Product Details
Father Hunger: Fathers, Daughters and Food

Father Hunger: Fathers, Daughters and Food
By Margo Maine

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


124 new or used available from $0.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

"Father Hunger" is the emptiness experienced by women whose fathers are/were emotionally absent, a void that leads to unrealistic body image, yo-yo dieting, food fears and disordered eating patterns. "Father Hunger" is a common phenomenon of Western culture, whose dictates and myths limit a father's role, creating a loss for all family members. Dr. Maine also discusses practical solutions to help readers understand and improve their father/daughter relationships and help families reconnect.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #653582 in Books
  • Published on: 1991-11
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 254 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"A remarkable book, for its clinical insights for therapists and also for its clearly described path of healing." -- John P. Foreyt, Ph.D., co-author of Handbook of Eating Disorders

"Healthy, well-balanced advice to family members and health practitioners. A book well worth reading." -- Laura Hill, Ph.D., Dir. of Educ., National Eating Disorders Organization

"I found the book to be 'carefronting' in relationship to my own married daughter and granddaughter..." -- Ralph Earl, Ph.D., Past-President AAMFT

Review

"This powerful book explains how a father's emotional or physical absence can contribute to a daughter's eating problems, body dissatisfaction, and low self-esteem."
Lindsey Hall author of BULIMIA: A Guide to Recovery and Self-Esteem: Tools for Recovery

"Fact one: Dads tend to withdraw from girls during adolescence. Fact two: Adolescent girls too often develop unhealthy eating behaviors. Put these two ideas together and you get a fascinating book called Father Hunger."
Daughters: A newsletter for parents of girls ages 8-18

About the Author
Margo Maine, Ph.D., a senior editor of Eating Disorders: The Journal of Treatment and Prevention, is a clinical psychologist and Director of The Eating Disorders Program at the Institute of Living in Hartford, CT. A lecturer and researcher, she was clinical consultant for the Blue Ribbon Award for Excellence winning film, Wasting Away, and is past -president of Eating Disorders Awareness and Prevention, Inc.


Customer Reviews

Very Freeing5
There are so many self help books about the father wound. Most of them leave me intellectually stimulated but emotionally empty.

This book is different.

Dr. Maine speaks plainly and emotionally in this book. I haven't read all of it yet, but the parts I have read captured my feelings about my father perfectly. It explains his role--or lack thereof in my life--and it fosters me in my quest to mourn the void that I have inside due to his neglect and emotional absence.

The best part of the book is the statement that we must accept and change the role that society has foistered onto men. Men have been required to distance themselves from their emotions and to not have deep and intimate attachments. As such, when they become fathers, the experience requires intimacy on a much deeper level than they are accustomed to and often, they fail. In healing the father wound, we come to realize that it's not just ourselves that must heal, but our fathers also.

Because it is by encouraging men to heal and reconnect with themselves that they will ultimately reconnect with us.

Buy this book. Share with your friends. Tell anyone who will listen. Get healed, be free and do what we should have been doing all along with our fathers: enjoy one another.

Excellent5
This book is different from most eating disorder books because of its focus on the father. It really gives you a new perspective on how fathers are actually involved in a daughter's life without actually doing anything. As a recovering anorexic and bulimic, I found this book helpful in opening my mind up about the complex interactions that helped form my problems. Understanding the root of the problem makes solving it easier (but still not that easy)

This explains a lot4
Fathers of daughters with eating disorders need help understanding the disorder and how to overcome their frustration with not being able to "fix" their daughter. This book opens the door to begin the process of restoring a more normal and effective role for the father.

While not the most "user friendly" writing style for the non-professional, it is easily understood and offers much information to help men (and the women they love) deal effectively with everyone impacted by the eating disorder...themselves, their spouse and, most importantly, their child.

Although I am a physician, I am also the father of a daughter with an eating disorder and read this book upon the advice of her therapist. I am very glad to say that it has started my daughter and me on a path to a much richer relationship and that she is on the road to recovery.