Summary & Analysis of Wintering - SNAP Summaries

Summary & Analysis of Wintering

By SNAP Summaries

  • Release Date: 2021-02-27
  • Genre: Self-Improvement

Description

In Wintering, Katherine May recounts how she dealt with a series of physical and emotional challenges and offers the lessons she learned along the way.
What does this SNAP Summary Include?
Synopsis of the original book Key takeaways from each chapter Why sadness is a valuable skill and how we can learn it What nature can teach us about enduring periods of hardship Editorial Review Background on Katherine May About the Original Book:
When her husband fell ill, her own abdominal pains worsened, and her son became too anxious to go to school, May had to work through an emotional load of fear, uncertainty, and inadequacy. Her winter, her season of being in the cold, had come. Looking to nature—to trees and dormice and reindeer—she realized that only humans resisted winter. Every other living organism recognized the seasonal changes and hunkered down.
Part memoir and part self-help, Wintering is an invitation to embrace sadness, loneliness, despair, failure, pain, difficult transitions, and all the other unpleasant challenges that are an inevitable part of life. The only way through the cold and darkness of our personal winters, May observes, is to let it in, feel it, and let it guide us to what we need.

DISCLAIMER: This book is intended as a companion to, not a replacement for, Wintering. SNAP Summaries is wholly responsible for this content and is not associated with the original author in any way. If you are the author, publisher, or representative of the original work, please contact info[at]snapsummaries.com with any questions or concerns.

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