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Summary of Glennon Doyle Melton's Carry On, Warrior cover art

Summary of Glennon Doyle Melton's Carry On, Warrior

By: Falcon Press
Narrated by: Debra Smith
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Sample key takeaways from Part One:

  1. Life is an adventure, and our quest is to find the unfindable. This is the problem - life is a bit of a setup. We’re put here, and made to crave something that isn’t even here. Writer Anne Lamott calls this unquenchable thirst our “God-sized hole.”
  2. Glennon Doyle Melton tried to fill this hole with poisonous things for 20 years. When she was young, food was her only refuge. It was her God. But she also knew that society expected women to be thin to be considered beautiful, so she discovered bulimia as a solution.
  3. Bulimia made her comfortable because when she was going through a binge, she lost consciousness of her discomfort and emptiness. When she was done purging, however, and she lay exhausted on the bathroom floor, her hole felt even bigger."
©2021 Falcon Press (P)2021 Falcon Press

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