Showing posts with label psychology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psychology. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

"Overcoming Anxiety" by David Berndt

GUEST POST and REVIEW
Overcoming Anxiety:
Self-Help Anxiety Relief
by David Berndt, Ph.D.


Author and psychologist David Berndt, Ph.D., is celebrating the release of Overcoming Anxiety, the first of in his new Psychology Knowledge Mental Health Series.
The author joins me today to share a special guest post and an excerpt from the book. You can also read my review. Make sure you follow the author's blog tour, featuring many more reviews, guest posts, and interviews.

Description
Psychologist David Berndt, Ph.D., in Overcoming Anxiety, outlines several self-help methods for relief from anxiety and worry. In clear language and a conversational style, Dr. Berndt talks intimately with the reader like he would in a therapy session, and he shares what he learned from his peers and clients about how to make techniques for anxiety management more effective and helpful.
You will learn:
·       A Self-hypnosis grounding technique in the Ericksonian tradition.
·   Box Breathing, Seven Eleven and similar breathing techniques for anxiety relief.
·       How to stop or interrupt toxic thoughts that keep you locked in anxiety.
·       How to harness and utilize your worries, so they work for you.
·       Relief from anxiety through desensitization and exposure therapy.
Designed to be used alone as self-help or in conjunction with professional treatment Dr. Berndt draws upon his experience as a clinician and academic researcher to give accessible help to the reader who wants to understand and manage their anxiety.

Excerpt
I wanted to start off by teaching you a technique, sometimes known as the 54321 Technique, you can begin to use right way. I learned a version of this initially from another psychologist, Yvonne Dolan, who is one of the bright stars of the Solution Focused brief therapy approach. Perhaps because of her training under master therapist Milton Erickson, she learned the value of being especially creative and innovative. When I noticed early in my career that my skill set needed some bolstering, I sought training from Ms. Dolan, among others. She taught an earlier version of this technique in a seminar that I attended on treatment approaches to Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
The information she shared is presented in her 2000 book, One Small Step, Moving Beyond Trauma and Therapy to a Life of Joy and she indicated that the technique in its original version should be credited to Betty Erickson, the wife of hypnotherapist Milton Erickson. This particular method, as it has evolved in the way I use it, is now one of my "go to" tools whenever I want to help my clients to feel more grounded. Yvonne Dolan originally taught me the approach as a tool for dealing with flashbacks, so it is a fairly strong remedy, but my patients and I have discovered that it can be useful with many types of emotional storms.
Ms. Dolan encouraged those of us who were in that PTSD training seminar to continue to develop what I will call the "54321 Technique," and to modify it. I have, over the years, had the privilege - with significant input from many of my clients - to change, improve upon, and modify some components of this procedure. I now use the tool clinically as I present it here, to teach my clients how to manage anxiety and other strong feelings.
Custom Designed
The way I am presenting this technique is easy to teach, and in order to present it to the reader I have similarly made it as accessible as possible, and in so doing, by necessity I am making it rather generic. I leave it up to you the reader to shape it, change it, and enrich it in ways that are tailored to your own unique needs and style. As you become more skilled at the basic procedure (and others presented in later chapters), you will find ways to improve the technique by making it more interesting to you, more simpatico, and thereby more powerful.
In its simplest form this 54321 skill can be quite helpful, without any changes. However, by changing the technique and making it yours, you will more confidently rely on it for managing severe anxiety and for relief during other peak moments of stress. Combined with other strategies in the later chapters, you will get more adept at developing an emotionally intelligent skillset, from which you can pick and choose your best option for handling an emotional problem.

Praise for the Dr. David J. Berndt's Work
About the Multiscore Depression Inventory:
"A textbook example of how to create a psychological test." ~ Oscar Burrows, Mental Measurement Yearbook
"Dr. Berndt is a creative and forward-thinking psychologist who has contributed to advancing psychology both with his research and clinical practice. He has helped countless patients with their depression and anxiety, and his conversational and accessible style of writing makes Overcoming Anxiety a book you would want for your top shelf." ~ Charles Kaiser, Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Psychology at the College of Charleston

My Review


By Lynda Dickson
The author shares numerous techniques for overcoming anxiety and related disorders: the 54321 technique, breathing exercises, scheduling worry time, desensitization to overcome fears and phobias, cognitive behavior therapy to tackle negative thoughts, dealing with thoughts that can lead to depression. These are all described in a simple, step-by-step manner, making it easy for readers to employ them on their own or with the assistance of a trained psychologist. The author also describes the physiological reasons for panic attacks. Includes a full reference list at the end.
It's hard to believe so much information can be packed into such a small volume (188 pages). Full of handy self-help tips from a trained psychologist, this book is the cheapest form of therapy you are likely to get.

