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The book is a collection of thoughts and poems about life and
living. I have included some observations on how to live a loving,
caring life. There is a short story about my generation. It is my
hope that the reader will find this book as a thought inspirer and
maybe a way of life changer.
Gender diversity is now recognised as simply part of human
diversity, rather than being pathological. This shift calls for a
need for mental health professionals to adapt their practice when
working with trans and non-binary people. Written by two clinicians
with significant experience in this field, this book provides
practical, everyday advice on what to do when seeing gender-diverse
people in both inpatient and outpatient settings. It avoids
focusing on academic theory or being overly political and, instead,
offers straightforward, useful guidance on common issues clinicians
may face, such as which ward to accommodate someone on or which
name to use when. Topics include common drug interactions,
differential diagnoses, complex case formulation, autistic spectrum
conditions, the spectrum of sexualities, surgeries, legal and
religious matters, forensic assessment, psychotherapy and mental
health diagnoses. Fully relevant to contemporary practice, this is
a much-needed guide for busy clinicians seeking immediate,
practical and authoritative answers.
Rural Suffolk has much to offer the discerning person, but what the
pretty village of Debenham prides itself on is its Rotary Club. Or
it used to... Unfortunately, the small club is now in a serious
decline. Its members are squabbling, in conflict over petty
rivalries and moral dilemmas. Amongst this background of spirited
sea of similar members is George. George is not a typical Rotarian,
with his autism leading him to be blunt to the point of rudeness,
perhaps too literal and unable to read body language. He has carved
out a successful life for himself amidst this chaos and is
generally happier than the other members. They look to him for
stability. At least until the incoming President of the Rotary Club
leads a charge for 'the new'. He and his acolytes are desperate to
attract younger members to move the club forward, whilst the
traditionalists are equally desperate to cling to the old
idiosyncratic ways. Let the battle commence. Aside from Rotary,
George is the chairman of the trustees of a small local charity of
little relevance in the modern world. He becomes embroiled in a
bizarre and hilarious escapade dealing with a tricky problem that
attracts the attention of a national newspaper, to the
embarrassment of the trustees, who move against him, and his Rotary
club. Other misfortunes and dark dealings come to a head when the
Club suspends George's erstwhile friend, turned nemesis, Alec
Barton. Barton goes on a drunken rampage with a shotgun and comes
after George, with disastrous results. The club is now at a low ebb
and faces dissolution. But is there a way back?
People with gender identity problems are increasingly often
encountered by health professionals. The problems are often
imagined to consist only of transsexuality, but actually comprise
of both this and many other diagnoses. Properly establishing a
diagnosis and excluding alternatives including psychosis, partial
androgen insensitivity syndromes and personality disorder is
complex. The subsequent management of these disorders and their
differential diagnoses is even more so. Transsexual and other
Disorders of Gender Identity provides a comprehensive and extremely
practical account of the management of disorders of gender identity
and their differential diagnoses. Particular consideration is given
to, among others, coincidental mental illness, disability, family
and relationship issues, forensic and military settings.
Psychological and endocrine aspects are covered in depth, surgical
aspects to a level adequate for all but a specialist surgeon, and
legal aspects to the level generally needed by health
professionals. This book provides vital detail for general
practitioners, surgeons, endocrinologists, speech therapists,
social workers and, especially, psychiatrists.I conceived and
edited this book because when asked for recommended reading on the
practicalities of treatment for disorders of gender identity I had
nothing to suggest to others. I was always able to provide lists of
books which dealt with the classification of gender identity
disorders, and texts rich with competing aetiological theories.
There were also fascinating sociopolitical (including post-modern)
expositions. The problem always came with recommending practical
texts for everyday clinical use. - James Barrett, in the Preface.
