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Showing 1 - 20 of 31 items
By Joel Paris. 2013
The Intelligent Clinician's Guide to the DSM-5 explores all revisions to the latest version of the Diagnostic and Statistics Manual,…
and shows clinicians how they can best apply the strong points and shortcomings of psychiatry's most contentious resource.By Grant Martin. 1987
Each story of abuse has its own tragic cast and script, its own wardrobe of hurts and scars. Families across…
America, among them many Christians, shudder with the consequences. Psychologist Grant Martin's timely book rings sounds of hope for victims, abusers, and loved ones faced with the problem of violence in the home. Drawing on the vastness of God's redemptive love in the context of sound and practical counseling principles, the offers suggestions that may pave the way for emotional healing.By John Boghosian Arden. 2010
"Rewire Your Brain focuses on the self-help applications and the ongoing research on the aging brain. Rewire Your Brain is…
also filled with practical suggestions and exercises to help the reader improve his or her memory and relationships--and overcome mild depression, anxiety issues, procrastination, and various other negative thought patterns. Each of the chapters in this book offer key components of the new developments in neuroscience and describe how to apply them to specific areas of one's life."--Provided by publisher.By Tony Attwood. 2008
By Williams, J. Mark G. 2007
'In Mindful Way through Depression', four experts explain why our usual attempts to "think" our way out of a bad…
mood or just "snap out of it" lead us deeper into the downward spiral. With insightful lessons drawn from both Eastern meditative traditions and cognitive therapy, they demonstrate how to sidestep the mental habits that lead to despair, including rumination and self-blame, so you can face life's challenges with greater resilienceBy Diane Reibel, Donald McCown, Marc S Micozzi. 2010
The applications and use of mindfulness-based interventions in medicine, mental health care, and education have been expanding as rapidly as…
the empirical evidence base that is validating and recommending them. This growth has created a powerful demand for professionals who can effectively deliver these interventions, and for the training of new professionals who can enter the fold.Ironically, while the scientific literature on mindfulness has surged, little attention has been paid to the critical who and how of mindfulness pedagogy. Teaching Mindfulness is the first in-depth treatment of the person and skills of the mindfulness teacher. It is intended as a practical guide to the landscape of teaching, to help those with a new or growing interest in mindfulness-based interventions to develop both the personal authenticity and the practical know-how that can make teaching mindfulness a highly rewarding and effective way of working with others. The detail of theory and praxis it contains can also help seasoned mindfulness practitioners and teachers to articulate and understand more clearly their own pedagogical approaches.By Jacqui Dillon, Marius Romme, Sandra Escher, Dirk Corstens, Mervyn Morris. 2009
This book is a groundbreaking development in modern mental health because it recognises the importance of the first hand experience…
and argues that hearing voices is not a sign of madness but a reaction to serious problems in life.By Daniel J Siegel. 2012
By Zindel V Segal, Williams, J. Mark G, John D Teasdale. 2002
This book presents an innovative eight-session program that has been clinically proven to bolster recovery from depression and prevent relapse.…
Developed by leading scientist-practitioners, and solidly grounded in current psychological research, the approach integrates cognitive therapy principles and practice into a mindfulness framework. Clinicians from any background will find vital tools to help clients maintain gains made by prior treatment and to expand the envelope of care to remission and beyond.By David Schwarz, Adam McNicol. 2011
When he was eight years old, David Schwarz saw his father killed in front of him in a domestic dispute…
gone wrong. Despite going on to become a star footballplayer, playing 11 seasons with the Melbourne Football Club, the effect of this early shocking experience would shadow him throughout his successful sportingcareer. This is David Schwarz's honest and courageous story, told in full for the first time. Starting with the trauma of losing his father and riding the highsand lows of his football career, David tells the tale of his eventual undoing - a gambling addiction that saw him lose every dollar he'd ever earned and tookhim to the brink of personal and professional destruction. But it is also a tale of redemption, as David recounts the moment he turned his life around, and thepath of recovery since.By Don G Campbell. 1991