Guest Post by the Author
Anxiety Relief: Box Breathing and 7/11
by David Berndt, PhD clinical psychologist
The way I am going to introduce breathing techniques for the management of anxiety is very much the same way I introduce it to my clients. Breathing is a skill that most people never bother to learn, or, at least, they never learn well. Professional singers pay for voice lessons, in order to learn how to breathe deeply, using the diaphragm muscle at the bottom of the lungs to make their lungs into a bellows. They learn how to pump oxygen like a bagpipe over their reed-like vocal cords, so singers can hold and trill a note for a long time. Swimmers and gymnasts are trained at how to breathe deeply, and so are actors, who need to project to the back rows of a theater.
But, of all the groups who need to learn how to breathe deeply, there are few with more at stake than the person who is prone to anxiety. If you can learn to breathe deeply, and you can use that skill both tactically and strategically, then you will have a good chance at winning battles in your war with anxiety. 
Deep breathing techniques are helpful with management of the physical symptoms of anxiety, and they can also help to calm or still the mind, when your thoughts starts swirling. The reason deep breathing exercises play such an important role in anxiety management has to do with the impact of two different sets of physical equilibriums.  One of these is the role of the parasympathetic nervous system, and the other is the very specific role that breathing can play in warding off or reversing a panic attack.
Most anxious patients have learned at one time or another that breathing can help with anxiety, because taking several deep breaths can switch on the Parasympathetic nervous system. This finely tuned system’s cluster of physical functions (also known as the relaxation response) serves to counterbalance your survival reflex. Your Sympathetic nervous system, when your body senses threat - from a tiger, your boss, or the IRS, kicks into high survival gear. It pumps adrenaline, speeds up your heart rate and among other things, elicits a panting-like rapid shallow breathing, in order to rapidly take in as much oxygen as possible. Much of what we know as anxiety are the physical reactions that automatically switch on when the body needs to avoid harm. The parallel system (Parasympathetic) works in just the opposite manner, and it helps you unwind when the threat has ceased. Deep breathing is just one of many grounding techniques that can switch this relaxation system on; many of these grounding techniques typically operate by activating this Parasympathetic nervous system.
In order to breathe in a manner that switches on the Parasympathetic nervous system, you need to inhale deeply, like a deep sigh, expanding the lungs fully, assisted by your diaphragm muscle. You can practice this by putting one hand on the stomach and another on the chest. When breathing deeply the area near the stomach should expand more than the chest; that’s why deep breathing is often referred to as "belly breathing."
There are many different yardsticks to help you breathe deeply enough, and most of them involve counting. Think of the counting as scaffolding, it’s just a guideline and the actual numbers do not matter much. In fact, if there is a number that matters it is four. When you breathe in (to a count of four while doing so), you can begin to get the effect you are seeking. Three is not enough, and four is just barely enough – more than that is even better. Breathing in by a count of four and out by a count of four works, but it’s the smallest depth of breathing that actually helps with anxiety. Five is better, six is better still, etc.
However, when I teach breathing techniques, I want to make sure we are killing two birds with one stone. Breathing deeply (such as: in by four and out by four) will help switch the relaxation response on, but, as I said above, there is another system at play, and this one has to do with panic and severe anxiety attacks. Panic attacks can be warded off and/or reversed by adding a new wrinkle to your breathing strategy. There is not time to go into it in depth here, but I cover the physiology of this second component in my final chapter of Overcoming Anxiety (this mechanism has to do with a sensor in your body that maintains a balance between oxygen and carbon dioxide).
If you can take my word for it, all you really know is that you need to breathe not just deeply, but, in the process, also breath more out (or hold your breath) for an interval longer than the amount that you breathe in. 
Two widely used techniques illustrate simple ways to implement this, and both of them make use of both of these physiological systems. In Four Squared, you breathe in for a count of four, hold your breath for a second count of four, breathe out for four, and finally hold for another four, before starting around the rectangle a second time.  This method is also called "Box" breathing. Repeat it as long as needed but ideally at least four times. The other useful technique is called 7/11. You simply breathe in for a count of seven and out for a count of 11, and keep repeating this for several minutes.  Both of these techniques are constructed so that when you learn them, you are addressing both sets of problems.
These techniques can both seem to "take forever" to take effect, when you are very anxious, but often succeed after only a few minutes if you can hang in there. They can typically kick in a few minutes quicker than the benzodiazepines, and of course you do not develop a tolerance to it or an addiction like you likely would if you use the benzos in that manner. 
If you already have a breathing technique that you use, juts modify it to include the factors I mentioned above (more out than in, a count of four or greater). From a health perspective it does not matter whether you use your mouth or nostrils (whatever is easiest) or what other things you can combine with it such as visual imagery or muscle relaxation. While many of these other techniques can also be helpful, breathing alone is often enough to help bring your anxiety under control.
You probably want to develop a strategy about when and how to use breathing and how you practice to learn the habit of taking deep breaths. A therapist can be especially helpful in developing strategic and tactical applications. Whether or not you make use of a therapist, you will do best if you come up with a customized intervention that takes into account your strengths, interests, preferences, and past successes. Whatever method you use to practice breathing can also be an opportunity to combine breathing with a laser-like focus, or with one or more of the things you use already (listening to music?), so that the two can evoke each other.
Thanks for the opportunity to share this information with your readers. I hope that this can begin to give you a taste for all the techniques that are at your disposal when you decide to take the reins of your anxiety and learn to harness it.

