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Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Hardback English

The Kitchen Shrink: How the food we eat is the key to how we love

A FINANCIAL TIMES BOOK OF THE YEAR

By Dr Andrea Oskis

Regular price £18.99 £16.14 Save 15%
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15% off

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Hardback English

The Kitchen Shrink: How the food we eat is the key to how we love

A FINANCIAL TIMES BOOK OF THE YEAR

By Dr Andrea Oskis

Regular price £18.99 £16.14 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
Dispatched tomorrow with Tracked Delivery, free over £15
Delivery expected between Friday, 31st October and Saturday, 1st November
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  • 'Poignant and often sad, the stories of Oskis’s patients peel back the layers of the human mind and our attachment to people and things... What becomes clear as consommé is that food is humanity’s original and universal love language' The Mail on Sunday 'Dr Oskis shows us that what’s on our plate speaks volumes about our hearts' Suzy Walker, Muddy Stilettos There is no better way to understand ourselves and our relationships with others than through what we eat. Me: ‘When did you know he didn’t love you anymore?’ My patient: ‘It wasn’t when we stopped having sex. No, it was when he stopped eating dinner with me.’ That was the lightbulb moment. That was when I discovered there is no better way to get inside people’s lives than through their stories about food. Did you know that the food we eat reveals a lot about how we love? Psychologist Dr Andrea Oskis shows us how we connect with each other and how we can change our relationship ‘recipes’ for the better. Along the way, she also reveals her own food story about love and loss. Inviting us into her therapy room, she tells us: the real reason why comfort food comforts why dessert isn’t a good idea when you’re stressed what makes children feel obliged to eat their greens why you should never give a bottle of hot sauce to someone who has been rejected Be prepared to never look at your plate in the same way again.
'Poignant and often sad, the stories of Oskis’s patients peel back the layers of the human mind and our attachment to people and things... What becomes clear as consommé is that food is humanity’s original and universal love language' The Mail on Sunday 'Dr Oskis shows us that what’s on our plate speaks volumes about our hearts' Suzy Walker, Muddy Stilettos There is no better way to understand ourselves and our relationships with others than through what we eat. Me: ‘When did you know he didn’t love you anymore?’ My patient: ‘It wasn’t when we stopped having sex. No, it was when he stopped eating dinner with me.’ That was the lightbulb moment. That was when I discovered there is no better way to get inside people’s lives than through their stories about food. Did you know that the food we eat reveals a lot about how we love? Psychologist Dr Andrea Oskis shows us how we connect with each other and how we can change our relationship ‘recipes’ for the better. Along the way, she also reveals her own food story about love and loss. Inviting us into her therapy room, she tells us: the real reason why comfort food comforts why dessert isn’t a good idea when you’re stressed what makes children feel obliged to eat their greens why you should never give a bottle of hot sauce to someone who has been rejected Be prepared to never look at your plate in the same way again.