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Author Archive for Lisa Edwards



Body Mind Mastery by Dan Millman

by Lisa Edwards on October 5th, 2012
Body Mind Mastery by Dan Millman Cover Image

“Those who believe they can and those who believe they can’t are both right.” -Henry Ford.

Not long ago I heard someone mention metacognition and “thinking about thinking.” It sounded convoluted and a little bit too spiritual for my grasp, but something about it stuck in my head. What I eventually gathered from it was the awareness involved while learning something new. With the mental training I’ve read about, this was something I wanted to learn more about, and the book Body Mind Mastery by Dan Millman was the perfect discovery.

Millman was once a world trampoline champion, gymnastics coach, speaker, and has written several books. His approach to training, work, doing the dishes, and everything else, is to use the mind and body as one to master life. He helps readers take the sum of their parts and create a stronger whole, encouraging the “peaceful warrior” within.

A lot of what he touches on is mental training topics that I’ve come across before, but he does it with a spiritual flare. He is a firm believer in yoga, T’ai Chi, and meditation. He talks about matters of the mind in ways that are a bit intangible and hard for readers to take serious at times, but opening up to everything he says helps drive his points home. You may start the book warily as he talks about natural laws and flowing energies, and end the book Googling the local Aikido club.

It’s split into three parts with the first preparing you to think about how the body works, and building awareness and mental readiness to work in accordance with your body. Most of what he talks about seems like obvious things but explains why they are effective and has personal experience to back it up. His stories could be completely made up, but you believe them and are inspired either way.

The second part talks about how to train with your body AND mind. He shows how important it is to mold your mental game and maintain a clear, positive mind. This section is probably the one that I took the most away from, and applied to other parts of my life. As he mentions, this book is not strictly for the athlete, but something to apply to general life as well. In multiple chapters he talks about awareness, and the idea of not letting our emotions hold us back struck a chord with me. The idea of acknowledging a negative emotion and just letting it go was so simple, yet a mind-blowing concept for me.

The third part covers fitness, enhancing practice, and competition. His experience and obvious research shines through to the end of the book and brings to light the importance of staying physically fit and mentally sharp. At times it does feel like he is just stringing together a bunch of inspirational quotes that you would see on the walls of training rooms, but they apply and work with what he says, so you ignore the cheesiness of his inspiration regurgitation. The interesting thing is that he doesn’t only quote sports icons, but philosophers, writers, politicians and more. Again indicating that this awareness and self-control of one’s body and mind can be practiced in all parts of life.

When I finally finished the book, I wanted to go back and reread the beginning with more awareness. It’s definitely a book that has impacted my way of thinking and I would undoubtedly pick up another book by him.

“Fear, anger, and sorrow are all parts of life. You can’t make them go away by wishing it. Emotions pass like clouds in the sky. Meanwhile, you always have the power to choose how you will respond. You may feel afraid, but you don’t have to behave fearfully. Emotions are not destiny.” -Dan Millman

3 Quick Non-Fiction Picks

by Lisa Edwards on July 30th, 2012
3 Quick Non-Fiction Picks Cover Image

The Iowa City Public Library is happy to welcome its first Guest Blogger, Lisa Edwards.

Growing up, I almost always had a book with me and made time to read often. I loved getting lost in fiction stories, and never thought I would be one for non-fiction books. I thought biographies would be stuffy and boring, and why would I research anything outside of school? As I got older, I got busier (or lazier), and had a hard time even finishing readings for class, so my library card became lonely.

Now that I’ve gone through the motions and graduated college, I find myself craving books and regret skimping on homework in school. Motivated by interests and desire for knowledge, I’ve wandered into the non-fiction section more in the past year than I have in most of my five years of college. From autobiographies to athletic training, I’ve hit a range of topics lately, and I’m going to touch on three of my recent favorites.

10-Minute Toughness: The Mental Exercise Program for Winning Before the Game Begins by Jason Selk – I’ve always been naturally athletic, and very competitive, so I never thought it would be my head that would trip up my feet. A year after living in Iowa City, I joined the Old Capitol City Roller Girls and am now in my fourth year with them. As a chaotic, hard-hitting sport, I knew that I would physically get frustrated, but was utterly paralyzed during a couple of bouts when I mentally gave up. Knowing there was a deeper problem, I set off to the Library in search of sports psychology books. I came across Selk’s book and absolutely loved it. He is not only a performance coach for many professional and Olympic athletes, but provides mental training for the business world as well.

He lays out a very thorough, yet simple plan to help get your mental game into tip-top shape. With a clearer mind and goals to focus on, he helps you get mentally aligned before you ever step on the track/court/field. Even if you don’t follow his exact steps, his stories and words are inspiring and help you train in a different light. Everything he teaches can be applied to life outside of athletics as well.

Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex by Mary Roach – This book I picked up and put down multiple times over the last year. It wasn’t that I didn’t like it, I just had limited time and it was one of those reads that you could just pick up randomly. I was dying to finish it though, and that’s why I started it with a book in hand and finished it through an audiobook (Both available in the Library). Roach managed to write almost purely scientific, yet with a touch of humor, and kept it very interesting. I suppose it didn’t hurt that her topic was sex.

Sex is obviously a controversial subject and taboo to talk about depending on what decade or culture you live in. You probably never stop to think how so much knowledge about our sexual bodies has come to be, or how those experiments played out. Roach delves into that research and reveals how hard it was (and is) for researchers to be taken seriously about the one topic that drives human life. She traveled all over the world to various libraries, research labs, and pig farms (yes, pigs) to cure her every curiosity. She goes so far as to throw her and her husband into an MRI machine for an experiment. Pick it up for the laughs, and walk away with a little bit more knowledge about your body.

Nerd do well: A small boy’s journey to becoming a big kid by Simon Pegg. I got over my fear of biographies, thinking that they all would read like a history book, by reading a string of books by comedians. Pegg’s autobiography translated his life story in a unique way, by adding a touch of comicly-exaggerated prose, depicting him as a dashing superhero with a robot butler. The chapters would go back and forth between his real life and this imagined one.

I found myself connecting the dots with his background on becoming a comedian, creating Shaun of the Dead, and many other cinematic endeavors. I also found myself dying to know what would happen next in his fiction chapters. After reading this, I feel more inspired to go after what I really want in life. It’s hopeful to hear stories about how people get from one place in their life to another, and reminds me to be patient and keep working hard.

Lisa Edwards is a member of the Old Capitol City Roller Girls. She works as a production assistant and a barista. Edwards is known as Left 4 Deadwards on the flat track, and writes her own blog about roller derby: deadwards.blogspot.com.

About Lisa Edwards

Lisa Edwards
Where you would find me in the Library: Non-fiction. Since I've joined roller derby I have been researching everything from coaching and training to marketing.

I came to Iowa City for school, graduated with a BFA in Intermedia and now I work as a production assistant for the morning news and also as a barista (to compensate for the lack of sleep). I'm known as Left 4 Deadwards on the flat track, and write my own blog about roller derby. When (if) I have spare time, I like to shoot and edit video or squeeze in a few books.

My blog: http://deadwards.blogspot.com

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