HalfAssed A WeightLoss Memoir

Memoir, of course, is a venerable genre. It’s been around a while. The

first guy to hunker down and scratch a few words in the dirt, ten to one

he was writing in regards to himself. Here’s what I saw, here’s what I felt.

Judging by recent headlines, however, the breed is in the midst of taking

a beating. Poor James Frey in his million little maligned pieces, the

latest bad-assed spoiled rich kid to bleed all the way to the bank. What

is it when it comes to telling our own story that makes us want to

oversensationalize, inflate our own egos with endless puffs of hot air?

Augusten Burroughs, running with the scissors that his foster family

swears up and down were fabrications. Is it insecurity? Maybe our own

lives actually aren’t that important. Even here in Montana, Judy Blunt

probably will have to have thought twice before writing that scene when it comes to her

father-in-law going after her typewriter with a sledgehammer.

In this cynical atmosphere, the new essay by Tom Groneberg, One

Good Horse, (Scribner, $24) is a kind of palliative. It’s like running into a

buddy you haven’t seen for a while, arguing regarding who may buy the introductory

round. Ostensibly the story of a novice cowboy’s basi foray into horse

training, it’s rather more the portrait of a life, a cross-section of the

quotidian struggles that make up the humane condition. Like another

instant Montana classic of memoir, Fred Haefele’s Rebuilding the

Indian, Groneberg uses his narrative armature, his horse training, as an

entrée into substantially more spectacular issues. For instance: What does it mean

to be a father, a husband, a friend? What are the duties that we fetch to

our lives, and what are our rewards?

“I think, perchance for the primary time, that I ought to have my own horse. If I

walked out into a pasture with a halter, it would nicker and trot toward

me. I wouldn’t have to determine which horse to saddle, which animal to

trust. If I had a good horse, I could give it my life. I could ride it for years.

We could grow old together. Then I would give it to Carter [his son]. His

own horse, to ride, to have, because I know I will not always be there for

him.”

Superficially, it’s true that the average, page-flipping and blurb-reading

browser might waffle over One Good Horse. The veneer of it is all with regards to

karaoke bars and occupation hunting, mornings expended feeding out bales of hay

and an evening or two with the in-laws. Dig a little deeper, though, and

you come to see, within these intimate totems, compelling reductions of

all our days. As opposed to the over-sensationalized, truth-hedging

memoirs that now top the bestseller list, Groneberg’s narrative quietly

communicates a real sense of generosity, a vision of merely doing the

best you can, making a hand out of the cards you’ve been dealt. It is,

more than anything else, a calm meditation on relationships: A man to

his horse, his friends, his family, his community.

Still in the midst of resetting his dials after losing both his ranch and then

his job, he writes, “Maybe I may get a colt and do not forget what it is I love

about being out in the west. The pieces of my life will fall into place

again and everything will make sense.” Shortly thereafter, he comes

across another memoir, Teddy “Blue” Abbott’s We Pointed Them North.

One of the tent poles of Montana’s literary canon, Groneberg uses

WPTN as a counterpoint, describing it is narrative to us in pieces, subtly

couching his own experiences in the larger, historical context of Teddy

Blue’s example. Groneberg aspires to being a cowboy in a long line of

cowboys, a writer in an established tradition of western writers, and

Teddy Blue gives him a place to hitch his figurative horse. “What can’t

be reclaimed is the hole in my story, the empty space on that line that

used to read ‘cowboy’ or ‘ranch hand’ or ‘man with horse.’ I need a new

story.”

And so we’ve started out with these two messages that tells the particulars of an act or occurrence or course of events threads, firstborn one and

then the other – Groneberg’s horse training, and now Teddy Blue’s tale.

We’re shortly given a third: The untimely birth of Groneberg’s twin

sons. “I phone grandparents and deliver the news. Carter watches

cartoons. Jennifer nods off. Time disappears. In the tiny kitchen all over

the hall from Jennifer’s room, I raid the refrigerator for little packs of

chocolate pudding, cups of ice chips, half-sized cans of lemon-lime

soda and ginger ale. Just before dinner, I scrub my hands and put on

another gown and visit the boys again. Someone has taped a card over

each isolette, one reading Avery, the other Bennett. This is me, I think.

This is my life.”

The pediatrician, “a convinced doctor, reassuring, with short strawberry

blond hair and a warm smile,” says, “‘I’d like to do a good deal of tests on Avery.”

She explains that “there is a peculiar crease in his palm that she is

concerned about, and that his ears seem to be set a little low on his

face.” As privileged readers, we discover, together with Groneberg and

his wife, that their finelooking new son has been born with Down

syndrome. “Jennifer and I hold each other and we cry. We mourn for

Avery, for his future. Or possibly our sadness is for ourselves, for the loss

of who we thought we were. We thought it didn’t matter, this notion of

perfect children. At less than a week old, Avery has been labeled,

limited, his life foreclosed on, his future told by a crease in his tiny palm.”

It is a measure of the strength muscling through Groneberg’s

deceptively simple prose that our hearts break right along with theirs.

In tackling memoir, it’s not sufficient to say that one has merely lived, that

you were here next door, microwaving leftovers and filling parking

spaces. You’re asking a finish stranger to spend time with your life,

after all; you need to convince them that something here is important.

