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Natural Prozac: Learning to Release Your Body's Own Anti-Depressants
 
 
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Natural Prozac: Learning to Release Your Body's Own Anti-Depressants [Paperback]

Joel Robertson , Tom Monte
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Frequently Bought Together

Natural Prozac: Learning to Release Your Body's Own Anti-Depressants + Taming the Black Dog: How to Beat Depression - A Practical Manual for Sufferers, Their Relatives and Colleagues + Overcoming Depression: A guide to recovery with a complete self-help programme
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Product details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: HarperSanFrancisco; Reprint edition (18 May 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0062513540
  • ISBN-13: 978-0062513540
  • Product Dimensions: 20.2 x 13.5 x 1.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 340,297 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

More About the Authors

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Product Description

Product Description

For the millions who suffer depression, Natural Prozac prescribes a safe, effective, and completely drug-free solution.

Scientifically proven and easy to follow, Dr Joel Robertson’s groundbreaking lifestyle program makes a significant advance in treating and overcoming depression and its debilitating effects without drugs. With more than 21 million people now using Prozac and other anti-depressants worldwide, this book comprises an enormous breakthrough: an all-natural method anyone can use to regain control of their physical and emotional health.

Robertson, an expert in pharmacology and brain chemistry, has been using this method with remarkable success for more than twenty years. His approach uses the body’s own natural chemistry to restore the brain’s chemical balance and end the dangerous cycle of negative thought patterns and behaviour that cause depression to recur. With detailed instructions on developing a tailored program of diet and exercise, new techniques for understanding and breaking free of negative habits, and targeted exercises for burning up self-destructive chemicals. Natural Prozac gives every depression sufferer a new option.

From the Back Cover

'THE DRUG-FREE ALTERNATIVE TO ENDING DEPRESSION

'

"Depressed people cannot simply 'cheer up.' They suffer from a chemical imbalance in their central nervous system that is the source of their depression. Fortunately, balance can be restored, and that is the aim of this book…I will demonstrate how common behaviours can either maintain a brain-chemical imbalance and thus sustain depression or be used to balance our brain chemicals in order to overcome depression."- from 'Natural Prozac'

For millions of people, depression is an inescapable fact of daily life. Now, 'Natural Prozac' reveals how to break the debilitating grip of clinical depression by ending self-destructive patterns of thought and behaviour. This safe, easy-to-follow, and scientifically proven approach to natural healing addresses the root causes of depression, not just its symptoms, and offers a new way to restore the brain's natural
chemical balance without the use of prescription drugs.

'DR JOEL ROBERTSON, an internationally known expert on pharmacology and brain chemistry, helps readers: '

• develop a tailored program of diet and exercise that will restore natural balance to the brain's chemistry
• learn new techniques for understanding and breaking free of negative habits
• adopt behaviours that produce and promote beneficial brain chemistry
• use other natural methods to understand and overcome the cycle of depression, and
• establish a lifestyle that makes full use of the tools we each possess to control and improve our own psychological and emotional health

As director of The Robertson Institute, Dr Joel Robertson, author of Peak Performance Living, has provided performance enhancement programs and treatments
for clients including General Motors, United Airlines, the Detroit Red Wings, and many others.

Tom Monte is the bestselling coauthor of 'Recalled by Life', and a contributor to 'Life, Natural Health, New Age Journal, ' and 'Cosmopolitan. '


Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
In the blink of an eye, your brain interprets every expe you have and responds physically, intellectually, and emotionally, sending you a message that is at once infinitely complex and as simple as a single thought: "I feel good" or "happy" or "sad" or "safe" or "afraid" or "depressed" All your mem, abilities, talents, weaknesses, and potential as a human being lie within your brain. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent theoretical basics, little useful advice, 13 Jan 2011
By 
This review is from: Natural Prozac: Learning to Release Your Body's Own Anti-Depressants (Paperback)
This is a self-help book for people who suffer from depression. In everyday language, we sometimes say we're depressed when we're sad or something, but there are people for whom it's much more serious, who are feeling "down" more or less regularly, so that it seriously interferes with their life.

Dr. Robertson explains how that more or less permament kind of depression is caused by the imbalance of certain substances in the brain. According to the book, people can be divided in two types which have quite different brain chemistries, resulting in quite different personalities and lifestyle choices. Both can get depressed, but their depressions are of a very different nature. Dr. Robertson explains in detailed but accessible manner what is going on in a person's brain in each case. There is also a test to determine which type you might be.
Actually, getting to know about the very existence of that other type of people was a huge revelation for me. Thanks to Dr. Robertson, I can now understand many people much better than I used to.

