Mindsight The new science of personal transformation

Daniel J. Siegel, 1957-

Book - 2010

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Subjects
Published
New York : Bantam Books c2010.
Language
English
Main Author
Daniel J. Siegel, 1957- (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
xviii, 314p. : ill. ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780553804706
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: Diving into the Sea Inside
  • Part 1. The Path To Well-Being: Mindsight Illuminated
  • 1. A Broken Brain, a Lost Soul: The Triangle of Well-Being
  • Minding the Brain: The Brain in the Palm of Your Hand
  • 2. Crepes of Wrath: Mindsight Lost and Found
  • Minding the Brain: Neuroplasticity in a Nutshell
  • 3. Leaving the Ether Dome: Where Is the Mind?
  • Minding the Brain: Riding the Resonance Circuits
  • 4. The Complexity Choir: Discovering the Harmony of Health
  • Part II. The Power To Change: Mindsight in Action
  • 5. A Roller-Coaster Mind: Strengthening the Hub of Awareness
  • 6. Half a Brain in Hiding: Balancing Left and Right
  • 7. Cut Off from the Neck Down: Reconnecting the Mind and the Body
  • 8. Prisoners of the Past: Memory, Trauma, and Recovery
  • 9. Making Sense of Our Lives: Attachment and the Storytelling Brain
  • 10. Our Multiple Selves: Getting in Touch with the Core
  • 11. The Neurobiology of "We": Becoming Advocates for One Another
  • 12. Time and Tides: Confronting Uncertainty and Mortality
  • Epilogue: Widening the Circle: Expanding the Self
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

