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Things Might Go Terribly Horribly Wrong »

Book cover image of Things Might Go Terribly Horribly Wrong by Kelly Wilson

Authors: Kelly Wilson
ISBN-13: 9781572247116, ISBN-10: 1572247118
Format: Paperback
Publisher: New Harbinger Publications
Date Published: May 2010
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Kelly Wilson

Kelly G. Wilson, Ph.D., is associate professor of psychology at the University of Mississippi. He is coauthor of the seminal book Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, which set the foundation for this new model of psychotherapy, as well at the book Mindfulness for Two. He lives and works in Oxford, MS.

Troy DuFrene is a writer specializing in psychology. He is coauthor of Coping with OCD and Mindfulness for Two. He lives and works in Oakland, CA.

Book Synopsis

In Things Might Go Terribly, Horribly Wrong, Kelly Wilson and Troy DuFrene, authors of Mindfulness for Two, offer an effective approach based in acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) to coping with the worry, panic, and fear associated with anxiety disorders. This comprehensive book is packed with in-the-moment strategies readers with anxiety can use to calm their fears.

Publishers Weekly

Rejecting the use of diagnostic labels (agoraphobia, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, etc.) as part of a medical legacy best left behind, psychologist Wilson (Mindfulness for Two) and writer Dufrene (Coping with OCD) approach anxiety as a mild dysfunction treatable with "acceptance and commitment therapy" (ACT), a way of becoming "more psychologically limber" in order to "negotiate crowds, participate in social functions, take risks, and so forth." The collaborators contend that behind much anxiety is an inability to deal with ambiguity; as such, they suggest a series of exercises to stop the cycle of brooding that arises from problems that do not have clear, immediate solutions (and which may be unsolvable). Many of the techniques they propose (visualization, "mindful breathing practice") are familiar exercises in mindfulness, but the most important message of ACT is not to avoid situations that produce anxiety. Instead, this empathetic guide helps readers recognize that brooding over painful or disorienting thoughts is a natural part of everyone's life, necessitating the flexibility to "work around obstacles... inside our own heads."
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