The Man Who Couldn't Eat - A Powerful Memoir of Illness and Resilience | Inspiring True Story for Food Allergy Sufferers & Medical Professionals" (Note: This is a book title optimization that includes: 1. SEO elements (memoir, illness, resilience, true story) 2. Translated from Chinese if applicable 3. Added usage scenarios for food allergy communities and medical fields)
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DESCRIPTION
A personal journey with Crohn’s disease: months of excruciating treatment and the enduring effect it has on the author’s emotional state and relationship with food—as well as on his wife, children, and friends.In this beautifully written memoir, both gut-wrenching and inspiring, award-winning writer Jon Reiner tells the story of his agonizing battle with Crohn’s disease—and the extraordinary places his hunger and obsession with food took him. I’m a glutton in a greyhound’s body, a walking contradiction, in the grip of the one thing I can’t have—food, writes Reiner, who details what happens when that which keeps you alive, that bonds us together and marks life’s special occasions, becomes a toxic substance, an inflammatory invader. His unvarnished account depicts an explosive medical emergency, a marriage in crisis, children faced with grown-up fears, a man at a life-and-death crossroads sifting through his past and his present. And it captures a tough, courageous climb out of hopelessness as Reiner began a process of healing in body and mind, discovering a renewed appetite, any way he could manage it, for the things that truly matter most.
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4.5
Sufferers of Crohn's Disease will find in this book a vivid, moving, and often humorous account of the worst case scenario. It's a memoir of one man's worst year with Crohn's Disease (one of the inflammatory bowel diseases or IBD). He has become so gravely ill, that his bowel needs a period of total rest, which means he can have nothing by mouth. He is placed on total parenteral nutrition (TPN), which means he's fed by a machine that pumps liquid nutrients into his body intravenously. It used to be that a patient on TPN had to stay in the hospital for the duration, but nowadays TPN is administered through a portable unit that fits in a backpack. So, this husband and father is able to be at home, and that's the heart of this memoir: trying to navigate marriage, parenthood and friendship with relative normalcy when one can't eat in a world that revolves around food. Eye-opening and well-told.
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