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***As seen on NBC's TODAY Show*** When Loose Girl author Kerry
Cohen reached her early 40s, she realized she was drinking too
much. Her alcohol dependence was not obvious - she was still
getting her kids to school in the morning and working a full day as
a clinical psychologist. But when five o'clock rolled around, she
was more than ready for a glass of wine. Or maybe two. Or maybe the
whole bottle. And while she may have been drinking alone, Cohen
realized she was not alone in her struggle. Lush is a fiercely
honest exploration of the nature of alcoholism and alcohol recovery
among middle-aged women, and Cohen's decision to use the
controversial moderation management program to curb her nightly
binges. For any woman who has wondered how much wine is too much
wine, Cohen provides a provocative and eye-opening look at the
culture of drinking through the lens of her own experience.
For anyone who has wondered Why does everyone else seem to be able
to make romantic relationships work, and I can't? What's wrong with
me? Why is love so hard? Psychologist and bestselling memoirist
Kerry Cohen is all too familiar with the questions she often hears
from her clients-and has asked herself. Even though sex and love
are some of the most universal, sought-after experiences we have,
many of us lack the tools and understanding to approach them in a
healthy way. Without knowing it, many people struggling with sex
and love actually fall somewhere on the spectrum of sex and love
addiction (SLA). Sex and love addiction is still wildly
misunderstood. It's shrouded in secrecy and shame, and many
counselors lack the training to address it-leaving people who need
help without resources. Yet SLA isn't a binary of you are or you
aren't, rather, it's a spectrum. Kerry Cohen knows this all too
well as both a therapist and someone who identifies on the SLA
spectrum. Based on research and her own clinical experience, Crazy
for You dives into SLA and provides an inclusive framework for
understanding relationships, along with practical exercises and
advice for self-assessment, discovery, and healing:Part one
explains the sex and love addiction spectrum, helping you determine
where you fall on it and how you got therePart two introduces
strategies for breaking the spell of sex and love addiction, like
behavior modifications and self-awareness techniquesPart three
teaches you how to navigate healthy, safe, and fulfilling
relationships
For everyone who was that girl. Loose Girl is Kerry Cohen's
captivating memoir about her descent into promiscuity and how she
gradually found her way toward real intimacy. The story of
addiction-not just to sex, but to male attention-Loose Girl is also
the story of a young woman who came to believe that boys and men
could give her life meaning. For everyone who knew that girl. In
rich and immediate detail, Loose Girl re-creates what it feels like
to be in that desperate moment, when a you try to control someone
by handing over your body, when the touch of that person seems to
offer proof of something, but ultimately delivers little more than
emptiness. Kerry Cohen's journey from that hopeless place to her
current confident and fulfilled existence is an unforgettable
memoir of one young woman who desperately wanted to matter, and
speaks to countless others with its compassion, understanding, and
love. For the thousands of people who have found their voice in
this book, and the thousands more who will.
Baring the Truth in Your Memoir When you write a memoir or personal
essay, you dare to reveal the truths of your experience: about
yourself, and about others in your life. How do you expose
long-guarded secrets and discuss bad behavior? How do you
gracefully portray your family members, friends, spouses, exes, and
children without damaging your relationships? How do you balance
your respect for others with your desire to tell the truth? In The
Truth of Memoir, best-selling memoirist Kerry Cohen provides
insight and guidelines for depicting the characters who appear in
your work with honesty and compassion. You'll learn how to choose
which details to include and which secrets to tell, how to render
the people in your life artfully and fully on the page, and what
reactions you can expect from those you include in your work--as
well as from readers and the media. Featuring over twenty candid
essays from memoirists sharing their experiences and advice, as
well as exercises for writing about others in your memoirs and
essays, The Truth of Memoir will give you the courage and
confidence to write your story--and all of its requisite
characters--with truth and grace. "Kerry Cohen's The Truth of
Memoir is a smart, soulful, psychologically astute guide to
first-person writing. She reveals everything you want to know--but
were afraid to ask--about telling your life story." --Susan
Shapiro, author of eight books including Only As Good as Your Word,
and co-author of The Bosnia List
Cliches like shop 'til you drop and retail therapy tend to be
associated with women--women with maxed-out credit cards, stuffed
shoe racks, and overflowing closets. Women are oh-so superficial,
and irresponsible, and greedy--or so the stereotype goes. In Spent,
editor Kerry Cohen opens the closet doors wide to tales of women's
true relationships with shopping. From humorous stories of hating
the mall to heartbreaking tales of overspending to fix
relationships, the essays each shine light on the particular impact
shopping has on all of us. Whether they're cleaning out closets,
dividing up family possessions, hiding a shoplifting habit, trying
out extreme couponing, buying a brand-new car while in labor, or
coping with aging, the book's contributors vacillate between
convincing themselves to spend and struggling not to. This
illuminating anthology links the effects shopping has on our
emotions--whether it fills us with guilt, happiness, resentment, or
doubt--our self-worth, and our relationships with parents,
grandparents, lovers, children, and friends. With a contributor
list that includes notable female writers like Emily Chenoweth,
Ophira Eisenberg, Allison Amend, and Aryn Kyle, Spent shares an
honest look at how shopping truly affects our lives.
Seeing Ezra is the soulful, beautifully written memoir of a
mother's fierce love for her autistic son, and a poignant
examination of what it means to be normal. When Kerry Cohen's son
Ezra turns one, a babysitter suggests he may be different, setting
her family on a path in which autism dominates their world. As he
becomes a toddler and they navigate the often rigid and
prescriptive world of therapy, Cohen is unsettled by the
evaluations they undergo: At home, Ezra is playfully expressive,
sharing profound, touching moments of connection and intimacy with
his mother and other family members, but in therapy he is
pathologized, prodded to behave in ways that undermine his unique
expression of autism. It soon becomes clear that more is at stake
than just Ezra's well-being; Cohen and her marriage are suffering
as well. Ezra's differentness, and the strain of pursuing varied
therapies, takes a toll on the family--Cohen's husband grows
depressed and she pursues an affair--all as she tries to help
others recognize and embrace Ezra's uniqueness rather than force
him to behave outside his comfort level. It isn't until they
abandon the expected, prescriptive notions about love, marriage,
and individuality that they are able to come back together as two
parents who fiercely love their little boy. Powerful and
eye-opening, Seeing Ezra is an inspirational chronicle of a
mother's struggle to protect her son from a system that seeks to
compartmentalize and fix him, and of her journey toward accepting
and valuing him for who he is--just as he is.
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