About the Author
David J. Berndt, Ph.D. was a Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Chicago, where he published or presented over 80 papers and articles, before establishing a private practice. Dr. Berndt currently lives in Charleston, S.C., where he also teaches in an adjunct capacity at the College of Charleston. He is best known for his psychological tests The Multiscore Depression Inventory, and the Multiscore Depression Inventory for Children, both from Western Psychological Services. He also contributes to several psychology websites including Psychology KnowledgeOvercoming Anxiety is the first in a series of books on dealing with psychological problems that Dr. Berndt plans to release in 2015-2017.

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Wednesday, February 19, 2014

"The Shopping Addiction Cure: How to Stop Your Compulsive Spending Forever!" by Olivia Sanborne

NEW RELEASE
The Shopping Addiction Cure:
How to Stop Your Compulsive Spending Forever!
by Olivia Sanborne


Description
You’re about to discover if your spending habits are just a little out of control or if you have a spending addiction. Millions of people struggle with overspending and mismanagement of their income. If you are finding yourself in this situation, then perhaps you may have a shopping addiction. Being a shopaholic is no laughing matter, if disregarded, this could potentially ruin your future and your family's future. Most shopaholics use the excuse as they are trying to do their part to ensure a productive economy, but the truth is, your economic future is in jeopardy if your destructive habits have you deeply in debt. If you hide any purchases from your partner or friends - then this book is for you. This book will help you understand the meaning of addiction and what steps you can take to control your spending. You will get some basic steps to guide you through methods to control your addiction, information about addiction, strategies to stay on track while shopping and where to go for help and support.
Here is a preview of what you'll learn...
  • What is Compulsive Shopping?
  • How do you know that you are a shopaholic?
  • Why do compulsive spenders spend?
  • What if you are not a severe compulsive spender?
  • Seeking Counseling
  • Where to turn for information
  • Much, much more!


Excerpt
Chapter 3: Why do compulsive spenders spend?
People shop and spend money for many different reasons. The most obvious reason to shop is to buy the things that you need to survive. If this is the reason that you shop, then you are probably not a shopaholic.
According to Terrence Shulman, founder of the Shulman Center for Compulsive Theft, Spending, and Hoarding, one of the reasons that shopaholics overspend is because they may have been denied possession of things when they were young. Now that they are older and have access to money, they want to buy all the things that they didn’t have when they were kids—and they also do the same for their own kids.
Another reason might be that they enjoy the thrill of buying things. It is exciting to them. They enjoy the feelings of euphoria when they can exert the power to just go into a store and buy something—just because they can. However, in many cases this backfires on them when they ultimately do not have the money to pay for these things. 
Some shopaholics are constantly seeking the approval of their peers—this is mainly when they flaunt new clothing and jewelry to their friends and coworkers. They want to impress people, so they spend money that they do not have. Then of course, this causes problems for them when the bills come in, and they do not have money to pay them.
Other shopaholics are truly impulsive and or compulsive. They really cannot control their own behavior. These folks are the most severe cases.  Because they have no control whatsoever, they will run their bank accounts down, bounce checks, max out their credit and charge cards, and will wind up declaring bankruptcy and or turning to theft, which will eventually lead them to jail or worse.
Why is it important to understand why you are a shopaholic or compulsive spender? Won’t that just dredge up more unhappy memories?  The answers to these questions are simple. Before we can solve a problem, we must first understand why it is a problem and how it came to be a problem. Then we will deal with the reasons first. That is the only way that we can determine a path that will lead us to success and recovery.
Dealing with the root of the problem first will eliminate the reason to do what we do. If you no longer have a reason to do it, it will be easier to get your life on the right track to end your addiction.

