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A Physical Education: How I Escaped Diet Culture and Gained the Power of Lifting

A Physical Education: How I Escaped Diet Culture and Gained the Power of Lifting

by Casey Johnston

Grand Central Publishing ·2025 ·272 pages
New Release
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
I Index
49/99
Near the Top

60/99

Critics' Rating Index

Maybe Someday

38/99

Readers' Rating Index

n/a

Scholars' Citation Index

34/99

Volume of Reviews

81/99

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About This Book

From the most visible woman writing about weightlifting today, a memoir and manifesto about how lifting helped dissolve her allegiance to diet culture; taught her to be at home in her body; and led her to grow every kind of strength. In A Physical Education, Casey Johnston recounts how she ventured into the brave new world of weightlifting, leaving behind years of restrictive eating and endless cardio. Woven through the trajectory of how she rebuilt her strength and confidence is a staggering exposé of the damaging doctrine spread by diet and fitness culture. Johnston's story dives deep into her own past relationships with calorie restriction, cardio, and codependency. As she progresses on her weightlifting journey, carrying groceries and closing heavy doors become easier. She eats to fuel her growing strength, and her cravings vanish. Her physical progress fuels a growing how mainstream messaging she received about women's bodies was always less about transformation and more about preserving the status quo. Having previously been convinced that physical improvement was a matter of suffering, now she learns it requires self-regard, and patience. Ultimately, she is dazzled by what a little pushing at a time adds up the reawakening of parts of herself she didn't even know were there.A Physical Education asks why so many of us spend our lives trying to "get healthy" by actively making our bodies weaker. Casey Johnston is a voice for those of us who feel underdeveloped and unfulfilled in our bodies, for all of us looking to come home to ourselves.


Reviews

"Johnston...effectively simplifies the science of weight lifting for a layperson, and peppers the narrative with charming anecdotes that chart her growing strength ..."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Weight lifting has stuck, for me and I think for Johnston, because it can also change the way one thinks about achievement."

Julie Beck· The Atlantic Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Johnston's prose slips down like a juicy post-workout burger ..."

Sarah Ditum· The Times (UK) Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"There is...something misaligned about the plotted awakening that Johnston charts in her book, whose plain sentences conform to the recognizable beats of 'before' and 'after.'"

Lauren Michele Jackson· The New Yorker Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

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