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Written by two clinical psychologists with nearly a century of combined experience, this book explains how people who suffer from depression, anxiety, or undue anger can overcome these difficulties by allowing the normal process of grieving to occur.Sadness is generally characterized as a negative emotion, yet experiencing sadness plays a positive and key role in achieving and maintaining mental health and in avoiding anxiety, depression, and anger. Indeed, sadness can be understood as a normal and necessary feeling that always occurs when one loses something that is loved. The Positive Power of Sadness examines the experience of sadness, taking into account the personal, relational, and neurological factors of sadness; explains the cultural reasons that many resist feeling sad and consequently displace sadness into secondary processes; and provides a practical and systematic way to overcome anger, anxiety, and depression by allowing the normal process of being sad to occur. This simple paradigm of love and loss causing joy and sorrow in tandem is founded on solid research, carefully considered theory, and extensive experience and will serve to stimulate further thought and writing. Professional therapists, psychologists, counselors, teachers, and clergy who work with people in various settings will find this enlightening reading, as will general readers seeking self-help or possessing an interest in psychological functioning or relational difficulties.
Ron Johnson and Deb Brock, husband and wife, are clinical psychologists who have been in private practice for a combined total of 90 years.
Series Editor's ForewordIntroductionChapter 1 Not My DaughterChapter 2 Daily Grief: "The Little Sads"Chapter 3 Different Kinds of LossesChapter 4 Loss of RelationshipsChapter 5 Why We Don't GrieveChapter 6 Depression and Anxiety: Sadness DisguisedChapter 7 How to Do SadnessAnnotated BibliographyIndex