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The Situation Is Hopeless But Not Serious The Pursuit Of Unhappiness



The author, Paul Watzlawick, discusses how people can make their everyday lives miserable by playing games with language. He talks about how people can turn themselves into their own worst enemies by playing games with the past, self-fulfilling prophecies, and why anybody would love them. He also discusses how therapists and counselors can use the techniques in the book to help their patients. more details
Key Features:
  • The author, Paul Watzlawick, discusses how people can make their everyday lives miserable by playing games with language.
  • He talks about how people can turn themselves into their own worst enemies by playing games with the past, self-fulfilling prophecies, and why anybody would love them.
  • He also discusses how therapists and counselors can use the techniques in the book to help their patients.


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Features
Author paul watzlawick
Format paperback
ISBN 9780393310214
Manufacturer W.w. Norton & Company Ltd
Model Number 9780393310214
Description
The author, Paul Watzlawick, discusses how people can make their everyday lives miserable by playing games with language. He talks about how people can turn themselves into their own worst enemies by playing games with the past, self-fulfilling prophecies, and why anybody would love them. He also discusses how therapists and counselors can use the techniques in the book to help their patients.

Calling upon metaphors, vignettes, jokes, innuendos, and certain other "right-hemispheric" language games, Paul Watzlawick shows how we can (and do) make everyday life miserable.
Do you see the past through a rosy filter that makes it seem like Paradise Lost? Are you convinced that traffic lights always turn red for you? Do you have to win (so as not to lose)? After extricating yourself from a bad relationship, do you find another partner just like the previous one? If so, congratulations! You have the makings of an unhappiness expert. With the techniques in this book, you can raise yourself to the genius level. A word of warning, however. Along the way you may begin to ask yourself, "How did I manage to turn myself into my own worst enemy?" Fortunately, this tongue-in-cheek (but serious) volume takes a look at that question too.

Special attention is given to such topics as "Four Games with the Past," "Self-fulfilling Prophecies," and "Why Would Anybody Love Me?" Those who believe that the search for happiness will eventually lead to happiness will find much to ponder in the section "Beware of Arriving."

All readers will be both amused and startled to find themselves in these pages, but there is a special delight and enlightenment for therapists and counselors. Although the author does not officially admit it, the book is one complex "symptom prescription," a therapeutic double bind as described and practiced by him and his colleagues.
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