Social phobia library

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deleted #89

Guest
Here are some books that I read and can help tremendously. Feel free to add suggestions of books...

1. Mind Lines by L. Micheal Hall Ph.D
2. Emotional Intelligence by Travis Bradberry and Jean Greaves
3. Been there done that, do this ! by Sam Obitz
4. The mindfulness and acceptance workbook for anxiety by John P. Forsyth
5. Feel the fear and do it anyways by Susan Jeffers Phd
6. Taming your outer child by Susan Anderson
 
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MaliceInWickedland

Well-known member
Nice! I read The Mindfulness and Acceptance Workbook for Anxiety by John P. Forsyth before. I'm definitely going to look into the others.
Thanks for sharing! :D
 
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deleted #89

Guest
Cool. The book Mind lines can be a tough one to understand BUT this book literally teaches you how to change your bad thinking patterns.
 
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deleted #89

Guest
Forget about miraculous solutions offered by modern quack doctors, a good novel will always teach you more about the forgotten art of living than those greedy swindlers wearing white coats. Hesse is indispensable for neurotics like us, followed by others than know how to expose our human soul as it is without disguise or hypocrisy, like Tennessee Williams or Raymond Carver. Also The tree of knowledge from Baroja is a sheer pearl of wisdom, but it should be kinda difficult to find in English even though is utterly interesting.

Anyway, recommending books to SA sufferers is like trying to heal a Korsakoff syndrome by giving cheap wine. Normal people don't need to acquire any introspective knowledge because for them living without reflecting about why they live is enough and OK, which is something I envy from the deepest nook of my moody heart.
 
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deleted #89

Guest
Forget about miraculous solutions offered by modern quack doctors, a good novel will always teach you more about the forgotten art of living than those greedy swindlers wearing white coats. Hesse is indispensable for neurotics like us, followed by others than know how to expose our human soul as it is without disguise or hypocrisy, like Tennessee Williams or Raymond Carver. Also The tree of knowledge from Baroja is a sheer pearl of wisdom, but it should be kinda difficult to find in English even though is utterly interesting.

Anyway, recommending books to SA sufferers is like trying to heal a Korsakoff syndrome by giving cheap wine. Normal people don't need to acquire any introspective knowledge because for them living without reflecting about why they live is enough and OK, which is something I envy from the deepest nook of my moody heart.

"Hope never abandons you; you abandon it." - G.Weinberg
 
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Thanks for the suggestions Mr. Wonderful.

I'd like to add these two, both really helped:
Janet Esposito, 'In the Spotlight'
Paul McKenna, 'Change your life in 7 days'

Also, any audio books my Tony Robbins - they've really given me the final push to change my life - I listened to The Edge and Personal Power - the most inspiring 2 weeks of my life, and I've never looked back. Some of the techniques he suggests are ones that have completely changed my life.
 
"Hope never abandons you; you abandon it." - G.Weinberg

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deleted #89

Guest
@Hamelechh. Keep on doing what your doing...seems to work for you.
 
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TheRadicalAnxiousLefty

Well-known member
I'd recommend "59 Seconds" by Richard Wiseman, PhD.

He gives all sorts of hints and tips for dealing with many situations, all backed up with a cornucopia of facts, studies, statistics, and so on.
 
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