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Family caregiving has its challenges: emotional overload, time
constraints, anxiety, burnout, missed work, adult sibling
conflicts, and marital issues. AARP Meditations for Caregivers
blends emotional and spiritual motivation to minimize the strains
while helping caregivers view their work as a mission from the
heart. Chapters are organized by theme, including topics such as
accepting your feelings, knowing your limits, seeking support, and
managing stress. Each reading offers a poignant meditation, an
anecdote drawn from the author's personal or clinical experience,
and hands-on or psychological advice to foster coping skills and a
sense of fulfillment.The meditations in this dispensable book will
provide you with solutions to typical caregiving challenges, offer
relief and renewal through mindfulness, and inspire you to find
meaning and value in the work you do.
In the 1960s, college sports required more than athletic prowess
from its African American players. For many pioneering basketball
players on 18 teams in the Atlantic and Southeastern conference,
playing ball meant braving sometimes menacing crowds during the
tumultuous era of civil rights. Perry Wallace feared he would be
shot when he first stepped onto a court in his Vanderbilt uniform.
During one road game, Georgia's Ronnie Hogue fended off a hostile
crowd with a chair. Craig Mobley had to flee the Clemson campus,
along with other black students. C.B. Claiborne couldn't attend the
Duke team banquet when it was held at an all-white country club.
Wendell Hudson's mother cried with heartache when her son decided
to play at the University of Alabama, and Al Heartley locked
himself in a campus dorm at North Carolina State for safety the
night Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated. Grounded in the
civil rights struggles on campuses throughout the south, the voices
of players, coaches, opponents and fans reveal the long-neglected
story of race, sports and social history. Barry Jacobs has written
for The New York Times, The Washington Post, People and other
publications. He is the author of several sports books, including
Coach K's Little Blue Book. He lives in Hillsborough, North
Carolina.
AARP Love and Meaning After 50 addresses the 10 most common
challenges of sustaining loving relationships and emotional
wellness in our 50s, 60s, and beyond. Authors Barry Jacobs and
Julia Mayer, a husband-wife team of psychologists with more than 50
years of combined clinical experience helping individuals and
couples, help readers decide -- and gracefully walk through --
those next steps. Jacobs and Mayer provide professional expertise
paired with tried-and-true advice from those who've walked this
walk before you. The challenges and advice in the book includes:
The Empty Nest: How can you shift from an intense focus on children
and turn more toward your partner? Diminished wealth and cutbacks
in spending: How can you agree to live more modestly to stretch
limited income and joint savings over longer expected lifespans?
Need for care-giving: If caring for your partner, how can you still
feel well cared for and loved -- even when you feel you're giving
more than you're getting? Slow drift and detachment: Spouses who
have long-held resentments, difficulties resolving disagreements,
and little tolerance of each other's bad habits often drift over
the years into emotionally distant arrangements of parallel
co-existence rather than living the life of fully engaged partners.
How can this be avoided?
Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, often cited as 5-HT) is one of the
major excitatory neurotransmitter, and the serotonergic system is
one of the best studied and understood transmitter systems. It is
crucially involved in the organization of virtually all behaviours
and in the regulation of emotion and mood. Alterations in the
serotonergic system, induced by e.g. learning or pathological
processes, underlie behavioural plasticity and changes in mood,
which can finally results in abnormal behaviour and psychiatric
conditions. Not surprisingly, the serotonergic system and its
functional components appear to be targets for a multitude of
pharmacological treatments - examples of very successful drugs
targeting the serotoninergic system include Prozac and Zoloft.
The last decades of research have not only fundamentally expanded
our view on serotonin but also revealed in much more detail an
astonishing complexity of this system, which comprises a multitude
of receptors and signalling pathways. A detailed view on its role
in basal, but also complex, behaviours emerged, and, was presented
in a number of single review articles. Although much is known now,
the serotonergic system is still a fast growing field of research
contributing to our present understanding of the brains function
during normal and disturbed behaviour.
This handbook aims towards a detailed and comprehensive overview
over the many facets of behavioural serotonin research. As such, it
will provide the most up to date and thorough reading concerning
the serotonergic systems control of behaviour and mood in animals
and humans. The goal is to create a systematic overview and first
hand reference that can be used by students and scholars alike in
the fields of genetics, anatomy, pharmacology, physiology,
behavioural neuroscience, pathology, and psychiatry. The chapters
in this book will be written by leading scientists in this field.
Most of them have already written excellent reviews in their field
of expertise.
The book is divided in 4 sections. After an historical
introduction, illustrating the growth of ideas about serotonin
function in behaviour of the last forty years, section A will focus
on the functional anatomy of the serotonergic system. Section B
provides a review of the neurophysiology of the serotonergic system
and its single components. In section C the involvement of
serotonin in behavioural organization will be discussed in great
detail, while section D deals with the role of serotonin in
behavioural pathologies and psychiatric disorders.
* The first handbook broadly discussing the behavioral neurobiology
of the serotonorgic transmitter system
* Co-edited by one of the pioneers and opinion leaders of the past
decades, Barry Jacobs (Princeton), with an international list (10
countries) of highly regarded contributors providing over 50
chapters, and including the leaders in the field in number of
articles and citations: K. P. Lesch, T. Sharp, A. Caspi, P. Blier,
G.K. Aghajanian, E. C. Azmitia, and others
* The only integrated and complete resource on the market
containing the best information integrating international research,
providing a global perspective to an international community.
* Of great value not only for researchers and experts, but also for
students and clinicians as a background reference.
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