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June 26, 2007

Summer Reading 2007: What You Can/Can't Change

I've amassed quite a long summer reading list, though not many suggestions from you guys. The theme this summer is self-improvement, so I thought the best book to start with is What You Can Change & What You Can't: The Complete Guide to Successful Self-Improvement, by Martin E.P. Seligman, Ph.D. Why bother wasting my time reading self-improvement books about things I just can't improve selfly? Though this book is sort of old (1994), and I think I might have read it before (perhaps a book on improving memory and information retention is in order?), it surprised me in a few ways.

I'm 30, so it hasn't been that long since I've been in school, but it seems to me that my education focused much more on the nurture, rather than the nature, approach to psychology. Tabula rasa and free will. Nurture (i.e. formation of personality by childhood events) has been the popular approach since WW2, as a reaction to the Nazi genocide. The nature argument that Sam does better than Peter because he's genetically superior slid too far down the road to fascism and racism. The nurture argument that Sam does better because he had more opportunities as a child became popular, and helped the Civil Rights movement gain success. But, as it turns out, personality is more the product of our genes than previously thought, including traits such as intelligence, musical talent, religiousness, conscience, politics and exuberance. Far more of who we are is dictated by our genes than by our upbringing.

To save you the trouble of reading the book (though it is a pretty good book), here's a list of what you can change and what you can't:

What You Can Change:
1. Panic can be easily unlearned, but can't be cured by medicine.
2. Sexual dysfunction, such as frigidity, impotence and premature ejaculation, can be easily unlearned.
3. Moods can be readily controlled
4. Depression can be cured by a change in conscious thinking or helped by medicine, not by childhood insights.
5. Optimism can be learned.

What You Can't Change:
1. Dieting almost never works in the long run.*
2. Kids don't become androgynous easily.
3. Alcoholism - no treatment significantly improves the natural course of recovery.
4. Homosexuality.

*Now, this isn't to say that you should eat whatever you want because dieting doesn't work. Noooo, it isn't that easy. Every body has a set natural weight that it fights to maintain. Starving yourself will work - you'll lose weight, but not for long. Your body readjusts its processes to conserve more energy, lower metabolism, do whatever it takes to regain the set point for your natural weight. And once you've dropped too low below your natural weight, your body remembers that it was once starved and, like our caveman ancestors, will store fat at a higher rate in preparation for the next famine. Eat to be healthy, and your body will find its own ideal weight.

Getting to Know All About You: Now that you, too, know what you can change and what you can't, what skills do you want to learn? BA Answer: increase my memory retention, improve my ability to identify flavors/smells, become friendlier and learn what to do with my hands when I dance. You?

June 24, 2007

Sunday Muffins: Strawberry-Orange Muffins

If you'll remember, before corn retaliated against my blog, I excitedly bought lots of strawberries, some at the grocery store and some from a little ol' lady in the health department parking lot. With those strawberries, I made muffins, even though it was the first week of June and May is actually National Strawberry month. I'm such a renegade, bending all the rules. The recipe includes a recipe for strawberry jam, which I also made, using the smaller and riper strawberries. The jam is really easy, especially for novice jam-makers like me. There was no need for pectin or paraffin or processing the canning jars. Nope, the recipe is really simple, but the jam is so delicious. It won't last long in the fridge, but it's so good that it wouldn't last long anyway.

My berries were ripening quickly, so I made up the wet batter several days in advance, to save the strawberries from getting too ripe. It was then very easy to mix together the muffin batter. The muffins baked up into a nice thick crumb texture, with a light but distinct strawberry flavor. Super.

Strawberry-Orange Muffins

1-¼ cups halved strawberries
3 tablespoons butter or stick margarine, melted
2 teaspoons grated orange rind
2 large eggs
1-½ cups all-purpose flour
1-¼ cups sugar
1 teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
Cooking spray
2 teaspoons sugar

Preheat oven to 400°.

Combine first 4 ingredients in a blender, and process just until blended. Lightly spoon flour into dry measuring cups; level with a knife.

Combine flour, 1 1/4 cups sugar, baking powder, and salt. Add strawberry mixture to flour mixture, stirring just until moist. Spoon batter into 12 muffin cups coated with cooking spray. Sprinkle with 2 teaspoons sugar.

Bake at 400° for 20 minutes or until muffins spring back when touched lightly in center. Remove from pan immediately.

Serve warm with Brandied Strawberry Jam.

Yield: 1 dozen (serving size: 1 muffin)

CALORIES 184 (20% from fat); FAT 4g (sat 2.1g,mono 1.2g,poly 0.3g); PROTEIN 2.8g; CHOLESTEROL 45mg; CALCIUM 33mg; SODIUM 179mg; FIBER 0.8g; IRON 1mg; CARBOHYDRATE 34.8g
Cooking Light, MAY 1999

Brandied Strawberry Jam

This easy jam doesn't involve canning. It will keep in the fridge for about two weeks.

4 cups quartered strawberries
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup brandy, divided
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Combine strawberries, sugar, and 3 tablespoons brandy in a heavy Dutch oven; bring to a boil. Reduce heat; simmer until reduced to 1 1/2 cups (about 45 minutes), stirring occasionally. Remove from heat; stir in 1 tablespoon brandy and vanilla. Spoon into a bowl; cool to room temperature. Cover and chill.

Yield: 1-1/2 cups (serving size: 1 tablespoon)

CALORIES 26 (3% from fat); FAT 0.1g (sat 0.0g,mono 0.0g,poly 0.1g); PROTEIN 0.2g; CHOLESTEROL 0.0mg; CALCIUM 4mg; SODIUM 0.0mg; FIBER 0.6g; IRON 0.1mg; CARBOHYDRATE 6g
Cooking Light, MAY 1999


May 11, 2007

Alphabetical Happiness

I can't believe that not a single one of you has a self-help book to recommend to me. Are you ashamed to admit you read self-help books, or do you think I'm so perfect that I need no improvement? Those are your only two options; choose one. Did you choose Blue Artichoke perfection? Thanks, but my bent pinkie fingers and poor memory keep me from achieving perfection, also my tendency toward inattention. Long ago, I ripped Authentic Happiness from audio CD to my computer and today transferred it to my fauxPod so I could listen to it while I worked solo all day. It wasn't until a few hours into the book that I realized it seemed really disjointed. I looked at my fauxPod and discovered that the chapters were reordered alphabetically when transferred! I finished listening to it that way and wondered how many other books could be improved upon by organizing chapters alphabetically instead of numerically or chronologically. I suppose I'll have to actually read the book as it was written to see which version I prefer, so that's another book added to my summer reading list.

Getting to Know All About You: What keeps you from achieving perfection?