Rating: Summary: This Book Is FUN! And you get to read about real therapy. Review: "The Mummy at the Dining Room Table" is the most fun I have had reading a book on therapy since Oliver Sach's "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat." And both of these books share the common ground of unusual cases that very famous therapists have engaged in their practice. The beauty of the book by Kottler and Carlson is that instead of hearing from one therapist, we get to read about the work of many of the best. Great therapists are not just some people who have special insights into life and life's problems. They are people who make special use of themselves in the service of others. They are people who think outside the box. And they are people whose interest and fascination with others take the rest of us into the world of human interaction in awe and wonder.This is a book for everyone who wants to be a therapist. It is a book for everyone who was once in therapy. It is a book for people who are just fascinated with the breadth and depth of human life. Get this one: it is FUN!
Rating: Summary: This Book Is FUN! And you get to read about real therapy. Review: "The Mummy at the Dining Room Table" is the most fun I have had reading a book on therapy since Oliver Sach's "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat." And both of these books share the common ground of unusual cases that very famous therapists have engaged in their practice. The beauty of the book by Kottler and Carlson is that instead of hearing from one therapist, we get to read about the work of many of the best. Great therapists are not just some people who have special insights into life and life's problems. They are people who make special use of themselves in the service of others. They are people who think outside the box. And they are people whose interest and fascination with others take the rest of us into the world of human interaction in awe and wonder. This is a book for everyone who wants to be a therapist. It is a book for everyone who was once in therapy. It is a book for people who are just fascinated with the breadth and depth of human life. Get this one: it is FUN!
Rating: Summary: Wow...I had to read it twice Review: A wonderful book full of unforgettable psychological trials and triumphs. This book reels you in with the bizarre, takes a glimpse at the various therapy techniques used today, AND makes you really step back, reconsider, and re-evaluate your own perceptions of what is considered strange. If you want to think even further outside the box, READ THIS BOOK!
Rating: Summary: Five stars for 32 therapists! Review: A wonderful book full of unforgettable psychological trials and triumphs. This book reels you in with the bizarre, takes a glimpse at the various therapy techniques used today, AND makes you really step back, reconsider, and re-evaluate your own perceptions of what is considered strange. If you want to think even further outside the box, READ THIS BOOK!
Rating: Summary: Written with compassion and humanity. Review: Generally human behaviour is odd at the best of times. As inhabitants of the planet, most of us do try to live happy and productive lives against varying degrees of opposition, and sometimes our coping skills, the actions we take to be happy, appear to others, including ourselves, to be quite bizarre. This book is a selection of unusual cases from the files of leading therapists. It should be made clear from the start that this isn't a freak show, tales of the macabre, but a genuine telling of memorable cases from professionals who have made it their life's work to help people in dire need. After finishing the text, it also became clear to me that the business of the mind, psychiatry and psychology, is by no means a strict science. The various therapeutic techniques out their being used around the world run into the thousands. It is a social science that is constantly changing and developing. In other terms, there is no blanket cure all - a miracle technique to make us into happy productive people. After reading these cases, what most of the therapists had in common was their intuition. They're confronted by an unusual case, and through active listening, a bit of trial and error, in some instances a breakthrough was made. Sometimes a little progress is made and the session ends, leaving the therapist to remain wondering for years what happed to that particular client. Some of the cases in this collection are exceedingly bizarre, while others, to a great extent, touched the heart. Some of us are pretty resilient beings and can put up with a lot of suffering and pain, and somehow come out smiling. Moreover, there are some cases represented in this book that showed me that some of us need our illnesses simply to live on a day-to-day basis. Out of the thirty-one cases in the text, all interesting and unique in their own way, one stood out for me the most. The therapist was Bradford Keeney, and the case is called: "The Medicine Man Who Never Had a Vision." What makes this case unique was Keeney's uncanny intuition about how to handle the Indian Shaman. The treatment would not be found in any textbook. In fact, the treatment came to him in a vision! The Shaman followed Keeney's instructions to the letter to great results. What was even more fascinating was what transpired later, when another Indian came to Keeney with a problem that sent chills up my spine. He dreamed of being confronted by warriors, and his face painted red. The man awoke with his face actually painted red! He was troubled by this and needed some advice from the 'white' medicine man. This case reinforced the fact that the mind and spirit have far greater potential and depth than we care to admit. This book is written with genuine compassion and a noticeable humanity. Highly recommended to those interested in the mind and our culture in general.
Rating: Summary: Wow...I had to read it twice Review: Just when you thought you couldn't be amazed by something along comes this book. I don't really know who a lot of the therapists are but that didn't keep me from being entranced by this book. The stories of people whose lives are so incredibly complicated either by their own making or by what life had handed them was incredible. I really enjoyed the ways that the counselors were able to help these people with their predicamants. Makes one realize how blessed one's life truly is in comparison to what other people deal with!!
Rating: Summary: A Review of The Mummy at the Dining Room Table Review: The Mummy at the Dining Room Table by Jeffrey Kottler and Jon Carlson is a wonderful book that is very entertaining to the reader. Although the stories are humorous, they have a message for the reader that is touching. Each of the stories is provided by noted therapy experts. The stories are presented in a narrative format that is easy to read. I particularly want to comment on the following two stories: ---Jay Haley's story about the 82 year old prostitute ---Brad Keeney's medicine man who had never had a vision. Truly Kottler and Carlson have created a book that is a "must" for therapists and their clients. When you read these stories, it will make you feel normal! I give the book 5 stars. Loretta J. Bradley, Ph.D. Professor, Counselor Education, Texas Tech University Past President, American Counseling Association Past President, Association for counselor Education and Supervision
Rating: Summary: A Review of The Mummy at the Dining Room Table Review: The Mummy at the Dining Room Table by Jeffrey Kottler and Jon Carlson is a wonderful book that is very entertaining to the reader. Although the stories are humorous, they have a message for the reader that is touching. Each of the stories is provided by noted therapy experts. The stories are presented in a narrative format that is easy to read. I particularly want to comment on the following two stories: ---Jay Haley's story about the 82 year old prostitute ---Brad Keeney's medicine man who had never had a vision. Truly Kottler and Carlson have created a book that is a "must" for therapists and their clients. When you read these stories, it will make you feel normal! I give the book 5 stars. Loretta J. Bradley, Ph.D. Professor, Counselor Education, Texas Tech University Past President, American Counseling Association Past President, Association for counselor Education and Supervision
Rating: Summary: A classic book that can be enjoyed by anyone Review: The Mummy at the Dining Room Table is a classic book that can be enjoyed by anyone. The 32 stories provide insight into what happens behind the therapy door. Although I have been a therapist for many years and thought that I had heard everything until I started to read the Mummy. Each story is told in a very readable fashion that makes the reader feel like they are actually in the room. I really enjoyed Frank Pittman's Buzzy Bee and His Oral Fixation as well as Peggy Papp's The Third Sexual Identity. I think this book will be very popular and give it a 5 star rating.
Rating: Summary: I LOVE this book! Review: There are some books you come across in your lifetime that you feel compelled to pick up and never put down. This is one of those books. If you are at all interested in human nature, then this is a must read. The stories are well-written and offer diverse portraits of human strife from behind the therapists door. The stories are sad, funny, bizarre and touching and provide a rare glimpse into the thought process and theories of therapists.
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