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| The Feeling Good Handbook | 
enlarge | Author: David D. Burns Publisher: Plume Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy Used: $4.43 You Save: $20.57 (82%)
New (51) Used (81) Collectible (2) from $4.43
Avg. Customer Rating: 86 reviews Sales Rank: 614
Media: Paperback Edition: Rev Sub Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 768 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1.7
ISBN: 0452281326 Dewey Decimal Number: 616.89142 EAN: 9780452281325 ASIN: 0452281326
Publication Date: May 1, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: May have some marks or highlights.
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Product Description With his phenomenally successful Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy, Dr. David Burns introduced a groundbreaking, drug-free treatment for depression. Now in this long-awaited sequel, he reveals powerful new techniques and provides step-by-step exercises that help you cope with the full range of everyday problems. * Free from fears, phobias, and panic attacks * Overcome self-defeating attitudes * Discover the five secrets of intimate communication * Put an end to marital conflict * Conquer procrastination and unleash your potential for success With an up-to-date section on everything you need to know about commonly prescribed psychiatric drugs and anxiety disorders such as agoraphobia and obsessive-compulsive disorder, this remarkable guide can show you how to feel good about yourself and the people you care about. You will discover that life can be an exhilarating experience.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 81 more reviews...
Effective and user-friendly tools September 3, 2001 345 out of 349 found this review helpful
In both this book and its predecessor ("Feeling Good"), David Burns has done an excellent job of putting tools into our hands so we can change the feelings and behaviors that we want to change. The tools in this book that I've found most helpful include (i) instruments to measure both anxiety and depression, (ii) a "pleasure-predicting sheet," (iii) a daily mood log to help identify and change unwanted feelings, and (iv) tools to help you overcome procrastination.I agree with another reviewer who said that this book and "Feeling Good" overlap to a great extent, and I recommend this one. You don't need to read "Feeling Good" first, and the worksheets in this "Handbook" are larger and easier to copy and work with. While Dr. Burns uses tools from cognitive behavioral therapy, I strongly recommend that you also obtain "A Guide to Rational Living," by Albert Ellis. Dr. Ellis invented rational (cognitive) behavioral therapy in the mid-1950s and still writes, lectures, and works with clients. While Burns' books are generally better written than Ellis', Dr. Ellis teaches you how to use cognitive techniques more effectively than Dr. Burns does. Instead of just showing you how to recognize faulty thinking that produces unwanted feelings and behaviors and think of alternative thoughts, Dr. Ellis teaches you how to PERSUADE YOURSELF that this faulty thinking is both irrational and counter-productive. In my view, the difference in their approaches is similar to that between an intellectual discussion and a thoroughly persuasive speech. In order to make the desired changes, you need to convincingly and powerfully persuade yourself to change your thinking. Together, this book and "A Guide to Rational Living" give you most all of the tools you need to experience the changes that you want in your feelings and behaviors. The approaches in both books require work. Passively reading them (or anything) will not lead to significant changes. The best news of all is this: There is hope! And you can have the tools at your fingertips.
A moderately effective course in cognitive therapy May 22, 2002 216 out of 229 found this review helpful
Many people don't buy into the whole "root of your problems" mentality that seems to infect the mental health fields nowadays. That's understandable. There certainly is something to be said for a more pragmatic, straightforward approach to the treatment of certain mental states. It is to this group of people that Dr. David Burns addresses his Feeling Good Handbook. The methods in The Feeling Good Handbook are aimed at helping those suffering from depression, anxiety, and other "mild" mental issues to train themselves into healthy mental patterns. Burns has put together a series of writing exercises and journaling that is intended to help readers recognize fallacies in their thought processes. He then spends a great deal of time on each of these fallacies of thought and how to overcome them. Burns is an avid supporter of cognitive therapy. It is obvious that Burns feels the best way to mental health is through learning to master these negative thought processes. Furthermore, he states outright that it is possible to train yourself to be positive and happy by following these exercises. Like most self-help books, Burns' popular book has both positive and negative attributes. Burns has managed to accurately classify the thought traps that those suffering from clinical depression and anxiety fall into. He also presents them in such a way that they are easily memorable and will often return to the reader's mind throughout the course of the day. Burns also includes a surprisingly accurate quiz to gauge the progress of the reader. However, Burn's book depends very heavily on the reader following his instructions with exactness--and some of them are extremely tedious. This is, perhaps, not the best way to help those suffering with depression. Usually depression saps an individual of their desire to do anything at all. Additionally, Burns tends to be a little over-simplistic about his methods and even more over-enthusiastic about their results. On its own, The Feeling Good Handbook is a moderately useful book in the amateur diagnosis and treatment of mild depression. When used in conjunction with a counselor who understands cognitive therapy, this book is an excellent tool in training the reader to think in a new way.
Adds nothing to the original "Feeling Good" February 5, 2000 79 out of 88 found this review helpful
I'm rather disappointed with this book; it adds nothing to what was said in the original Feeling Good (a book I found to be nothing short of revelatory, perhaps the best book on depression self-help I've ever encountered). I'd expected new information and a great deal of useful pencil-and-paper work not contained in the original "FG". There is some of that here, but far too little, and functions neither to add new info to nor to expand meaningfully upon the original book. Also, a quarter to a third of the Handbook consists of a guide to medications. Useful info, indeed, but not the sort of thing I go to a volume on cognitive therapy to read up on--this info is available in so many other places, and as presented here will soon be out-of-date as well.
This book helped me overcome a clinical depression! October 13, 2001 50 out of 51 found this review helpful
My copy of this book is from 1980. I am certain that the current edition is even more useful! In my case, I combined the cognitive therapy Burns recommends with medication to control my depression, and I would recommend that ANYONE suffering from depression use the same approach. Burns has an excellent treatment of modern antidepressants included in the book.An exceptionally useful item in the book is a self assessment. I used this to periodically rate my level of depression to show if I was getting better or not. This tool alone is worth the price of the book. In any case, if you are suffering from the symptoms of depression, GET HELP! From personal experience, it is extremely difficult to dig your way out of depression alone. Burn's book will augment any form of therapy and medication. By the way, in the early days of my depression, I took the Misnnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) which rates you on a number of items. On the depression scale, I scored 10 out of a possible 10 points! (Which is as bad as it gets!!)
Feeling Good Handbook January 23, 2001 46 out of 62 found this review helpful
The "Feeling Good Handbook" is a book that contains information that you are required to use on a consistent basis if you want to see positive results ...it is as useful as (if not better than) "The Power of Positive Thinking" book by Norman Vincent Peale. The cognitive approach has to be constantly used on a daily basis in order for the methods to work for you..much like positive thinking. That's it in a nutshell. As with anything else...once you stop using the cognitive approach you slip back into a depression and your old thoughts come back again...I gave the book four stars because it certainly works better then most approaches I have tryed in the past..and it works deeper then positive thinking alone because it penetrates your subconsious by cleaning out all the junk in your mind such as negative thinking, hostilities, bitterness, losses, etc... and reprograms your mind with new positive information and a new "thought" data base. I also gave the book a high mark because I think Dr. David Burns genuinely cares about people and he has excellent knowledge about human behavior, psychology, and theories which seem to work well when used on a consistent basis..I can never overemphasize that word strongly enough! Once again.... it is like working out in a gym... in order to see results you have to keep exercising on a persistent basis ...you have to stay on top of the therapy everyday and that can get very boring...you can only read the book so many times and use the information until you get bored with it or frustrated then you either go back to your old ways of thinking or you try something else...
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