brain decline.
Secondly, it is a cookbook, which to me, is a way to put education to
action. Woven throughout Eat to
Beat Alzheimer’s, is also a message of worth and self-value. As a
counselor and an author I am always encouraging my clients and readers to
self-reflect and to pay attention to what is nourishing them, and what is not.
This is not a simple task, but an ongoing learning and investigation. To
me, it is worth having a continual dialogue and conversation because we are
often bombarded with external expertise that can be conflicting. I aim to
find a communion between sharing quality research and prioritizing an
individual’s personal experience and inner knowing when it comes to what is
truly needed for health and wellness. Not only that, but this research is
emerging and while I know Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s
is going to be a really great start for a lot of people, our collective
understanding about brain health and overall health as it relates to nutrition,
is constantly evolving.
I wrote Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s so readers can have a place to begin, but
it has also served as a starting point for me. It is my first book, and
I’ve got plenty more planned! It has grounded me deeply in the research
and the current findings, for which I am very grateful. I am more aware
now than ever about the importance of continual learning, both for my brain and
the integrity of my work. And it is an important area that I want to be a
part of, to help awaken myself and others to the power of our everyday choices;
to be a reminder that what we do, what we think, and how we eat definitely
matters and we are all in a position to turn the tide of illness, to transcend
our collective fears and move into being empowered, knowledgeable students of
wellness.
Links:
Upcoming tour dates include:
Friday, July 15th @ Renee’s Pages with Renee Roberson
Renee Roberson reviews Francie Healey's cookbook "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's" - don't miss this exciting blog stop and opportunity to learn more about Francie as she shares her knowledge in this great publication. http://reneespages.blogspot.com/
Monday, July 18th @ Nichole Smith’s Chaos in the Country
Nichole Smith at Chaos in the Country hosts today's blog tour stop for Francie Healey's "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's". Don't miss Healey's gust blog post about "Releasing Personal
Tuesday, July 19th @ Gina Hott’s Hott Books
Gina Hott at Hott Books hosts Francie Healey - reader can find out more about Healey's cookbook titled "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's" and read as Healey shares in a moving blogpost "Why Alzheimer's and Dementia?" http://www.hottbooks.com/
Wednesday, July 20th @ The Road to a Dream with Ava Louise
Francie Healey visits The Road to a Dream and shares with readers of Ava Louise's blog. Learn more about Healey's cookbook "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's" as well as enjoying some insight in her guest post "Social Media for Authors" http://avalouise.net/theroadtoadream/
Thursday, July 21st @ Kathleen Pooler’s Memoir Writer’s Network
Join Francie Healey and learn more about her cookbook "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's" as she stops to visit with Kathleen Pooler's readers at Memoir Writer's Journey. Healey pens today's guest post "From Concept to Publication" and Pooler offers her thoughts as she reviews Healey's cookbook. Don't miss this blog stop! http://krpooler.com/
Friday, July 22nd @ Linda Appleman Shapiro
Linda Appleman Shapiro hosts fellow author Francie Healey as Healey writes today's guest post titled "How I Knew it was Publishing Time". Don't miss this blog stop and opportunity to learn more about these amazing authors and Healey’s recently published cookbook “Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s”
Monday, July 25th @ Building Bookshelves
Learn more about “Eat to Beat Alzheimer’s” by Francie Healey and check out today's guest post by her as well - guest post titled "Energizing Baby Boomers". You won't want to miss this stop!
Tuesday, July 26th @ Bring On Lemons
Read Francie Healey's post "Feeding the Brain" and find out more about her recently published cookbook "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's" http://bringonlemons.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, July 27th @ Mari McCarthy’s Create Write Now
Join Mary McCarthy as she welcomes Francie Healey at the Create Write Now blog today. Healey pens today's guest post titled "Connecting with Readers". Find out more about Francie Healey and her new cook book "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's". http://www.createwritenow.com/
Thursday, July 28th @ One Sister’s Journey with Lisa M. Buske
Francie Healey pens today's guest post "How to Eat Clean in Today's Busy World" as she visits the blog of Lisa M Buske. Don't miss this post and opportunity to learn more about Healey's cookbook "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's" http://www.lisambuske.com/
Friday, July 29th @ Android After Forty
Join the lovely Linda Peters as she reviews "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's" by Francie Healey. You'll love Linda's blog and readers will be delighted to learn what she thinks about this highly acclaimed cook book! www.AndroidAfterForty.com
Monday, August 1st @ Beverley A. Baird
Beverley A Baird reviews Francie Healey's cookbook "Eat to Beat Alzheimer's" - check out Beverley's blog and her thoughts on this excellent new publication!
Lisa- thank you so much for hosting today's blog stop. I always love popping by your blog and seeing your smiling pic!
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad to be here! Thank you Lisa! - Francie :)
ReplyDelete