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When children from insecure backgrounds become adolescents, the
challenges they experience themselves and present for those around
them can get a lot harder to sort out, before the teenager can
fully integrate into society. These adolescents can quickly acquire
'bad kid' or 'anti-social' labels. They may form attachments by
joining gangs, but in doing so, further alienate themselves from
other more constructive options on offer.The contributors to this
much needed book have all worked successfully on the front line
with teenagers whose ability to make healthy relationships, or to
find learning exciting or even possible, has been severely
compromised by their past experiences of trauma, neglect and abuse.
Each expert practitioner offers practical strategies, underpinned
by attachment theory and their own extensive experience, to enable
teachers, psychologists, therapists and social workers to reach out
to young people in new ways, establishing genuine connection and
real possibilities for learning and hope.
Experiencing claustrophobia can be terrifying. Each person who is
claustrophobic copes with their fears differently - some by
struggling to manage their anxieties and panic, and others by
limiting their lives to avoid enclosed spaces, like tube-trains,
lifts, tunnels, car-washes, MRI scans, loo's on planes, or even
wearing a crash-helmet. Some people find their fears embarrassing
or shameful, and worry what others may think of them, when they
have to "just get out" of small or crowded places. In this
sensitive and insightful book, therapist and consultant Andrea
Perry speaks honestly of her own experiences, as well as drawing on
the views of others whose claustrophobic feelings have affected
their lives. She paints a powerful picture of the challenge of
dealing with claustrophobia on a daily basis, looking at how people
manage, whether it is possible to overcome the anxiety, and what
others can do to help friends, family and colleagues to cope. She
even manages to find the humour in what can be a truly frightening
experience, and controversially, presents claustrophobia not simply
as an irrational response, but as a deeply human rejection of being
electronically controlled in the confined spaces of an increasingly
technological world. She also claims that many businesses are
losing customers through not understanding people's fear of
confined spaces and provides concrete suggestions as to what
designers, architects and a wide range of public and private
service providers can do to help.
Procrastination is a frustrating habit, but it can also disrupt our
health and happiness. 'Isn't it about time?' explores and explains
why we put things off. The book is full of useful ways to overcome
procrastination, and to create a more satisfying, exciting and
productive life. Andrea Perry is an experienced psychotherapist who
recognises that if people could 'just do it', with or without fear,
they would. She describes how we need to develop trust in our
abilities to follow our own logic into satisfying action, and how
procrastination is a strategy to compensate for significant gaps in
this process. She shows how to identify how you block your natural
tendency to be effective and creative, and how to build on your
strengths and give your tendency to procrastinate something better
to do. Accessible and practical, illustrated with humorous and
pertinent cartoons, 'Isn't it about time?' provides a rich variety
of ideas which help you overcome delay and accomplsih what you need
and want to do - today, not tomorrow.
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Rise (Paperback)
Andrea Perry
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R360
Discovery Miles 3 600
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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