The Cognitive Behavioral Solution - The Anxiety and Worry Workbook
ByDavid A. Clark★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | |
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ | |
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ | |
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆ | |
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Readers` Reviews
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
lucas
Like most workbooks on anxiety (and I've read and worked with many), anxiety is relieved through distraction of tasks and such. Not much lasting progress made at the end of it. But it's written better than most with a kind and compassionate voice. I enjoyed it.
★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆
garrett morris
I never really got into this book. While I struggle with anxiety & worry & the book addressed difficulties I experience, I am not a workbook fan. I think the book would be good for someone more motivated than I was at the time.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
sue anne
This is an important book, for obvious reasons. It's the first self-help book on anxiety by Aaron T. Beck, the founder of cognitive therapy. It's published hot on the heels of Beck's 2010 revised treatment manual for cognitive therapy of anxiety disorders, also co-authored with David Clark. Beck's original treatment manual for anxiety was published in 1985 and revised in 2005 but this is a major revision of his approach. He has now provided an extremely comprehensive account of the scientific evidence for cognitive therapy and a more carefully defined and up-to-date set of guidelines for clinicians. This self-help workbook is basically the companion text for that clinical manual, presenting the same approach in a version designed for the general public to use by themselves or as homework when seeing a cognitive therapist using the same approach.
It's not as much of of a light-read as some popular self-help books. It's a workbook in the true sense, with a thorough and systematic chapter-by-chapter approach, including many forms to complete and regular exercises to engage in, perhaps requiring half an hour of work per day for several months. This, in other words, is a serious evidence-based guide to addressing anxiety directly and it will require commitment from the reader.
The book begins with a generic approach to anxiety, which can be used for subclinical problems and many mild-moderate issues. The later chapters focus on three special categories of anxiety: panic attacks, social anxiety and chronic worry. These problems are experienced by many people but the chapters will, of course, be particularly relevant to people who suffer from panic disorder, social phobia, or generalised anxiety disorder (sometimes called the "worry" disorder). Of course, individuals with diagnosable anxiety disorders should probably seek treatment from a qualified therapist who can guide them through an approach like this.
Beck's approach is different to that described by many other books on CBT, some of which adopt a simpler approach or perhaps failed to recognise or assimilate aspects of Beckian cognitive therapy fully. For example, Beck has always interpreted anxiety as being maintained by faulty "appraisals" of threat and coping, following early research in the field of stress, which he applied to anxiety. Thoughts which over-estimate the probability and severity of potential harm are therefore the main target, along with those which under-estimate one's ability to cope and create a sense of helplessness or vulnerability. Moreover, Beck makes the technique of exposure to feared events central to his approach, emphasising the role of "habituation", from behaviour therapy, the natural tendency for anxiety to abate when anxious situations are endured in a repeated, prolonged and systematic manner, without internal struggle or unecessary safety-seeking efforts. Beck also recognises that the process of worrying, prolonged thinking about possible catastrophes and one's difficulty coping, needs to be addressed in a way that goes beyond simple disputation of individual thoughts. The AWARE acronym recommended in his earlier manual (1985) as a self-help strategy for use early in cognitive therapy, although not mentioned in his recent clinical manual for anxiety, re-appears here, particularly as advice for coping during exposure experiments. (AWARE = Accept feelings, Watch thoughts and feelings in a detached way, Act as if non-anxious, Repeat these steps, and Expect to make progress, adopting a realistic but optimistic attitude.) This acronym (from 1985) shows the extent to which Beck's original cognitive therapy for anxiety pre-empted recent "mindfulness and acceptance-based" approaches to CBT.
For some people, without the guidance of a therapist, this workbook (which is really a rigorous programme of self-help) will perhaps be too demanding. However, it probably contains the best evidence-based guidance on tackling anxiety available and potentially makes a powerful adjunct to individual CBT for a range of anxiety disorders. That said, even if someone reads it and only applies some parts of the book, they may still be better off than someone who reads poor advice from popular but less scientific books on anxiety and self-help. So overall: highly recommended!
Donald Robertson
Author of The Philosophy of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (CBT): Stoic Philosophy as Rational and Cognitive Psychotherapy
It's not as much of of a light-read as some popular self-help books. It's a workbook in the true sense, with a thorough and systematic chapter-by-chapter approach, including many forms to complete and regular exercises to engage in, perhaps requiring half an hour of work per day for several months. This, in other words, is a serious evidence-based guide to addressing anxiety directly and it will require commitment from the reader.
The book begins with a generic approach to anxiety, which can be used for subclinical problems and many mild-moderate issues. The later chapters focus on three special categories of anxiety: panic attacks, social anxiety and chronic worry. These problems are experienced by many people but the chapters will, of course, be particularly relevant to people who suffer from panic disorder, social phobia, or generalised anxiety disorder (sometimes called the "worry" disorder). Of course, individuals with diagnosable anxiety disorders should probably seek treatment from a qualified therapist who can guide them through an approach like this.
Beck's approach is different to that described by many other books on CBT, some of which adopt a simpler approach or perhaps failed to recognise or assimilate aspects of Beckian cognitive therapy fully. For example, Beck has always interpreted anxiety as being maintained by faulty "appraisals" of threat and coping, following early research in the field of stress, which he applied to anxiety. Thoughts which over-estimate the probability and severity of potential harm are therefore the main target, along with those which under-estimate one's ability to cope and create a sense of helplessness or vulnerability. Moreover, Beck makes the technique of exposure to feared events central to his approach, emphasising the role of "habituation", from behaviour therapy, the natural tendency for anxiety to abate when anxious situations are endured in a repeated, prolonged and systematic manner, without internal struggle or unecessary safety-seeking efforts. Beck also recognises that the process of worrying, prolonged thinking about possible catastrophes and one's difficulty coping, needs to be addressed in a way that goes beyond simple disputation of individual thoughts. The AWARE acronym recommended in his earlier manual (1985) as a self-help strategy for use early in cognitive therapy, although not mentioned in his recent clinical manual for anxiety, re-appears here, particularly as advice for coping during exposure experiments. (AWARE = Accept feelings, Watch thoughts and feelings in a detached way, Act as if non-anxious, Repeat these steps, and Expect to make progress, adopting a realistic but optimistic attitude.) This acronym (from 1985) shows the extent to which Beck's original cognitive therapy for anxiety pre-empted recent "mindfulness and acceptance-based" approaches to CBT.
For some people, without the guidance of a therapist, this workbook (which is really a rigorous programme of self-help) will perhaps be too demanding. However, it probably contains the best evidence-based guidance on tackling anxiety available and potentially makes a powerful adjunct to individual CBT for a range of anxiety disorders. That said, even if someone reads it and only applies some parts of the book, they may still be better off than someone who reads poor advice from popular but less scientific books on anxiety and self-help. So overall: highly recommended!
Donald Robertson
Author of The Philosophy of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (CBT): Stoic Philosophy as Rational and Cognitive Psychotherapy
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★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
emily wilkinson
The book helps one think in a more structured way and allows one to think about what he/she is thinking. It also helps one make a decision or choice as to how one thinks with the knowledge that what one thinks influences how one feels and acts.
★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
raquelle
I decided I want to buy this book, Kindle edition, and guess what? It isn't available on my Kindle Paper version. Only PC, IOS, and Kindle Fire. the store is doing a fabulous job of trying to lose money on eBook sales opportunities.
Seriously the store? You sell me the Kindle Paper not that long ago but then you don't allow some books to be downloaded onto it? Genius...
Seriously the store? You sell me the Kindle Paper not that long ago but then you don't allow some books to be downloaded onto it? Genius...
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