The advice section of the book is mostly divided in two, according to the respective type of depression. The two seem to be similarly structured. I read just "my" half of it and it's no good at all. Dr. Robertson's numerous lifestyle tips tend to be common-sense and of very limited usefulness. For instance, have you ever heard that exercise is healthy? Or what good is the advice that one will feel better if one has found a sense of purpose? To say such a platitude to a depressed person is obvious mockery, like when a homeless person is in the pouring rain and you tell him that it might be a good idea to go indoors.
I won't waste your time with numerous objections I wrote on the pages of my copy of the book while reading, as they would make sense only to someone who has read the book. Let me just tell you that many of those spontaneous comments go along the lines "so what?", "it's easy for you to say", "fine, but what can I do about it?" and "HOW????". Quite a few things he suggests I am doing already and they have been of no help.
On pp 163-164, you can see a summary of Dr. Robertson's advice on healing one of the two kinds of depression. Every item of that "program" is either obvious ("avoid the television"), impossible to do ("develop a stronger sense of self"), or already done by me for a long time in vain ("writing daily in a journal").
In particular, the nutrition advice in this book (published in 1997) is badly flawed and outdated. Even more absurd are Mr. Robertson's suggestions how one or another type of music is supposed to affect people's mood. Some small children believe that when they close their eyes, the entire world goes dark. Dr. Robertson apparently believes that if Chopin's music makes him feel good, it makes every other human being feel good too.

From the positive side, I should mention that I sent the author a question about something I found puzzling in this book, and I was somewhat surprised to receive a clear and sensible explanation. So, the author seems to be a nice and intelligent person. That, unfortunately, doesn't change the fact that this book could have been much better.

What my good rating is for is an awesome writing exercise described in this book. I've been doing a lot of journalling for 20+ years, which is why I was very skeptical about it, but that particular exercise turned out to be really good. I was totally stuck in my personal development. Methods that I had been praising in my earlier reviews just wouldn't help me any further. I was seriously considering psychotherapy. But that writing exercise helped me put my life back on track.
To be precise, the exercise is from another book and Dr. Robertson describes it very briefly. But that's all you need in order to do the exercise. I browsed the other book and found it really unnecessary.

I should also mention that at the end of the book, there is a questionnaire which the readers are encouraged to fill out and send (with money) to the Robertson Insitute for evaluation. I asked them and they told me that that offer was no longer valid. You can only get the evaluation through a certified therapist or something.

After (or even instead of) this book, you might want to check out "The Edge Effect" by Eric Braverman. It's about brain chemistry and neurotransmitters in general, not just depression. However, that's the book in which I found practical advice which I have applied to come out of my depression. (But that's a long story which doesn't belong in this review.)
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5.0 out of 5 stars Best book read so far on the subject of depression, 18 Feb 2011
This review is from: Natural Prozac: Learning to Release Your Body's Own Anti-Depressants (Paperback)
Having suffered from depression for many years this is the first book I've read that has really nailed how I feel at times. The combined approach of diet/exercise/music/diary is really helping. I've always shyed away from trying music as therapy but find it really effective just to have some on in the background when I'm working or reading. I am learning to meditate and find myself no longer needing to use guided relaxation CDs which has widened the variety of music I can listen to the get the same effect. Well worth buying. I don't claim to have put all the dietary advice to use yet, changing to a semi vegetarian diet is a big change but I'm making gradual changes and feeling the benefit of those. In the longer term if it saves the need for drugs with all their side effects then it will be worth the effort.
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Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)

51 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars First real hope I've had in years, 14 May 2001
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Natural Prozac: Learning to Release Your Body's Own Anti-Depressants (Paperback)
As someone who has battled severe depression since late childhood, has a strong family history of depression/suicide, has read a lot on this subject, has seen a couple therapists, has tried several anti-depressants (60mg of Prozac right now is keeping me afloat but not improving), etc., my thoughts on this book are:

1) The theory behind this book dovetails with everything else I've read and experienced (not just about depression but about how behavior, diet, exercise, sleep, etc. impact metahormones and various aspects of health) and is argued persuasively. 2) The information is not just for people with mild depression; it applies even moreso to those of us who are severely depressed and therefore need to look deeper and work harder on the underlying issues that affect our brain chemistry and mood. 3) This book actually gave me hope, after almost 5 years of struggling against a major episode, including periods of not having the motivation to get out of bed or even to call someone to talk about it. It's the first book I have ever read that I could say that about, and I've read at least a dozen on depression. 4) The reason it gave me hope is two-fold: * I recognized myself utterly in his profile of the "satiation-depressed" personality down to the last detail, which gives me confidence he knows whereof he speaks, and * He supplies practical information on how to impact your brain chemistry over time--just as prolonged stress/trauma may have adjusted it to depressive chemistry--whether you're taking medication or not.

