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Paul A. Hauck

Auteur de Overcoming Depression

43 oeuvres 276 utilisateurs 3 critiques

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Œuvres de Paul A. Hauck

Overcoming Depression (1973) 35 exemplaires
Overcoming Frustration and Anger (1974) 26 exemplaires
Overcoming Worry and Fear (1975) 23 exemplaires
How to be Your Own Best Friend (1988) 20 exemplaires
Overcoming the Rating Game (1991) 14 exemplaires
Mitől jó a házasság? (1990) 6 exemplaires
Reason in Pastoral Counseling (1972) 5 exemplaires
The Three Faces of Love (1984) 4 exemplaires
Brief Counseling With Ret (1980) 4 exemplaires
Marriage Is a Loving Business (1977) 3 exemplaires
Cómo hacer lo que te propones (1984) 3 exemplaires
A féltékenység (1989) 2 exemplaires
Svartsjuka (1982) 2 exemplaires
Marriage and the memo method (1975) 2 exemplaires
Cómo hacerse valer (1985) 2 exemplaires
Agressivité (1983) 1 exemplaire
Selvtillid (1983) 1 exemplaire
Uspešen zakon 1 exemplaire
Légy jó önmagadhoz! (1993) 1 exemplaire
Fii calm! 1 exemplaire
Depresija (1991) 1 exemplaire
Cómo hacer lo que te propones (1993) 1 exemplaire
How to get the most out of life (1990) 1 exemplaire
Dépression 1 exemplaire

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Hauck is a crisp, clean and effective popular writer in the tradition of Albert Ellis and friends, the schools of cognitive psychology. It’s true he doesn’t talk about fear and love and all those things most profound like religion, or what I might call ‘end game’, what you’d ideally like to be, but more about first steps and things upon which people are more likely to agree. I also feel like he made a few allusions perhaps to social psychology perhaps, but I couldn’t get a clear non-obvious insight to talk about here. I am certainly very familiar with the basic idea that circumstances do not tyrannize over us unless we let them, and I agree. Or as Anne Frank said, Honestly, things are only as bad as you make them. We treat every suburban frustration as though life and limb were in danger, but even people in real danger have managed to get by without crippling anger and other dysfunctional thoughts, so.

It is largely about getting by though, not end game, and I’m very religious so for me this can only be a good beginning. I would therefore like to say something sufficiently non-devotional to be an appropriate response to a psychology book, but still ambitious. Basically, be sad. If you can be sad instead of angry—humor is a kind of halfway point I think, preferable certainly to anger but not entirely at ease—then with your sadness you have defeated anger. It’s like with music; the trashy break up songs are that way because they feed off of the energy of anger, and if they can’t have the positive energy they’ll settle for the negative variety. But if you just calm down the energy and get at ease, you might still be sad that people are foolish and vain—you’ll probably not be happy, still less pleased—but you won’t be wishing you could hurt them anymore, not even as a joke.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
goosecap | Jul 30, 2021 |
Mouais, je ne vois aucune solution utilisable dans le cadre professionnel.... je ne peux pas faire la grève du sexe avec mes collègues ;P
 
Signalé
CathCD | Jan 16, 2016 |
Makes sense -- your marriage should be run like a business. Got a lot of good information from it. Now all I have to do if figure out how to put it to practice.
 
Signalé
bami210 | Jun 30, 2013 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
43
Membres
276
Popularité
#84,078
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
3
ISBN
72
Langues
10

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