The concept of emotional intelligence, or EI, rather than IQ as the true barometer of social success has been a hot topic in psychological circles since Daniel Goleman's landmark Emotional Intelligence (1995). Yet, according to UCLA psychiatrist Siegel, Goleman's personal friend and fellow Harvard alum, the notion of mindsight, or the mind's knack for stepping back and analyzing its own thought processes, is just as critical. Drawing on cutting-edge neurobiological research and Eastern meditation practices as well as studies conducted by his own, L.A.-based Mindsight Institute, Siegel presents a convincing case that mindsight's dual focus on mindfulness and empathy can literally rewire the brain and catalyze greater personal fulfillment. In 12 lucid yet scientifically grounded chapters, he provides the evidence for mindsight's powerful effect on human behavior and then presents a guidebook for developing and applying mindsight in one's life. Unlike his earlier, more academic works, Mindsight is refreshingly accessible, offering solid practical advice while avoiding the naive optimism of many mainstream self-help books.--Hays, Carl Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Siegel (Parenting from the Inside Out) combines Western neuroscience with Eastern meditation in an exciting exploration of how a troubled mind can right itself. Drawing on current science and case studies, Siegel, a clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA School of Medicine, reinforces "the idea that the power of reflection allows us to approach, rather than withdraw, from whatever life brings us." And learning to stay with a feeling, even a threatening one, is the beginning of discovering that this emotion is just "a set of neural firings in our brain." There is enormous pain in the clinical cases: 31-year-old Allison's back pain conceals a painful memory; 12-year-old Sandy is stuck in a panic expressed in obsessive-compulsive behavior. But there is also enormous hope that therapy, sometimes even without medication, can guide a patient through life. Siegel's method isn't a quick fix and doesn't sugarcoat reality: The mindful traits of serenity, courage and wisdom involve accepting our place in the order of things." He challenges his patients to a life of tough work and convincingly suggests it will be well worth the effort. (Dec. 1) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Siegel (psychiatry, Univ. of California, Los Angeles; The Developing Brain) presents the theory of mindsight, combining the practice of mindfulness, or focused awareness, with neuroplasticity-the theory that the brain is transformed anatomically and physiologically through learning and social interaction. Siegel defines mindsight as the ability to focus attention on the workings of the mind and use that information to change and redirect inner experience. Using the image of a closed fist representing the parts, functions, and processes of the brain, he explains the underlying neurobiology of the mind as a system of neural networks monitored and reshaped by thought and experience. With examples from his own practice, Siegel describes how he has used mindsight to treat clients with mild symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorders, and other mental disturbances. Though Siegel admits in an endnote that more research is needed before conclusions can be made linking neuroplasticity to issues of mental health, he maintains that mindsight as a cognitive therapy shows promise in future mental illness treatments. Verdict This will appeal to those fascinated by recent studies in neuroplasticity, e.g., Norman Doige's The Brain That Changes Itself, and of the role of mindfulness in behavioral and physical change as depicted in Sharon Begley's Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain.-Lucille M. Boone, San Jose P.L. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Chapter One A Broken Brain, a Lost Soul The Triangle of Well-Being Barbara's family might never have come for therapy if seven-year-old Leanne hadn't stopped talking in school. Leanne was Barbara's middle child, between Amy, who was fourteen, and Tommy, who was three. They had all taken it hard when their mother was in a near-fatal car accident. But it wasn't until Barbara returned home from the hospital and rehabilitation center that Leanne became "selectively mute." Now she refused to speak with anyone outside the family-including me. In our first weekly therapy sessions, we spent our time in silence, playing some games, doing pantomimes with puppets, drawing, and just being together. Leanne wore her dark hair in a single jumbled ponytail, and her sad brown eyes would quickly dart away whenever I looked directly at her. Our sessions felt stuck, her sadness unchanging, the games we played repetitive. But then one day when we were playing catch, the ball rolled to the side of the couch and Leanne discovered my video player and screen. She said nothing, but the sudden alertness of her expression told me her mind had clicked on to something. The following week Leanne brought in a videotape, walked over to the video machine, and put it into the slot. I turned on the player and her smile lit up the room as we watched her mother gently lift a younger Leanne up into the air, again and again, and then pull her into a huge, enfolding hug, the two of them shaking with laughter from head to toe. Leanne's father, Ben, had captured on film the dance of communication between parent and child that is the hallmark of love: We connect with each other through a give-and-take of signals that link us from the inside out. This is the joy-filled way in which we come to share each other's minds. Next the pair swirled around on the lawn, kicking the brilliant yellow and burnt-orange leaves of autumn. The mother-daughter duet approached the camera, pursed lips blowing kisses into the lens, and then burst out in laughter. Five-year-old Leanne shouted, "Happy birthday, Daddy!" at the top of her lungs, and you could see the camera shake as her father laughed along with the ladies in his life. In the background Leanne's baby brother, Tommy, was napping in his stroller, snuggled under a blanket and surrounded by plush toys. Leanne's older sister, Amy, was off to the side engrossed in a book. "That's how my mom used to be when we lived in Boston," Leanne said suddenly, the smile dropping from her face. It was the first time she had spoken directly to me, but it felt more like I was overhearing her talk to herself. Why had Leanne stopped talking? It had been two years since that birthday celebration, eighteen months since the family moved to Los Angeles, and twelve months since Barbara suffered a severe brain injury in her accident-a head-on collision. Barbara had not been wearing her seat belt that evening as she drove their old Mustang to the local store to get some milk for the kids. When the drunk driver plowed into her, her forehead was forced into the steering wheel. She had been in a coma for weeks following the accident. After she came out of the coma, Barbara had changed in dramatic ways. On the videotape I saw the warm, connected, and caring person that Barbara had been. But now, Ben told me, she "was just not the same Barbara anymore." Her physical body had come home, but Barbara herself, as they had known her, was gone. During Leanne's next visit I asked for some time alone with her parents. It was clear that what had been a close relationship between Barbara and Ben was now profoundly stressed and distant. Ben was patient and kind with Barbara and seemed to care for her deeply, but I could sense his despair. Barbara just stared off as we talked, made little eye contact with either of us, and seemed to lack interest in the conversation. The damage to her forehea Excerpted from Mindsight: The New Science of Personal Transformation by Daniel J. Siegel All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.