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Metabolic Freedom is a 2025 health book by Ben Azadi. Its full subtitle is A 30-Day Guide to Restore Your Metabolism, Heal Hormones & Burn Fat. It focuses on metabolic health through fasting, ketogenic nutrition, sleep, exercise, circadian rhythm, and reducing processed foods. The book positions poor metabolic health as a root cause of weight gain, fatigue, and hormonal imbalance, and proposes a structured 30-day reset. (PenguinRandomhouse.com) (Random House Books)
Key themes:
Intermittent fasting as a tool for improving insulin sensitivity
Ketosis and fat adaptation for metabolic flexibility
Hormone regulation (insulin, cortisol, leptin)
Lifestyle biohacks like morning sunlight, sleep optimisation, and movement
Whole-food nutrition over calorie-counting
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The 30-day plan in Metabolic Freedom by Ben Azadi is structured as a progressive metabolic “reset,” moving you from stabilising blood sugar to becoming fat-adapted and metabolically flexible.
Here’s the simplified structure:
Focus is on removing metabolic stressors and preparing the body.
Cut out ultra-processed foods and added sugar
Emphasise whole foods (protein, healthy fats, vegetables)
Start gentle intermittent fasting (often 12–14 hours overnight)
Prioritise sleep and hydration
Begin daily movement (walking, light exercise)
The goal is to shift energy use away from glucose dependence.
Increase fasting window (often 14–16 hours)
Lower carbohydrate intake further (moving toward keto-style eating)
Increase healthy fats (avocado, olive oil, eggs, fish)
Stabilise electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium)
Continue light–moderate exercise
This phase pushes the body into stronger fat-burning mode.
More consistent 16-hour fasting (sometimes longer depending on adaptation)
Carb intake kept low to maintain ketosis
Improved energy stability and reduced cravings expected
Incorporation of higher-intensity exercise (if energy allows)
Strong focus on circadian rhythm (morning sunlight, no late-night eating)
The final phase focuses on sustainability and flexibility.
Experiment with longer fasts (occasionally 18–24 hours, if appropriate)
Identify your personal carb tolerance (“metabolic flexibility”)
Build a long-term eating pattern rather than strict rules
Reinforce habits: sleep, stress reduction, movement
Aim for stable energy, reduced cravings, and consistent fat-burning ability
Rather than just dieting, the program is designed to:
retrain your body to switch efficiently between fuel sources (glucose ↔ fat)
reduce insulin resistance
stabilise hunger signals and energy levels
If you want, I can turn this into a daily checklist, or explain whether it actually works based on current nutrition evidence.
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If you mean the poet Charles Wright, one of his most striking lines on death is:
“Out of any two thoughts I have, one is devoted to death.” (Goodreads)
It’s powerful because it treats death not as an event, but as a constant companion to consciousness.
Another beautiful, more elegiac one:
“We disappear as stars do, soundless, without a trace.” (Goodreads)
That one feels especially fitting if you’re looking for something reflective, minimalist, and haunting.
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If you mean How Not to Kill Yourself: A Portrait of the Suicidal Mind by Clancy Martin:
It’s a memoir-philosophy hybrid published in 2023. Martin writes very directly about living with chronic suicidal ideation, addiction, and more than ten suicide attempts, while weaving in philosophy (Seneca, Nietzsche, Camus, Jean Améry) and literature to examine why people want to die—and what keeps them alive. (Wikipedia) (Google Books)
A few things that make it stand out:
Unusually candid: it doesn’t sanitize suicidal thinking.
Not a “self-help” manual: it’s reflective, messy, intellectual, and personal.
Practical in places: the later sections include concrete anti-suicide strategies and what Martin found useful. (Wikipedia)
Often recommended by readers with lived experience, especially for feeling “seen.” (Reddit) (Reddit)
Who it’s for:
People interested in memoir + philosophy
Readers who want an honest account of suicidal thinking
Clinicians or loved ones trying to understand that mental state
Who it may be hard for:
If you’re currently in acute crisis, it can be intense and potentially triggering.
If you were asking because you’re considering reading it, I can also suggest similar books depending on what you want—more philosophical, more comforting, or more practical.
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If you want a chapter-by-chapter anecdote + tagline for How Not to Kill Yourself, I should note that editions vary and I don’t have the exact table of contents in front of me. If you paste the chapter titles (or a photo of the contents page), I can break down each chapter precisely.
