Thank you Dr. Ashton for helping me with your more-laughter challenge: this book had me cracking up, though not in the way I think she wanted. I was actually cackling throughout the book because after every single week, she's like, "From doing X thing for 5 more days, I felt lighter on my feet, happier, more focused, my skin was glowing even more, I looked younger, I was less stressed, etc." Girl what! That really happened 52 weeks in a row?! So you reached Enlightenment?? Sorry, correction: 48 weeks, because she did not do well at her sugar challenge and detailed how much she felt like crap at the end of those 4 weeks. Although, then at the end of that chapter, she's like, "I was uncontrollable re: sugar for the whole month but I stayed positive and the whole next month I only ate one single bite of sugar." And then she immediately moves to the next topic like she didn't just completely flip her worst habit. I'm so confused.
To be clear, if she really felt that positive for the vast majority of the year, I'm happy for her. Especially after what happened with her ex-husband, she deserves some Enlightenment. It just doesn't seem super plausible. But to be honest, I don't really care because it was so entertaining. Also, she really almost convinced me to try meditating, so she deserves a shout out for that. Didn't quite get me, but came closer than anyone else.
Small annoyances include talking about being "meat-free" while detailing all the chicken and fish she was eating—girl do you need me to define "animal" for you?—and how much she talked about how helpful it can be if we get our Instagram followers in on our challenges—we don't all have 300k followers, it's not the same.
Actual problems include saying that anyone can do a push up. Do I really need to explain why this is a problem.