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Do You Worry All the Time? Have you tried to control your thoughts and “get your worrying under control?” Did it work? If it didn’t, try this simple exercise: Take thirty seconds, right here and now, and don’t think about something you recently worried about. Think about anything and everything else, but don’t think about that worry. How did you do? Like most of us, you probably could think of little else except whatever it was you worried about, no matter how h (more…)
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Women are more likely than men to develop anxiety disorders, a fact which researchers have attributed to a range of biological, psychological, and cultural factors. This predispostion inclines women to worry more than men about things like social problems, work, finances—even about worry itself, a phenomenon psychologists call meta-worry. The goal of this book is to help readers control excessive worry by learning to perceive threats more accurately and to stop focusing on thin (more…)
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From Publishers Weekly
For “highly worried people,” or those who suffer from the “what-if disease,” Leahy (president of the International Association of Cognitive Therapy and author of Cognitive Therapy Techniques: A Practitioner’s Guide) presents a systematic, accessible self-help guide to gaining control over debilitating anxiety. Leahy is an expert in changing thought processes, and he walks worriers step-by-step through problems in the way they think, with pointers on how to (more…)
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From Publishers Weekly
A star in motivational broadcasting because of her long-running infomercial, “Attacking Anxiety,” Bassett here offers self-help to sufferers from panic attacks, in a workbook format (with audio cassettes available), interspersed with anecdotes and personal experiences. Revealing her own struggles with anxiety and agoraphobia, which she calls “avoidance behaviors,” Bassett describes and analyzes the many degrees and forms of anxiety, discomfort and stress th (more…)
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Anxiety happens. It’s not a choice. And attempts to “manage” your thoughts or “get rid” of worry, fear, and panic can leave you feeling frustrated and powerless. But you can take back your life from anxiety without controlling anxious thoughts and feelings. You can stop avoiding anxiety and start showing up to your life. This book will get you started, using a revolutionary new approach called acceptance and commitment therapy, or ACT. The Mindfulness and Acceptance Workbook (more…)
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