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Making and maintaining lasting changes in nutrition and fitness is
not easy for anyone. Yet the communication style of a health
professional can make a huge difference. This book presents the
proven counseling approach known as motivational interviewing (MI)
and shows exactly how to use it in day-to-day interactions with
clients. MI offers simple yet powerful tools for helping clients
work through ambivalence, break free of diets and quick-fix
solutions, and overcome barriers to change. Extensive sample
dialogues illustrate specific ways to enhance conversations about
meal planning and preparation, exercise, body image, disordered
eating, and more. Reproducible forms and handouts can be downloaded
and printed in a convenient 8 1/2" x 11" size. Instructors
requesting a desk copy from Guilford will be emailed a link to
supplemental PowerPoint slides and exam questions. This book is in
the Applications of Motivational Interviewing series, edited by
Stephen Rollnick, William R. Miller, and Theresa B. Moyers.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
When Laura Curtis Bullard wrote the novel Christine in 1856, she
created one of antebellum America's most radical heroines: a
woman's rights leader. Addressing the major social, political, and
cultural issues surrounding women from within an unusually overt
feminist framework for its time, Christine openly challenges a
social and legal system that denies women full and equal rights.
Christine defies her family, rejects marriage, and leaves a job as
a teacher to embark on her career, rewriting the script for a
successful nineteenth-century heroine. Along the way, she recreates
domesticity on her own terms, helping other young women gain
economic independence so that they, too, have the autonomy to make
their own choices in love and life. One of the triumphs of the
novel is the author's ability to create a sympathetic heroine and a
fast-paced plot that intertwines vivid scenes of suicide,
destitution, and an insane asylum with theoretical and political
discussions-so skillfully that the novel successfully appealed to
otherwise hesitant middle-class readers.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
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