Author: Gilead Yeffett
“Imagine trying to enjoy a poolside party when you are drowning in the pool and all you can hear is people having a great time and laughing while completely oblivious to the way your body keeps submerging into the water and getting heavier by the water filling your lungs.” Anonymous.
Depression is like that.
Depression is usually defined as an illness characterised by prolonged low mood and a wide range symptoms, which vary from person to person and may include feeling helplessness, hopelessness, meaninglessness, low self-esteem, change in sleeping patterns, loss of
…Back in 1928, the sociologists W. I. Thomas and D. S. Thomas conceived a theorem, now named after them, that states, “If men define situations as real, they are real in their consequences”.
If we believe that there is a monster in the forest and we change our route to avoid it, then our belief is real in its consequence.
If we define some emotions, such as sadness or anger, as negative and we avoid them , then our belief is real in its consequence, we have fewer tools to understand ourselves, others and the impact of our
…An important talk by Matthew Lieberman, Ph.D about the importance of connecting with others.
…In Western culture, we usually use autonomy to measure the level of freedom we have. The more autonomous a person is the more freedom we assume the person experiences. As such, autonomy is the very core of freedom.
The trend of focusing on the self started in the West about 100 years ago with the rise of psychoanalysis; not only has it been growing since, it is also spreading to other cultures, along with other Western concepts rapidly via films, advertising, personal development books and self-expression workshops to name a few vehicles.
As much as autonomy is doing a great deal
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One of the risks of psychotherapy is that it can focus too hard on a specific issue, or a problem, thus isolating it from its context. Most problems are created by the contexts in which people live and therefore require contextual view and solutions. Poverty, violence, sexual behaviour, religious beliefs and practices, social practices and community life must all be part of the therapeutic work if we want to achieve anything beyond mere awareness.
I believe that people come to therapy with real-world problems and are seeking real-world solutions. Therapy that
…We tend to think of our emotions as things within us, anger, anxiety, sadness are labelled as negative emotions that we are better off without. We even speak of releasing anger, thinking positively to push away sadness and other mechanism to change the way we feel.
In Gestalt theory, the validity of our emotions is achieved in what is referred to as co-creation. Co-creation is the idea that no activity has intrinsic value, but is a function of an interaction between people and their environment; the validity comes from an agreement and understanding between people that a certain activity carries
…“…I would like to beg you dear Sir, as well as I can, to have patience with everything unresolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves as if they were locked rooms or books written in a very foreign language”. Rainer Maria Rilke 1902
Most of us have an inherent need to avoid tension and conflicts and that is understandable, unpredictable situations can bring up anxiety. And of course, the more we know about the future, the more predictable it would become and the safer we can feel – a
…A Japanese warrior approached a Zen master searching for an answer to a question that was troubling him.
“Tell me master” asked the warrior, “are there heaven and hell?”
“Ha!” snorted the master in what seemed to be scorn for the warrior.
“What makes you think you could understand such things?” “You are only an uneducated soldier who is wasting my time.”
The warrior immediately froze in shock, no one, but no one, ever spoke to a warrior like this. It meant instant death.
“You are still here” said the master. “Are you too stupid to understand what I said?”
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There once was a fearsome dog that lived by the road that led to a village. The dog made the lives of the villagers miserable, if you happened to cross its path, you were sure to feel the strength of its teeth. There was no one coming or going, no trade and no playing, only fear. I am in control thought the dog to itself.
This went on for a while and the villagers grew tired and desperate.
And so one day they went to the head of
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