Unf*ck Your Habitat - You're Better Than Your Mess
Book
A practical guide to overcoming the difficulties in home management experienced by many, especially...
Self-help personal development home hoarding cleaning organisation
Leading to Occupational Health and Safety: How Leadership Behaviours Impact Organizational Safety and Well-Being
E. Kevin Kelloway, Karina Nielsen and Jennifer K. Dimoff
Book
Leading to Occupational Health and Safety brings together prominent researchers to explore the...
10% Human: How Your Body's Microbes Hold the Key to Health and Happiness
Book
'A manual for the new, healthy way of being dirty ...Read it, and you will learn to love your...
A Theology of Incarnation from Within Dis-Abled Minds: Our Wounds are Not for Healing
Book
Too frequently, theology has addressed issues of mental health from a largely pastoral and detached...
Overcoming Parent-Child Contact Problems: Family-Based Interventions for Resistance, Rejection, and Alienation
Abigail M. Judge and Robin M. Deutsch
Book
In recent years there has been heightened interest in the clinical and legal management of families...
Surprisingly Down to Earth, and Very Funny
Book
The hysterical, shocking and incredibly intimate memoir from one of the most original and unique...
Mind Hacking: How to Change Your Mind for Good in 21 Days
Book
Have you ever wished you could reprogram your brain, just as a hacker would a computer? In this...
Sam (74 KP) rated Remember This When You're Sad in Books
Mar 27, 2019
Remember This When You’re Sad is part memoir, part self-help, based on the experiences of former Buzzfeed Social Media Editor and current BBC Social Media Manager Maggy Van Eijk. It focuses on her anxiety, depression, panic attacks and disassociation and how she gets through each day with them.
I really loved reading this. I never really read many self-help books before Matt Haig’s Reasons To Stay Alive, but now I really love them and enjoy that they make you feel like you’re being cuddled while reading them.
This book managed to be absolutely hilarious in places while somehow also remaining serious and to the point. It spoke about anxiety in the same way that I address mine. I wouldn’t have gotten through so much if it hadn’t have been for being able to laugh at it sometimes.
It doesn’t preach a miracle cure to mental illnesses. Instead, Maggy Van Eijk talks through different ways of getting through your worst points, from telling you the best places to have a good cry to explaining how to ‘Club Penguin’ your problems. It’s the perfect mental health book for my generation.
I loved how the book is split into lots of lists, and the chapters are split so you can easily flick to the one you need the most at the time you need it.
Maggy Van Eijk even went into the detail of discussing people’s reactions when you talk about your mental health and it made me think about something that happened when I was at college that I had forgotten about until now. I’ve always been open about my mental health, especially when it was much worse when I was in college. I spoke to a girl I knew about it and she said ‘But why are you so open about it? You don’t talk about things like that.’ People’s reactions in the book were quite similar to that.
It’s sad to see that this is a normal thing that people think, but at the same time, it’s not shocking. There is still a massive stigma around mental health conditions, which is why I love books like this that talk openly about it.
This is definitely one of my favourite mental health books. I’ve already had to buy it for a friend and I’ve got two friends waiting to borrow my copy. I’ve never read a book that has been so much like talking to a friend.
Suswatibasu (1701 KP) rated The Perks of Being a Wallflower in Books
Aug 18, 2017
Mindful Walking: Walk Your Way to Mental and Physical Well-Being
Book
Six million years ago, the evolving human brain existed only to instruct our bodies to move. In...