Review
The Shopping Addiction Cure, by Olivia Sanborne, is an extremely well-written, non-fiction book on how to stop compulsive spending. Shopping addiction or compulsive shopping is not a recent phenomenon but it has only started to become seriously addressed and treated within the last 10 years. I also liked the book because it made me realize a shopping addiction is not cute or funny. It is as painful as any other addiction. The book is more than poignant. It is worth the time of a woman reader or a man reader. It is an important look at the other side of loving to shop. Overall, I really enjoyed reading this book, it is a very fast read and I look forward to reading more from this author. Highly recommended!

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Thursday, April 11, 2013

"Meeting the Challenge of Bipolar Disorder: Self Help Strategies That Work!" by Association for Natural Psychology, Gabrielle Woods, PhD (Editor), Laura Pipoly, PC EdD (Foreward)


Meeting the Challenge of Bipolar Disorder:
Self Help Strategies That Work!
by Association for Natural Psychology,
Gabrielle Woods, PhD (Editor),
Laura Pipoly, PC EdD (Foreward)



Description
Self help for bipolar disorder can result in positive gains. Your moods involving mania and depression can be positively affected through Positive Lifestyle Changes. By developing an array of coping skills, and making gradual, incremental changes in your lifestyle, you will find that mood swings are less dramatic, and mood stability can be attained.
There are a multitude of factors that affect our mental health. Mental health treatment based on the medical model, usually involving psychiatric labeling and the prescribing of strong pharmaceutical drugs, sometimes with a little therapy, is based on a faulty foundation, and is not the panacea that it is proclaimed to be.
Whether or not you subscribe to the views of mainstream psychiatry, if you or a loved one has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, or displays the symptoms of bipolar disorder, there is much you can do to overcome its symptoms.
Educate yourself on the many avenues of psychological recovery. Don't be satisfied with the medical model interpretation of psychiatric disorders. You have everything to gain by giving due attention to self help when addressing symptoms of bipolar disorder. Remission and recovery is within reach for most who suffer with bipolar disorder.
Additionally, prevention in mental health prevention is an important aspect of psychology that is often overlooked. A healthy lifestyle based on practical wisdom for good physical and mental health should be a part of both formal education and self-education.
The model presented in this book is based on actual experiences of bipolar disorder remission.
In addition to a consideration of the subject in the introduction of this book, the following topics are developed. Each section is researched and contains a recommended reading section.
A Foundation for Change, Growth and Progress
One: Identify and Correct Individual Target Symptoms and Triggers
Two: Education and Self-Education Put You in Control
Three: Self Determination as an Aid Towards Personal Responsibility and Recovery
Four: Journaling is a Stabilizing Multi-Dimensional Self-Help Tool
Five: Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) as Self Help (and/or CBT with a Therapist)

Balance
Six: Seek Balance in Your Thoughts and Activities, Along with Structure in Your Routine
Seven: Self Monitor Shifts in Mood and Behavior to Prevent Relapse
Eight: Control Overspending Binges and Get Control of Your Finances
Nine: Take Time Daily for Relaxation
Ten: Determine What Causes Stress and Endeavor to Correct It, Handle It and Modify It
Eleven: Read for Therapy, Information and as a Positive Life Habit
Twelve: Write for Self Expression as a Stabilizing Therapy

Nutrition and Physical Needs
Thirteen: Pursue a Healthy Diet, Give Adequate Attention to Nutrition
Fourteen: Avoid Alcohol and Other Mood-Altering and Mind Altering Substances
Fifteen: Eliminate Caffeine and Cigarette Smoking
Sixteen: Regular Exercise as an Important Element of Mental Health, which Contributes to Feelings of Self-Worth and Stabilization
Seventeen: Order and Personal Hygiene Facilitate Better Mental Health

Visual and Sensory Elements of Mental Process
Eighteen: Create Art - A Side-Effect-Free Natural Mood Stabilizer
Nineteen: Avoid Overstimulation
Twenty: Consider Unplugging
Twenty-One: Engage in Positive, Pro-Active Activities Rather than Indulging in Media Violence
Twenty-two: Avoid Pornography, Overcome Pornography Addiction and Hypersexuality
Twenty-three: Music can Positively or Negatively Influence Mental Health and Symptoms of Bipolar Disorder
Twenty-four: Neurofeeback Can Effectively Reduce Symptoms
Interpersonal Relationships and Support
Twenty-Five: Build a Support System of Concerned Friends and/or family and Extended Family
Twenty-Six: Towards Self-Disclosure: Take Down Psychological Defences
Twenty-seven: Build Your Support Team with a Coach
Twenty-eight: Get Control of Anger: Adaptive Behaviors and Responses Towards Anger Management

