Caroline Adams Miller |
Caroline Adams Miller is an author and professional coach. Her books include My Name is Caroline, which looked at her struggle with bulimia as a teenager and young adult, and Creating Your Best Life: The Ultimate Life List Guide.
Q: In your book Creating Your Best Life, you
discuss the importance of making life lists. Why do you see that as an
important tool for someone to use to improve his or her life?
A: I picked lists as a euphemism for "goals,"
because the book is really the first empirical and evidence-based book on how
to set and accomplish goals, and putting them on lists was how the publisher
wanted to frame it. The Bucket List movie had just come out
and they were excited about the concept of bucket lists and my work fit the
bill.
Q: You've written about your experiences as a teenager and
young adult with bulimia. How difficult was it for you to write about those
experiences, and what was your family's reaction to your decision to write
about it?
A: I felt compelled to write about my experiences with
bulimia and my recovery because there were no resources available when I was
struggling. I wanted to demystify the lives of people like me and provide
an inside look at why so many high-functioning, bright people were falling
victim to eating disorders, and since no one knew how people got well back
then, my book was the first of its kind to shine a light on one possible
avenue.
It wasn't hard to write the book because I'm a writer, and that's
how I process things and make meaning. My family of origin never stood in
my way, but they may have had some self-conscious moments at times. I was
careful NOT to ever implicate anyone else in my disorder, so it wasn't a book
of blame, too. Ultimately, my parents saw that my book saved thousands of
lives and I think that erased any possible embarrassment. In fact, not a
week goes by - and it's been over 25 years - that I don't get a call or email
thanking me for writing that book. I'm still amazed at the power it had
and continues to have in giving people hope, and starting them on a path of
recovery.
Q: You received a Masters in Applied Positive Psychology
(MAPP) from the University of Pennsylvania, and you work as a professional
coach in addition to pursuing your writing career. What was the focus of the
MAPP program, and how do you use that material in your coaching work?
A: I wanted to get a rigorous education in the science of
happiness because it helped to give my profession a theoretical framework that
our profession needed at that time. Coaching is about getting people to
flourish and accomplish goals, and positive psychology involves all of that,
and more. I connected the science of well-being with the science of
goal-setting, and was the first to pull together a variety of motivational
theories on how to set and accomplish goals, which informs my coaching
practice. I work with men and women all over the world, in a huge variety
of professions, who want to make changes in their work and personal
lives.
Q: What advice would you give to someone who knows they want
to make changes in their life, but isn't sure how to go about it?
A: My book would be a good place to start. After
reading it, you could make a decision about hiring a coach who is especially
trained in goal accomplishment if you couldn't pull off change yourself.
Therapy is more designed to talk about change than actually do it, so I
find that many people who benefit from coaching are people who have lots of
insight but who never had the ability to act upon that insight.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I'm finishing Positively Caroline, which is
the sequel to My Name is Caroline. It will be the first
autobiography about how someone got into recovery from an eating disorder and
then stayed in recovery. There is a dearth of role models who can
demonstrate long-term recovery, and the field desperately needs it at this
point because we still see epidemics of eating disorders. I'm not exactly
sure how much better off we are as a society when it comes to tackling and
overcoming eating disorders, and I think that pressures are higher than ever on
young women to be perfect.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Everyone should take a course somewhere on the basics of
the science of happiness - it's that important. There's a reason why
Positive Psychology was, and remains, the most oversubscribed course in the
history of Harvard. Positive psychology gives people tools to use that
can change their lives for the better immediately. I have a lot of
information about where to get started at www.carolinemiller.com.
Interview with Deborah Kalb.
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