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OverviewHow We Break is the second part in the monumental How to Live trilogy, a profound and ambitious series that gets to the heart of what it means to be human. As a therapist, Vincent Deary has a ringside seat at the theater of change, having witnessed firsthand how it's done, and what it is that gets people stuck. As a researcher and reader, he knows that there are centuries of thought about habit and change, from the most ancient ethical and spiritual writings up to the most modern schools of psychotherapy and neuroscience. Deary's three freestanding books bring these insights together, synthesizing them to produce a coherent vision of what human beings are like--how we work, how we break, and how we mend. At the heart of these books is the insight that most of our lives are lived automatically. Consciousness has, on the whole, little to do with daily life. Moment to moment, we rely mostly on the vast store of automated practices that are ""the cognitive unconscious"" of modern neuroscience. This ""cognitive unconscious"" is distributed not only through our nerves and muscles, but also through our environment, our social network, and our culture. Human existence is, as such, largely reliant on ""scaffolding,"" an intricate supporting framework of cognitive prosthetics, both personal and communal. The purpose of the How to Live trilogy is to bring these hidden mechanisms to light and to show them at work beneath our daily life, in all our wounding and our healing. The second book of the How We Live trilogy moves away from the journey of normal change, with all its resistance and excitement, and focuses on the journeys that get derailed, dealing with the common ways in which we break: trauma, anxiety, depression, doubt, despair, or simply getting into a rut. How We Break shows how the human animal gets stuck, not because of some ""pathology,"" but because of the nature of the creatures that we are and the kinds of processes that constitute our being. It shows that these derailments are a normal part of being human. The last chapter, ""Escape Velocity,"" discusses the tension between our inertia and our need for change, thereby setting the scene for the third book, How We Mend, where we look at deliberate change and where we watch people getting better. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Vincent Deary , Vincent DearyPublisher: Blackstone Publishing Imprint: Blackstone Publishing Volume: 2 Dimensions: Width: 14.80cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 14.40cm Weight: 0.204kg ISBN: 9781504799485ISBN 10: 1504799488 Publication Date: 21 May 2024 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Audio Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews""An empathetic and searching meditation on some of humanity's deepest psychological questions."" -- ""Publishers Weekly"" ""Urgent...Reading this book had me re-reaching for F. Scott Fitzgerald's seminal essays on his own 'crack-up, ' not least because the speculative cadences of some of Deary's metaphors are reminiscent of those pieces...The self-help wisdom here is properly caveated and hard-won."" -- ""The Guardian (London)"" """Urgent...Reading this book had me re-reaching for F. Scott Fitzgerald's seminal essays on his own 'crack-up, ' not least because the speculative cadences of some of Deary's metaphors are reminiscent of those pieces...The self-help wisdom here is properly caveated and hard-won."" -- ""The Guardian (London)""" Author InformationVincent Deary is a practitioner health psychologist and professor of health psychology at Northumbria University, where his research focuses on the development of new psychosocial interventions for people with a variety of health issues, including cancer survivors and the elderly. A clinician in the UK's first transdiagnostic fatigue clinic, he works as part of a multidisciplinary team to help people for whom fatigue is a disabling symptom. He is the author of How We Are, the first book in the How to Live series. He lives in Newcastle upon Tyne, in the North of England. Vincent Deary is a practitioner health psychologist and professor of health psychology at Northumbria University, where his research focuses on the development of new psychosocial interventions for people with a variety of health issues, including cancer survivors and the elderly. A clinician in the UK's first transdiagnostic fatigue clinic, he works as part of a multidisciplinary team to help people for whom fatigue is a disabling symptom. He is the author of How We Are, the first book in the How to Live series. He lives in Newcastle upon Tyne, in the North of England. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |