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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Joanne JozefowskiPublisher: Jason Aronson Publishers Imprint: Jason Aronson Publishers Edition: Revised edition Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.644kg ISBN: 9780765702098ISBN 10: 0765702096 Pages: 262 Publication Date: 01 August 1999 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book offers us a highly compelling and credible account of the human capacity to grow from the adversity of grief. It maps a sophisticated journey that can lead us from our most searing losses into unusual strength of character and conviction previously unknown to us. Both poignant and practical, this clearly written book provides solid, compassionate company for grievers and helpers alike. -- Gina O'Connell Higgins, Ed.D, author, Resilient Adults: Overcoming a Cruel Past This book is like feeling the steady hand of a warm, compassionate friend who will walk with you through every step--all the way from surviving the agony of your loss, helping you cope, recovering, and eventually finding new meaning and purpose in your life. -- Al Siebert, Ph.D., author, The Survivor Personality In recent years, there has been a change from understanding the ways that individuals cope with grief to seeing the ways that grief changes people. In this wonderful book, Jozefowski offers sage advice and inspiration to both counselors and grieving persons that will help them grow even in the midst of loss. -- Kenneth Doka, Ph.D., author, Spirituality and Grief This is an inspirational book for psychotherapists, physicians, clergy, and all of us who must learn to keep living when someone we love has died. Dr. Jozefowski teaches us that grief is not about letting go but making contact: with our loved one, emotions, self, community, values, and hopes. She and her patients show us that these connections can be transforming and, like the Phoenix, can permit one of our saddest moments to become an occasion for rebirth. -- Nicholas A. Covino, Psy.D., Harvard Medical School This book offers us a highly compelling and credible account of the human capacity to grow from the adversity of grief. It maps a sophisticated journey that can lead us from our most searing losses into unusual strength of character and conviction previously unknown to us. Both poignant and practical, this clearly written book provides solid, compassionate company for grievers and helpers alike.--Gina O'Connell Higgins, Ed.D This book offers us a highly compelling and credible account of the human capacity to grow from the adversity of grief. It maps a sophisticated journey that can lead us from our most searing losses into unusual strength of character and conviction previously unknown to us. Both poignant and practical, this clearly written book provides solid, compassionate company for grievers and helpers alike. -- Gina O'Connell Higgins, Ed.D, author, Resilient Adults: Overcoming a Cruel Past This book is like feeling the steady hand of a warm, compassionate friend who will walk with you through every step—all the way from surviving the agony of your loss, helping you cope, recovering, and eventually finding new meaning and purpose in your life. -- Al Siebert Ph.D., author of The Survivor Personality In recent years, there has been a change from understanding the ways that individuals cope with grief to seeing the ways that grief changes people. In this wonderful book, Jozefowski offers sage advice and inspiration to both counselors and grieving persons that will help them grow even in the midst of loss. -- Kenneth Doka, Ph.D., author, Spirituality and Grief This is an inspirational book for psychotherapists, physicians, clergy, and all of us who must learn to keep living when someone we love has died. Dr. Jozefowski teaches us that grief is not about letting go but making contact: with our loved one, emotions, self, community, values, and hopes. She and her patients show us that these connections can be transforming and, like the Phoenix, can permit one of our saddest moments to become an occasion for rebirth. -- Nicholas A. Covino, Psy.D., Harvard Medical School Author InformationJoanne T. Jozefowski, Ph.D., R.N., C.S., is a psychotherapist who specializes in bereavement therapy. She is the founder of Counseling Affiliates, a group practice focusing on issues of loss and grief, and is an adjunct doctoral faculty member of The Union Institute, Cincinnati, Ohio Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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