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Free On-line Self help book
http://www.psychologicalselfhelp.org/
Author: Dr. Clayton E. Tucker-Ladd has been licensed as a Clinical Psychologist by the Illinois Department of Professional Regulation for 34 years (License no. 071-001073). Phone and Web site for verification: 217-782-0458 and http://www.dpr.state.il.us (use Ladd for the last name). Address: PO Box 7086, Springfield, IL 62791-7086. Dr. Ladd has also been registered for many years with the National Register of Health Service Providers in Psychology, http://www.nationalregister.org Verification (15474), using Tucker-Ladd, is possible through that database search. What is psychological self-help? I consider self-help to be intentional coping. It is handling your own troublesome situations by exercising deliberate conscious control to improve the outcome of the situation. It is recognizing your own personal weaknesses and working to overcome those faults and improve yourself. It sometimes involves changing others or the environment to improve your own circumstances or feelings, but self- help primarily focuses on changing your own behavior, feelings, skills, cognition (thoughts), or unconscious processes. Self-help is the conscious reasoning part of your "self" changing other aspects of your internal self, your actions, and your situation. It is self-improvement by your self. The self-change notion may seem a little foreign to you because our culture attends far more to changing other people--making children behave, teaching others, motivating employees, fighting crime and drugs, selling ourselves or products to others, pleasing our lover, getting people to vote our way, etc.--than to changing ourselves. "Making things better" often means trying to change someone else. Even my discipline of psychology spends far more time on studying methods for changing or treating others than on methods for self- improvement. The old concepts of self-control, self-responsibility, and self-reliance haven't been in vogue during the last few decades. On the other hand, if the idea of self-help seems like commonsense to you, then you may be particularly aware that our minds are almost constantly attempting to solve some current or approaching problem. Indeed, most of us are self-helping all the time, i.e. every time you plan your actions by imagining in advance how to possibly handle a situation. Even if it takes only seconds during a conversation to think of what to say, that is self-helping. Our brain's great ability to quickly imagine different ways of approaching a difficult situation sets us apart from other animals. We are constantly asking ourselves "what should I say or do now?" which usually involves thinking of alternative approaches as well as guessing what the outcome of each alternative might be. As a person becomes keenly aware of these constant and complex coping processes, he/she recognizes a myriad of opportunities for intervening to make things better. This book should, above all else, enhance your understanding of these internal mental events involved in coping moment by moment throughout life. This is the essence of self-help. |
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