Spirituality, Values and Principles and Life Philosophies
Twenty-nine: Be Honest - A Force for Healing and Good Mental Health
Thirty: Seek Spiritual Growth as an Avenue Towards Recovery
Thirty-one: Avoid Negative Spiritual Views and Maintain a Healthy Balance in Your Spirituality
Thirty-two: Develop Life Principles and Philosophies that Facilitate Good Mental Health
Thirty-three: Improve Self-Esteem - Ideas Worth Considering


Excerpt
...bipolar disorder should not be considered to be a life sentence, and it certainly is not a death sentence. The mathematical adage, "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts" proves to be true with the label "bipolar disorder".
While some in the mental health field have painted a gloomy, even negative view of recovery from bipolar disorder, statistics indicate that not only is recovery and remission possible, but that hundreds of thousands have recovered from bipolar disorder and its symptoms for good. While current statistics might indicate that for the majority who are diagnosed with bipolar disorder, it is considered to be a lifetime condition, part of the problem may be in the way the disorder is dealt with or treated by the mainstream psychiatric community in the first place.
With heavy emphasis on pharmaceutical treatment, which is often not effective as a long-term cure, and where relapse rates are high, even with properly administered psychiatric drugs, adequate consideration of pursuing Positive Lifestyle Changes, in addition to support from family, peers and professionals, can result in a much higher rate of recovery, where remission is likely possible and even probable.

Review
There are no reviews as yet for this recent release. Be the first to review this book after reading your copy.

From the Author
There is much that you can do to overcome symptoms associated with bipolar disorder. Good mental health is hard work. You need to be educated on what causes bipolar disorder and what you can do to address individual symptoms. Because a large percentage of cases of bipolar disorder are not severe, with simple lifestyle changes, many can help themselves through self help efforts. Educating yourself on bipolar disorder and self help methods is the key. This book helps demystify bipolar disorder and provides you with resources that help put you in control.
While it is often stated that bipolar disorder is a lifetime condition, this isn't always the case, and for a significant percentage of those diagnosed with bipolar disorder, recovery and remission can be achieved.
This book provides additional resources to help you reach your goal of recovery and remission. You can win in making gradual progress towards overcoming the symptoms of bipolar disorder.
(This book is not designed to replace professional psychological or medical assistance when necessary, but complements it).

About the Author

The Association for Youth, Children and Natural Psychology (AYCNP) is a New Jersey non-profit association operating as a 501 c(3) in the educational and psychology fields. It is rooted in public school education. It was started by a science teacher and doctor of educational leadership, both in Newark, NJ.
The AYCNP and its literature is non-religious and non-political. It is not supported or endorsed by any religious organization, nor are the ideas expressed in its publications rooted in any particular religious ideology. The literature of the AYCNP is eclectic in that it draws on a wide variety of resources for its information. The AYCNP has no political agenda but is strictly educationally oriented. The focus of Overcoming ADHD Without Medication and similar ideas on mental health is in practicality. Anyone can improve their mental health on any of a number of fronts through attention to practical measures, lifestyle changes and by developing coping skills.
Individual founders of the AYCNP are members of the Society for Teacher's of Psychology and NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness).
The AYCNP uses some of its funds towards charitable contributions directly to the Newark, NJ community to support the social, educational and artistic development of youth and children in Newark, and on a wider platform.
The AYCNP is a Member in good standing with National Council of Nonprofits and the Center for Non-Profits of NJ and operates as a 501 c(3) corporation. It provides materials and book donations to children and youth, as well as materials donations to public schools, public libraries, and to organizations involved with development of printed material on mental health issues.
The AYCNP website is Health on the Internet(HON) certified, Geneva, Switzerland, which is accredited by the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations.
Laura Pipoly is a National Board Certified Counselor and is part of the teaching faculty of the University of Phoenix. In addition to teaching she has also worked as a school counselor, case manager, psychotherapist, behavior specialist, and mobile therapist. Laura has presented at the national level at the American Counseling Association and at the state level at the All-Ohio Counselor's Conference. Most recently, Laura was a co-presenter at the Northeast Ohio Regional Drug Summit.
Gabrielle Wood, Ph.D. is a research psychologist and consultant. She is a member of the International Leadership Association, the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, and the American Psychological Association. She has ten years experience conducting multi-method research and leading numerous research studies. She is a former lecturer at Christopher Newport University teaching leadership, self- analysis methods, and values exploration. She has also taught Social Psychology, among other courses, at George Mason University. Dr. Wood was a Research Fellow for the Research Fellowship Consortium in Alexandria, Virginia.
  
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