
Forget bubble baths and crystals - Dr. Lakshmin's NPR Best Book of 2023 dismantles commercialized wellness culture with revolutionary precision. Martha Beck calls it "clear-eyed" while Eve Rodsky deems it a "revelation." Ready to discover why real self-care means reclaiming your power?
Pooja Lakshmin MD is the bestselling author of Real Self-Care: Crystals, Cleanses, and Bubble-Baths Not Included and a board-certified psychiatrist specializing in women’s mental health and burnout. A Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at George Washington University School of Medicine, she merges clinical expertise with critiques of commodified wellness, offering evidence-based strategies for sustainable self-care.
Her work has been featured in The New York Times, NPR, and Good Morning America, and she delivers keynotes for organizations like Google, LinkedIn, and Peloton.
Lakshmin founded Gemma, a physician-led women’s mental health education platform, and contributes to her Substack newsletter, Real Self-Care. Her writing and talks emphasize systemic barriers to well-being, drawing from her private practice treating perfectionism, anxiety, and cultural disillusionment. Real Self-Care was named an NPR Best Book of 2023 and has been endorsed by leading voices in psychology and feminism for its transformative approach to personal and collective healing.
Real Self-Care challenges the commodified wellness industry, offering evidence-based strategies like setting boundaries and aligning with personal values. Dr. Lakshmin, a psychiatrist, argues that true self-care involves systemic awareness and inner work—not superficial fixes like bubble baths.
This book is for anyone feeling disillusioned by generic self-care advice, particularly women and caregivers navigating burnout. It’s ideal for readers seeking actionable frameworks to confront societal pressures and prioritize sustainable well-being.
Yes—it’s a national bestseller and NPR Best Book of 2023. Lakshmin blends clinical expertise with relatable storytelling, providing tools to combat faux self-care traps like achievement-focused routines. Reviews praise its practicality for balancing personal growth with systemic challenges.
Lakshmin’s framework focuses on four pillars:
Unlike wellness guides promoting quick fixes, Lakshmin critiques capitalism’s role in perpetuating “faux self-care” (e.g., optimizing productivity). She emphasizes internal shifts over external purchases, linking personal well-being to societal change.
The book identifies three harmful coping mechanisms:
Start by auditing how systems like work or family dynamics drain energy. Practice “micro-boundaries,” like pausing before responding to non-urgent requests. Lakshmin also encourages reflecting on values weekly to guide decisions.
Some reviewers note the book focuses more on individual action than collective solutions to systemic issues. However, Lakshmin acknowledges structural barriers and advocates for policy changes alongside personal practices.
As a psychiatrist and New York Times contributor, Lakshmin draws from clinical cases and her own burnout experiences. She founded the maternal mental health platform Gemma, aligning her advocacy with the book’s themes.
It critiques unrealistic expectations placed on mothers, offering strategies to delegate tasks and reject “superwoman” stereotypes. Lakshmin’s viral essay “How Society Has Turned Its Back on Mothers” mirrors the book’s focus on systemic support gaps.
Pair with Burnout by Emily Nagoski for science-backed stress management or Atomic Habits for incremental change tactics. Lakshmin’s work uniquely bridges personal well-being and social critique.
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Self-care has become another burden-another item on the to-do list to feel bad about.
What women call "burnout" is actually societal betrayal.
Women have become society's scapegoats, tasked with reconciling our culture's irreconcilable contradictions.
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What if the solution to your exhaustion isn't another meditation app or wellness retreat? In "Real Self-Care," psychiatrist Pooja Lakshmin exposes how the $4.5 trillion wellness industry has transformed self-care into yet another burden for overwhelmed women. Drawing from her unique journey-from Harvard-educated physician to wellness commune participant to mental health advocate-Lakshmin reveals why bubble baths and green smoothies fail to address the systemic issues crushing women. When mothers like Erin begin their days at 5 a.m. and end with midnight work sessions, suggesting "just meditate" isn't just inadequate-it's insulting. Self-care wasn't always commodified; it began as a radical act of self-preservation among marginalized communities. The Black Panthers promoted it as resistance against systemic racism, and Audre Lorde famously called caring for herself "an act of political warfare." How did we go from revolution to retail therapy? And why do women-experiencing nearly double the anxiety rates of men-keep buying into a system that clearly isn't working?