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The Book You Want Everyone You Love to Read

Sane And Sage Advice to Help You Navigate All of Your Most Important Relationships

Audiobook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available
From author of the million-copy international bestselling The Book You Wish Your Parents Had Read, psychotherapist Philippa Perry helps you with managing all the other important relationships and connections in your life with compassion and a healthy dose of sanity.
Life is all about relationships and the quality of those connections, whether that's with family, partners, friends, colleagues or most importantly yourself. If you can get those relationships in balance, then the other tricky stuff that life throws your way becomes easier to manage.
In this warm, practical and witty book, international bestselling psychotherapist Philippa Perry shows you how to approach life's biggest problems: How do you find and keep love?
What can you do to manage conflict better?
How can you get unstuck and cope with change and loss?
What does it mean to you to be content?
Are other people just annoying, or are you the problem?
With a healthy dose of sanity, Philippa Perry's compassionate advice helps readers become happier, and wiser too.
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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2023
      Guidance for personal growth. Perry, a British psychotherapist, advice columnist, and author of The Book You Wish Your Parents Had Read, draws on her experiences with patients and letter-writers to offer guidance about developing self-awareness to help navigate trials and difficulties. "What I hope this book will do," she writes, "is help you understand your own early adaptations and belief systems, and be more aware of where they are serving you and where they may need updating." Recognizing the myriad issues that individuals face, she organizes the book into four sections: how we love, how we argue, how we change, and how we find contentment, which she defines as "being satisfied with your life." Each chapter includes letters from troubled men and women, which elicit her analyses of behaviors and views that undermine well-being. Overall, she emphasizes understanding and empathy, rather than blame and resentment. "If you look at others' actions in a positive rather than a negative light," she counsels, "you can get different meanings from them." She encourages speaking "in 'I' statements, which define your own experience, and not 'You' statements, which are a judgment on the other person." Throughout the book, she punctuates explanations with pithy nuggets she calls "Everyday wisdom." One example: "If you have to choose between guilt and resentment, choose guilt. You will discover that your world does not fall apart." Among the issues she discusses are disappointment in love and marriage; frustrations with jobs; isolation and loneliness; stress and anxiety; silencing one's inner critic; and dealing with loss, grief, and aging. She examines three ways of coping with adversity--thinking, feeling, and doing--and she encourages readers to try to understand another's perspective, rather than impose their own. In relationships, "to surrender to another person is a risk and an act of love. Surrendering means losing your ego, letting go of controlling behavior, and having faith that what will be, will be." A wise companion for life's challenges.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      October 15, 2023
      British psychotherapist and advice columnist Perry struck a chord with her best-selling The Book You Wish Your Parents Had Read (2020). Here, she focuses on the many factors that go into forging, maintaining, and strengthening adult relationships. Incorporating letters from people who wrote to her column in the Observer (the Sunday edition of the Guardian) into her essays, she divides the book into four sections. The first, how to manifest love, addresses connection, bonding, obsession, sexual intimacy, and forming lasting relationships. In the second, how to argue and deal with conflict, she considers seven common defenses that hinder constructive communication. Section three deals with change, whether getting unstuck or accepting the inevitable, such as loss, grief, and death, and a final section centers on finding peace and contentment. These issues are not tackled in a quick-read, question-and-answer format but through lengthy, thoughtful passages that consider a question Perry's been asked and present her thoughts on the better questions we could be asking about ourselves and our own behavior. Lots of practical, sensible advice.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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