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ACT on life not on anger : the new acceptance and commitment therapy guide to problem anger / Georg H. Eifert, Matthew McKay, and John P. Forsyth.

By: Eifert, Georg H, 1952-Contributor(s): McKay, Matthew | Forsyth, John PPublication details: Oakland, CA : New Harbinger Publications, c2006Description: xiii, 179 p. : illustrations ; 23 cmISBN: 9781572244405 (paperback)Subject(s): Anger -- Treatment -- Popular works | Acceptance and commitment therapy -- Popular works | Self-acceptanceSummary: If you'd tried to control problem anger before with little success, this book offers you a new approach to try. Instead of asking you to struggle even harder with anger, this book helps you to drop the rope in your tug-of-war with anger using a new set of principles and techniques: acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT). You'll start by learning how to accept your angry feelings as they occur, without struggling to alter or impede them in any way. Then, using techniques based in mindfulness practice, you'll find out how to watch your anger without identifying with it. Value-identification exercises help you decide what matters most to you and then commit to short- and long-term goals that turn these values into reality. In the process, anger simply loses power over your life-in the process, you'll gain the most profound control, accomplished by simply letting go.
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Book Book Mercy University Hospital Psycho-oncology SH54 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39117000000040

Includes bibliographical references.

If you'd tried to control problem anger before with little success, this book offers you a new approach to try. Instead of asking you to struggle even harder with anger, this book helps you to drop the rope in your tug-of-war with anger using a new set of principles and techniques: acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT).

You'll start by learning how to accept your angry feelings as they occur, without struggling to alter or impede them in any way. Then, using techniques based in mindfulness practice, you'll find out how to watch your anger without identifying with it. Value-identification exercises help you decide what matters most to you and then commit to short- and long-term goals that turn these values into reality. In the process, anger simply loses power over your life-in the process, you'll gain the most profound control, accomplished by simply letting go.

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