By Elan Golomb. 1992
In this compelling book, Elan Golomb identifies the crux of the emotional and psychological problems of millions of adults. Simply…
put, the children of narcissist--offspring of parents whose interest always towered above the most basic needs of their sons and daughters--share a common belief: They believe they do not have the right to exist. With an empathic blend of scholarship and case studies, along with her own personal narrative of her fight for self, Dr. Golomb plumbs the depths of this problem, revealing its mysterious hold on the affairs of otherwise bright, aware, motivated, and worthy people.By Bonnie Glass-Coffin. 2013
This book provides just that model, as well as concrete practices for living it. The model is derived from ancient…
wisdom traditions, modelled on the pulses, cycles, and seasons of our beloved Earth Mother. It deeply grounds the reader in a this world spirituality that blends indigenous cosmologies, earth-honouring ritual, and time-tested models for living with modern sensibilities.By Maggie MacKellar. 2004
When Georgiana Molloy gave birth on the beach at Augusta in 1830 with boxes of her possessions lying where they'd…
landed, she was one of the many women who literally had to remake their homes out of the broken bones of their past. In this passionate book Maggie MacKellar tells the stories of women on the frontier in Canada and Australia who ventured out in bonnets and petticoats to collect seeds, who abandoned sidesaddles to ride in the mountains, who risked their reputations to climb mountains - and beyond this it tells of the risky business of women who put their lives on the page to claim the importance of their experience. Core of My Heart, My Country weaves together experience and insight from women who lived and wrote in different landscapes, in different climates and in different eras. It is a provocative and remarkable encounter with buried stories and persistent myths.By Irma Kurtz. 1983
The slightly offside counsels of an expatriate American "agony aunt" (or British ""Dear Abbie""). Kurtz's situation is actually more unusual…
than what she has to say: part homilies about the new proliferation of ... more choice for women..., the responsibilities entailed and the courage called for, she includes advice on the standard topics of sex, love, relationships, and marriage.By Raimond Gaita. 2002
The Philosopher's Dog is Raimond Gaita's most personal work to date. It's a mixture of story-telling, and philosophical reflections on…
the stories he tells, combining a love for animals with a love for fellow humans, and a thirst for knowledge. Many of the stories are about animals Gaita himself has known and loved: Jack the cockatoo, Gypsy the dog and Tosca the cat. These stories are interwoven with reflections on how animals think, hope, trust and feel. What does Gypsy think about when she sits on her mat gazing out to sea? Is it mistaken to attribute the concepts of love, devotion, loyalty, grief, bravery or friendship to animals? Why do we care so much for some creatures and so little for others?By Ainslie Meares. 1984
By Maria M Tumarkin. 2007
"People care desperately about courage. For once, I am one of the people. Do you want to know what it…
means to care desperately? It means that I am prepared to give up dignity, talent and generosity for the attribute of courage. When I fantasise about what people will say after my death, I know what I want them to recall - whatever her flaws (too numerous to mention), she certainly had guts. Yet the courage I conjure up in my fantasies exists outside of the extremes of violence, endurance and fear. It is not primarily a virtuous ideal or an idea, but rather an expression of the human spirit-messy, explosive and morally ambivalent." Maria Tumarkin's view of courage contains no dead military heroes. Young, female, an immigrant from the crumbling Soviet states, she mines her own remarkable life story to produce a meditation on the courage we need to live our everyday lives, a hybrid of memoir and philosophy, of experience and ideas.By Helen Caldicott. 1992
Renowned anti-nuclear activist Helen Caldicott explores the race to save the planet. She explains the scientific and medical consequences of…
the greenhouse effect, ozone destruction, deforestation, species extinction, toxic chemical pollution, nuclear waste, food contamination, and the threat of nuclear war. Caldicott also gives us a prescription for a cure and a cause for hope.By Deborah Fullwood. 1990
Persons labelled "disabled" are beginning to be recognized as a valued part of the community, and an untapped resource that…
society can no longer afford to exclude or neglect. However, much still needs to be done to achieve total integration.