This first collection of 112 passionate, raw, thought-provoking
poems is just a small selection from the library that the
brilliant, brutally honest and prolific poet James Barrett
Rodehaver has written in his lifetime. His words illustrate
absolute fearlessness in self-discovery, his journey to find faith,
and his relentless championing of hope for a better country and
world. His poems span a wide chronology of growth and
self-evolution, of despair and victory, of his hatred for injustice
and his love of artists and poets. As a member of the LGBT
community, he makes sure his readers know where he stands on
equality and love. As a disabled man with a rare progressive bone
disease, he uniquely understands the pain we all go through on our
journey, and that poetry is how all of us can turn pain into
triumph. He chronicles his sufferings, his hopeful outlook, and his
questions to God about why he is the way he is, with poetry that
renders the soul bare. He is a survivor of not only a disability
and near-death, but of family crisis and the foster care system.
Yet despite all of this, his world view, though bitter at times,
still remains that of a dreamer. He presents to us many faces, and
yet, all of them are one: the revolutionary, the fighter, the witty
and hilarious dirty-minded poet, and the sensual lover. His poetry
shows us his true soul, and this impressive collection of his lets
us in on a man of kindness, integrity and conscience. It is as much
yours as it is his, and he has put his full heart and soul into
every page. Read it, share it, cherish it, and know that you, as
well, are strangely wonderful
The book is a collection of thoughts and poems about life and
living. I have included some observations on how to live a loving,
caring life. There is a short story about my generation. It is my
hope that the reader will find this book as a thought inspirer and
maybe a way of life changer.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
The Making of the Modern Law: Legal Treatises, 1800-1926 includes
over 20,000 analytical, theoretical and practical works on American
and British Law. It includes the writings of major legal theorists,
including Sir Edward Coke, Sir William Blackstone, James Fitzjames
Stephen, Frederic William Maitland, John Marshall, Joseph Story,
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. and Roscoe Pound, among others. Legal
Treatises includes casebooks, local practice manuals, form books,
works for lay readers, pamphlets, letters, speeches and other works
of the most influential writers of their time. It is of great value
to researchers of domestic and international law, government and
politics, legal history, business and economics, criminology and
much more.++++The below data was compiled from various
identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title.
This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure
edition identification: ++++Harvard Law School
Libraryocm13485461Published pursuant to a resolution of the
legislature.Montpelier: Journal Steam Printing Establishment, 1871.
54 p.; 24 cm.
"I have greatly enjoyed reading this study not only because of its
eminently readable style but above all because of its well
presented and important argument. Making excellent use of existing
scholarship on the tragic messenger, James Barrett manages to
increase considerably our understanding of the place and function
of this well-known, but often underrated figure. Thus, the relation
between tragic and epic narrative, which so far had been described
largely in terms of the shared use of unaugmented verb forms, is
explored on a much larger and significant scale. Barrett also works
out well the tensions between the messenger's human focalization
and epic ambitions. The different roles of the messenger are
effectively brought into relation with the thematic interests of
different plays. This is a study which has much to bring to both
student and specialist."--Irene J.F. de Jong, author of "A
Narratological Commentary on the Odyssey
"An agile and resourceful study of tragic messenger figures and
their speeches. James Barrett explores this fascinating subject
with the help of narrative theory and a sophisticated approach to
genre and rhetoric. His attentive readings of a range of
plays--from "Persians to "Rhesos--convincingly back up his claim
that messengers raise fundamental questions about knowledge and
authority. This is a learned book, written with engaging zest and a
fine feeling for the complex workings of dramatic narrative."--Pat
Easterling, editor of "The Cambridge Companion to Greek Tragedy
"The messenger speech "(angelia) is among the most familiar
conventions of the Greek stage, occurring in 26 of the 32 extant
tragedies. James Barrett interrogates the figure of themessenger
and questions the transparency of the messenger's report. Eschewing
approaches that focus more narrowly on the dramatic function or
narratological workings of messenger speeches, Barrett focuses on
their epistemic status--and with powerful results. He locates the
literary origins of the messenger in the epic narrator of the Iliad
and Odyssey and identifies an inner tension within the messenger's
claims to privileged status. [His] examination of the messenger
works through a set of skillful readings of key texts."--Thomas
Falkner, author of "The Poetics of Old Age in Greek Epic, Lyric,
and Tragedy
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