For now, here’s a thematic chapterwise-style breakdown of the book’s arc:
Anecdote: Martin describes early experiences of despair and the realization that suicide wasn’t just an abstract idea—it became a possibility in his mental landscape.
Tagline: “The idea of escape arrives long before the act.”
Anecdote: He explains how suicidal ideation can become habitual—almost like background noise—rather than dramatic crisis.
Tagline: “Sometimes survival is carrying death quietly.”
Anecdote: Martin recounts multiple attempts, not sensationally, but as fragmented episodes of pain, confusion, and interrupted endings.
Tagline: “The body survives what the mind rejects.”
Anecdote: He turns to Friedrich Nietzsche, Albert Camus, and Seneca, not for answers, but for company.
Tagline: “Thought can’t cure pain, but it can name it.”
Anecdote: Substance abuse appears not as separate from suicide, but often as its slower sibling.
Tagline: “Not all suicides happen at once.”
Anecdote: Relationships complicate the desire to die—sometimes anchoring him, sometimes intensifying guilt.
Tagline: “Love binds, but it also burdens.”
Anecdote: Martin begins assembling practical reasons not to die—not grand meanings, but small commitments.
Tagline: “Survival is often built on ordinary reasons.”
Anecdote: The book ends without triumph. He doesn’t “beat” suicidality; he learns to coexist with it.
Tagline: “Healing is not the end of pain, but a new way of holding it.”
This book’s central thesis could be summed up as:
“You do not need to love life completely in order to keep living.”
If you want the actual chapter titles decoded one by one, send me the contents page.
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Absolutely, Bobby — here is a chapter‑wise set of anecdotes + taglines for Jason Fung × The Hunger Code.
These are original, clinically meaningful, and true to the themes of the book, without reproducing copyrighted text.
Each chapter gets:
I’ve also embedded Guided Links so you can jump into any theme instantly.
Anecdote:
A child moves from Japan to the U.S. Thin on arrival, heavier each year — not because he changed, but because the environment did.
Tagline:
“It’s not you — it’s the environment.”
Explore: obesogenic environment
Anecdote:
A teenager eats crisps while gaming, not from hunger but from habit — the hand‑to‑mouth loop runs on autopilot.
Tagline:
“Hunger is often a reflex, not a need.”
Explore: conditioned hunger
Anecdote:
A parent wonders why their child is “always hungry” — until they realise it’s hedonic hunger triggered by screens and snacks.
Tagline:
“Know your hunger, or it will control you.”
Explore: hedonic hunger
Anecdote:
A boy eats a bowl of cereal and is starving an hour later — the food filled his stomach but not his hormones.
Tagline:
“UPFs feed cravings, not humans.”
Explore: UPFs and hunger
Anecdote:
A girl starts running because her best friend does — and starts snacking because her new friends do.
Tagline:
“We copy the tribe we eat with.”
Explore: social modelling
Anecdote:
A 1970s family eats three meals at the table; a 2020s family grazes all day. Only one of them struggles with weight.
Tagline:
“When the default is ‘not eating,’ weight loss happens by itself.”
Explore: structured eating
Anecdote:
A child who snacks constantly never enters the fasted state — the body never gets the signal to burn fat.
Tagline:
“You burn fat only when you’re not eating.”
Explore: fed vs fasted
Anecdote:
A woman stops snacking and cuts UPFs — without adding anything new — and her hunger normalises for the first time in years.
Tagline:
“Subtract the harmful; the body does the rest.”
Explore: Via Negativa
Anecdote:
A man tries to “eat clean” but keeps snacking. Once he follows the Golden Rules — early meals, no snacks, real food — his appetite finally quietens.
Tagline:
“Simple rules beat complicated diets.”
Explore: Golden Rules
Anecdote:
A girl discovers that soup, vinegar, and protein first make her feel full for hours — and she stops thinking about food.
Tagline:
“Use biology, not willpower.”
Explore: satiety tools
Anecdote:
A man who snacks six times a day tries a 14‑hour fast — and realises he wasn’t hungry, he was conditioned.
Tagline:
“Fasting resets the hunger system.”
Explore: fasting basics
Anecdote:
Three patients lose weight for three different reasons: one cuts sugar, one heals trauma, one stops snacking.
Tagline:
“Obesity has many roots — and many solutions.”
Explore: multifactorial obesity
Anecdote:
A mother stops blaming her child for overeating once she understands the biology — and the whole family heals.
Tagline:
“When we understand, we stop blaming.”
Explore: compassion in obesity