This is a blog about living with bipolar disorder, family, work, politics, current events, technology and programming, music and pop culture. As a Product Of The Seventies, it's also about that, and the remaining brain cells that are constantly struggling as a result. All thrown together by a mind that's been ridden hard, and put up wet
I'm reading a good book that teaches how to minimize the pain of the inevitability of dualism in our lives.
It's called Emotional Healing by John Ruskan. For it to be helpful though, I think, one has to trust that we are not so horribly different from anyone else. I do trust that all things of the psyche, extreme or not are inherently human and therefore we are not painfully unique except in our own alienated minds.
I'm finding this book extremely refreshing, though I'm sure it's not for everyone. You have to filter through the authors world view, which I frankly do not share, but find his fundamental message profoundly insightful.
3 comments:
Could you explain what you mean by that?
for every up there is a down?
I'm reading a good book that teaches how to minimize the pain of the inevitability of dualism in our lives.
It's called Emotional Healing by John Ruskan. For it to be helpful though, I think, one has to trust that we are not so horribly different from anyone else. I do trust that all things of the psyche, extreme or not are inherently human and therefore we are not painfully unique except in our own alienated minds.
I'm finding this book extremely refreshing, though I'm sure it's not for everyone. You have to filter through the authors world view, which I frankly do not share, but find his fundamental message profoundly insightful.
from the simple OCD that requires visual order, to the moods of my disorder, to the dualism (great term) mentioned by Gianna.
Thanks for the book review. Is the layout visually pleasing? ;)
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