Fame does the trick, á la Bill and Hillary Clinton, George Carlin.

Travelogues have wheels as well (although less so now than before,

what with all the deserts having already been explored). Harrowing

experiences (drugs, sexual abuse) and professional skillfulness both

usually suffice. But it is, to my mind, much more difficult to write a

compelling story out of the bare bones of the unexceptional. Here is a

view of the world from where I’m standing, and it’s one I’d like to share.

A slim sufficient book (considering the roiling issues in the subtext), and

conversational, adept in it is voice, One Good Horse is ultimately that rarest

of literary creations: It’s true.


Halfassed A Weightloss Memoir

After undergoing gall bladder surgery at age twenty-three, Jennette Fulda decisive it was time to lose a great deal of weight. Actually, more like half her weight. At the time, Jennette weighed 372 pounds.

Jennette was not born fat. But, by fifth grade, her response to a school questionnaire asking “what would you alter in regards to your appearance” was “I would be thinner.” Sound familiar?

Half-Assed is the captivating and fantastically honorable story of Jennette’s journeying to get in shape, lose weight, and modify her life. From the beginning—dusting off her never-used treadmill and steering clear of the donut shop—to the end with her goal weight in sight, Jennette wows readers with her determined persistence to shed pounds and the capacity to maintain her ever-present sense of self.

Review”In this touching, funny, and sincere story, Jennette Fulda, who was once 372 pounds, recounts her lifelong struggle with her weight- basi accepting it, then losing half of it.” — Shape Magazine, August 2008

Blogger Fulda explains how she lost 186 pounds. In January 2005, she weighed twice that. A year earlier, after having her gallbladder got rid of at the age of 23, she’d realized her weight was threatening her life and vowed to get into shape. “Only I didn’t,” she writes. “I stayed fat for at least another year. Wake up call received. Snooze button pushed.” Fulda did in the end take control, altering her eating habits and taking up exercise: original walking, then jogging, then a combining of jogging, pilates and weight training. She started a blog, “Half of Me,” to chronicle her progress. As of February 2007, she had lost half her body weight; in the final chapter, she writes that she’s within 15 pounds of her goal weight (160 pounds) but warns, “I may have lost the weight, but it could still find me again.” Fulda provides a reasonable amount of weight-loss data only the diet-and-fitness-obsessed could actually love, but the book is redeemed by the engaging account of her personal history interwoven throughout. In a conversational and honorable voice, she describes tackling the age-old paradox of attempting to receive herself while likewise attempting to change. This dialectical procedure caused her to run afoul of online “fat acceptance” communities, which work to decrease the marginalization of the overweight and the obese. “If I in truth accepted myself as I was, it meant I’d recognized who I was to the best of my ability, flaws and all,” writes Fulda. “It didn’t mean I was inevitably satisfied with all the materials that made the house of me.” A winsome, charming essay of personal discovery. — Kirkus Reviews, Feb. 15, 2008

Following Indianapolis-based blogger Jennette Fulda’s traveling to lose almost two-thirds of herself is so inspiring you’ll fill your cart with not one thing but turkey cutlets and cruciferous vegetables for weeks. At age 24, she weighed 372 pounds. “The truth is,” she writes, “I was a big, fat cliche.” Despite a good deal of in an emotional manner heavy moments, Fulda’s biting humor and no-holds-barred frankly keep you turning the pages. — Women’s Health, July 2008


Most helpful customer reviews

83 of 113 people found the following review helpful.
5Her rear is tiny, her life is big
By Book Maven
I’m a sucker for a good before and after tale. Lucky for me, this memoir is so much more. Fulda chronicles her amazing 186+ weight loss, more than half of her starting weight. But she does more than just show us her weight loss; she describes her relationship with her body and with her daily habits with such wit and humor that I laughed out loud dozens of times. The pace is quick, and the content is interesting (no daily diet plans or lists of gym workouts here).

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
5Dog Ears Throughout!
By Nicholas R. Miller
I can always tell how much I like a book by how fast I read it, and how much I abuse it. I received this book, and within 24hours I was turning the last page. Hours would slip by as I was reading Jeannette’s witty, charming and honest portrayal of the weight loss journey. Other reviewers have pointed out that is wasn’t ‘inspirational’ to them, or they couldn’t relate – or she didn’t give enough advice for them – but for me none of that was an issue.

I am a 29yo man who has had (and continues to have) a battle with weight similar to Jeanette’s. It was so nice and refreshing to have someone say all of the things in my brain without me having to say them. She had me in stitches when she said she couldn’t just throw all of her junk food out, and needed to start a ‘bundt cake relocation program’. I also liked how a topic she came back to a few times was that as a heavier woman she always felt that skinny people were judging her, and when she lost the weight she felt that heavier people were judging her – dealing with our fear of other’s judgement. Another topic that I could really relate to was when she talked about the ‘FA’ (Fat acceptance) clubs throwing her out cause she wanted to lose weight to be healthy.

No matter what Jeanette is writing about, she does it with a dry wit that can’t help but make you laugh. If you are looking for a how to book, or a quick fix – this ultimately isn’t for you – but if you are looking to comiserate about the internal struggle with weight loss, then pull up a bowl of sugar free Jell-o and crack the spine.

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