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Depression affects more than 300 million people worldwide from all
walks of life, and can be a completely debilitating and isolating
mental illness. Lynn Crilly speaks from personal and professional
experience, having suffered depression herself, and provides much
needed positive, practical answers, illustrated with observations
and anecdotes from carers and sufferers themselves, Hope with
Depression explains the many varieties of depression, how to spot
them and the possible causes and drivers, and gives a balanced
guide to available treatments - both mainstream and `alternative' -
in the context of what has worked in Lynn's experience. This is a
practical, supportive guide for anyone with this condition or
helping someone with depression, be they a family member, teacher,
sports coach, workplace colleague or friend. It recognises that
each person's illness and recovery will differ and having detailed
knowledge and a full toolkit of treatment options is the way to
empower each individual with hope for recovery.
Since the first edition of Hope with Eating Disorders was published
in 2012, eating disorders have become more widely recognised and
treatments have progressed, as have attitudes to this most
dangerous of mental health problems. In this second edition, which
maintains Lynn Crilly's warm, non-judgemental, family-friendly
approach, the more recently recognised eating disorders have been
included, the range of treatment options - both mainstream and
alternative - has been fully reviewed and revised, and the impact
of social and technological change has been fully accommodated,
with the role of social media for good and ill to the fore. New
case histories highlight key issues, and throughout all references
to research and stats have been reviewed and updated. Men's eating
disorders are now addressed by contributing author Dr Russell
Delderfield. Since originally writing Hope with Eating Disorders,
Lynn has experienced seven years of counselling practice and seven
years of her own daughter's recovery from an eating disorder and
obsessive compulsive disorder, underpinning her realistic insight
into what recovery actually is and means. Hope with Eating
Disorders is a practical, supportive guide for anyone helping
someone with an eating disorder be they a family member, teacher,
sports coach, workplace colleague or friend.
Anxiety is a familiar word, one which seems hard to escape in
today's busy world. It affects more than 280 million people
worldwide from all walks of life, and can be a completely
debilitating and isolating mental illness. In this new book, Lynn
Crilly brings her warm, non-judgemental, family-friendly approach
to bear on a the rising tide of contemporary anxiety, exacerbated
by political and economic uncertainty, climate change, social media
and a world that is being transformed ever more rapidly. She looks
at how anxiety manifests, how it relates to other mental health
problems and what the many options are for treatment and restoring
well-being. As ever, she draws on a wide range of health
practitioners to explain therapeutic options - both mainstream and
alternative - and thereby provide a truly varied toolkit with
something for every individual to try. Throughout, case histories
support, confirm and illustrate the practical information, always
with the emphasis on hope for leading a fulfilled life
unconstrained by the effects of anxiety.
OCD is often trivialized as an issue with cleanliness, but for
sufferers and those who live with them and/or care for them, it can
be life changing, keeping them the slaves of their anxieties. The
most common question asked by parents, partners and friends of OCD
sufferers is `What can I do?' Lynn Crilly, based on successful
support of her own daughter and other sufferers, finally provides
some positive, practical answers. Illustrated with observations and
anecdotes from carers and sufferers themselves, Hope with OCD
explains the many varieties of OCD, how to spot them, the possible
causes and drivers and gives a balanced guide to available
treatments - both mainstream and `alternative' - in the context of
what has worked in her experience. She gives hope for breaking free
to a full, obsession-free life.
'Self-Esteem' is one of those phrases that's been overused to the
point of losing all meaning, yet it's essential to every human
being's development and happiness. In what can be an incredibly
toxic and frightening modern culture, young people in particular
are struggling to gain some vestige of self-esteem and are
subsequently battling myriad mental and physical health issues.
Parents, teachers and carers want to help but often struggle to
know quite what they can do. DA-DAAA! Enter this book: a self-help
book for people who are fed up with being patronised by self-help
books. This guide will give you pragmatic, relevant advice on how
to nurture self-esteem and discuss and deal with mental health
issues, delivered with positivity, humour and realism. Although
touching on specific issues such as self-harm, eating disorders and
anxiety, this is more generally geared towards instilling
confidence and promoting a positive state of mind. A collaborative
effort between Lynn Crilly - a mother and counsellor who writes
with love and warmth for her fellow parents and carers - and
Natasha Devon - a journalist and activist, who writes with passion
(and a few swear words) for teachers - there's something in this
book for everyone.
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