Prix bas
CHF25.20
Pas encore paru. Cet article sera disponible le 12.12.2024
Préface
His current reach includes:
Current email list subscribers: 5000+ 
Psychology Today “Rethinking Mental Health” blog: 3 million views 
Auteur
Eric Maisel, PhD, is the author of more than 50 books in the areas of creativity, psychology, coaching, mental health, and cultural trends. He is a psychotherapist and the founder of the creativity coach profession, regularly working with lawyers, doctors, scientists, writers, painters, businesspeople, and folks from every walk of life. They include folks settled in a profession as well as folks struggling to find an outlet for their intelligence and looking for work that will allow them to be as smart as they are. They include individuals who are successful in their careers and those who, because of the realities of the marketplace, struggle to achieve success. And through his books, they could include you.
Sought after as an expert in his field, Dr. Maisel regularly contributes to Mad in America, writes a monthly print column for Professional Artist Magazine, and writes the "Rethinking Mental Health" blog for Psychology Today. He has been the keynote speaker at many conferences and leads Deep Writing workshops worldwide.
Dr. Maisel currently resides in Walnut Creek, California. Visit him at www.ericmaisel.com.
Texte du rabat
Working alongside Dr. Eric Maisel’s bestselling Why Smart People Hurt, this new guided journal helps you work through the difficult challenges bright, emotional people face on a daily basis.
Résumé
Working alongside Dr. Eric Maisel's bestselling Why Smart People Hurt, this new guided journal helps you work through the difficult challenges bright, emotional people face on a daily basis.
Échantillon de lecture
We do not celebrate intelligence for its own sake. That someone is brilliant, or smarter than average, is important to humanity only because he or she may find a way to contribute to the betterment of all of us by producing a vaccine, by desalinating the sea, by opening our eyes to injustice through writing, art, or oratory, or in some other way that serves us all. We need our best and our brightest. They do the most to keep civilization afloat. It follows that we should try to help them meet the challenges that they regularly face. That is the goal of this journal, to help you meet an array of challenges that you are likely to face or will inevitably face. I want to give you the chance to think about these pressing, poignant challenges and come up with your own best solutions. Smart, sensitive, creative people face an array of challenges peculiar to their temperament, outlook, intellectual needs, psychological makeup, interpersonal realities, work opportunities, and position in society. This journal provides you with the opportunity to consider whether any of these challenges may be confronting you—and what you might like to do to better meet them.
Contenu
Contents Introduction
Entry 1. Your Unfriendly Family
Entry 2. Society and Religion
Entry 3. Workplace Unfriendliness
Entry 4. The Role of Mass Culture
Entry 5. The Bigger Picture
Entry 6. Feeling Different
Entry 7. Feeling Misunderstood
Entry 8. Feeling Underutilized
Entry 9. Feeling Alienated
Entry 10. Feeling Special … And Small
Entry 11. Stuck on the Dull Track
Entry 12. Aimed in the Direction of “Safety”
Entry 13. The Family Business
Entry 14. How Social Pigeonholing Works
Entry 15. Hiding Your Light Under a Bushel
Entry 16. The Day Job Problem
Entry 17. The Right Day Job
Entry 18. Your Remaining Neurons
Entry 19. Too Long at the Day Job
Entry 20. When the Day Job Plan Fails
Entry 21. The Second Career Problem
Entry 22. Your Brain After Dinner
Entry 23. Surprising Shortfalls
Entry 24. Second Career = Chaos?
Entry 25. Sheer Overwhelm
Entry 26. Trapped in Smallness
Entry 27. The Uninteresting Day-To-Day
Entry 28. Standard Thinking
Entry 29. A Name for Yourself
Entry 30. Stick to That, Please!
Entry 31. Nothing of Interest
Entry 32. Interest … But No Passion
Entry 33. Passion … But No Passion Project
Entry 34. Passion Project Resistance
Entry 35. The Stalled Passion Project
Entry 36. Inner Noise and Monkey Mind
Entry 37. Underestimating Your Smarts
Entry 38. Being Too Vigilant
Entry 39. Feeling Unsafe
Entry 40. When Anxiety Strikes
Entry 41. Your Tangled Thinking
Entry 42. Unwanted Obsessions
Entry 43. A Rain of Thoughts
Entry 44. Repetitive Thoughts
Entry 45. Lost Thoughts
Entry 46. Thought Investigation
Entry 47. Defensive Not Knowing
Entry 48. Having Language
Entry 49. No Comment
Entry 50. Getting a Grip
Entry 51. Tolerating Process
Entry 52. The Reality of Circumstances
Entry 53. Tolerating Solitude
Entry 54. The Dangers of Solitude
Entry 55. Insatiability
Entry 56. Competition
Entry 57. Mismatched Intellig…