This is not a fad program, a money-making scheme, or bogus science. There is a test at the end of the book that you can submit for analysis for a fee, but it would only be necessary if you have a very unusual, intractable problem. Reading the book will give you a clear idea what the issues are, where you fall on the continuum, and a clear, detailed plan for change.

For example: You probably already know that exercise can improve your mood. But Dr. Robertson tells you what kind of exercise for how long for how often will boost which neurotransmitters--after he's helped you see which ones specifically need to be raised or lowered in your particular case.

Some people may take offense to being categorized, but that doesn't change whether the categorization is accurate or not. If you really have depression and you really want to change that, you can't afford not to read this book. Also highly recommended for family & friends trying to understand why personality, etc. is so affected in depressed people.

If this book speaks to you, you will also want to read BEYOND PROZAC, which covers more theory and more options, based soundly on experimental test data (e.g. exactly how to use light therapy effectively, detail on the impact & use of negative ions, etc.)


52 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A ray of hope for those suffering from depression., 22 Sep 1999
By Annie O'Keefe "Lover of Books" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Natural Prozac: Learning to Release Your Body's Own Anti-Depressants (Paperback)
I have suffered from depression for 30 years. I have been through therapy and have been on and off antidepressants for all those years. Whenever I attempt to "go off" medication, I end up depressed again and feeling defeated. I had given up hope of ever getting off medication until I read Dr. Robertson's book.

I always thought that there must be a connection between what I ate and my depression but none of my therapists and doctors ever suggested anything other than talking and taking medication. Also, I am a Psychiatriac Nurse and work in a mental hospital. I see firsthand what drugs can and cannot do and also the serious side effects of those drugs. Drugs and talk therapy can control symptoms in most people, but they do not cure. You stop the drugs, the symptoms return. Dr. Robertson is saying is that WE CAN BE CURED OF DEPRESSION through a program of diet, exercise, behavior modification, music, and the acitvities we choose! I have never heard a doctor say that before. After reading Dr. Robertson's book, I am filled with hope. In layman's terms, he describes how what we eat does contribute to our depression and also our own behaviors. He also goes into the different types of personalities, basically Type A and Type B, Arousal Type and Satiate Type. I am definatly type B.

Please read this book if you are depressed or if someone you love is depressed. You will not regret it.

I am making a serious effort to follow his guidelines. I have stopped smoking, I do some type of exercise every day, and I am changing my diet. I feel great. I am going to follow these guidelines for 2 months and then go see my doctor and talk with him about tapering me off my medication.

I would love to talk with others who have read this book and found it as helpful as I have or who tried and were not successful.


23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well Worth Considering, 3 Jun 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Natural Prozac: Learning to Release Your Body's Own Anti-Depressants (Paperback)
We're often inclined to look to medication to solve most health problems, including depression. While Robertson doesn't deny the value of the newer antidepressant drugs, he points out the side effects many experience on them, then suggests that natural mood boosters are worth considering to fight depression.

For example, he notes that complex carbohydrates naturally raise brain serotonin levels and feelings of well being. The complex carbs are superior in maintaining brain levels of serotonin more so than simple sugars (a candy bar, for example), because the complex carbs have long chains of amino acids that take longer to break down in the body, and thus provide a steadier stream of "feel good" nourishment.

He promotes exercise and sunshine as a way to feel better. I have tried many of his suggestions and feel he is on the right track. Even if you are already taking an antidepressant, you will likely find his suggestions helpful in beating depression. It's hard not to feel uplifted while on a walk on a sunny day, listening to a song that moves you, or eating food that truly nourishes you. Robertson reminds us not to ignore including these into our lives as mood boosters.

He asserts that over time, these better patterns of eating and living will change your brain chemistry as surely as a drug.

It's especially significant that he notes, in plain language, that sometimes sluggish depressed people may need dopamine (dopamine increases feelings of power), and overanxious depressed people may need more serotonin boosters. The book is basically about natural sources of each.

This book is a far cut above many "self help" books.

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