The user's guide to the human mind Why our brains make us unhappy, anxious, and neurotic and what we can do about it

Shawn T. Smith, 1967-

Book - 2011

"The User's Guide to the Human Mind is a road map to the puzzling inner workings of the human mind, replete with exercises for overriding the mind's natural impulses toward worry, self-criticism, and fear, and helpful tips for acting in the service of your values and emotional well-being--even when your mind has other plans."--P. [4] of cover.

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2nd Floor 152.4/Smith Due Sep 27, 2024
Subjects
Published
Oakland, CA : New Harbinger Publications c2011.
Language
English
Main Author
Shawn T. Smith, 1967- (-)
Physical Description
vii, 201 p. ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781608820528
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • What This Book Is About
  • Part 1. The Worry Machine
  • 1. Protection at a Price
  • Luke's Struggle
  • My Mind, My Bodyguard
  • The Argument Trap
  • The Paradox of Thought Suppression
  • 2. A Day in the Life of a Mind
  • What Is the Mind?
  • Why the Mind Worries
  • How the Mind Speaks
  • Anxiety and Depression: Ancient Tools for Modern Times
  • The Mind Is Always Rational, from a Certain Point of View
  • 3. Letting the Mind Do Its Job
  • From the Mind's Point of View, Survival Matters Most
  • Thoughts Are Not Facts
  • Observing Your Thoughts
  • Observing Your Emotions
  • Part 2.
  • Happiness Is Not Your Mind's Job
  • 4. How the Mind Uses History
  • How Penelope Lost Track of Her Values
  • The Past Is Not the Problem
  • The Mind's False Dilemmas
  • 5. The Mind's Skewed View and Biased Memories
  • What the Mind Fears and How It Responds
  • The Survival Value of Biased Recall
  • How the Mind Makes Rules to Keep Us Safe
  • 6. Values and Action
  • Training the Mind to Tolerate the Pursuit of Values
  • The Higher Mind
  • Finding Your Values
  • Control Your Life, Not Your Mind
  • The Trap of Waiting for Thoughts and Feelings to Change
  • Take Your Mind with You on the Road to Valued Living
  • Part 3. Four Ways Our Minds Coerce Us-and What We Can Do About Them
  • 7. That Was Then and This Is Then
  • What Meg Doesn't Know About Andy
  • Why Our Minds Rely on History
  • 8. Trump Cards and Double Standards
  • Trump Cards
  • Responding to Trump Cards
  • Double Standards
  • Staying Observant and Maintaining Distance
  • 9. Pessimistic Thinking
  • It Isn't Pessimism-It's Error Management
  • Pessimism: The Ancient Cure for Modern Times
  • Living with a Pessimistic Mind
  • 10. Quick Fixes
  • How the Mind Competes with Itself
  • Breaking the Quick-Fix Habit
  • Managing the Drive for Quick Fixes
  • Part 4. Mood, Lifestyle, and Psychological Flexibility
  • 11. Welcome to Your State of Mind
  • Mallory's Mood
  • Don't Trust Every Mood You Meet
  • My Mind Might Be Wrong
  • Opposite Action: Moving Toward Values
  • To Medicate or Not to Medicate?
  • 12. Mind the Basics
  • How Healthy Habits Insulate Us from the Mind
  • One Final Exercise: Increasing Psychological Flexibility for a Lifetime
  • References
Review by Library Journal Review

Smith, a clinical psychologist and blogger at ironshrink.com, defines the mind as "the combined systems that churn away beneath our conscious awareness." Because of a genetic history that reaches back to prehistoric days, our minds continually try to protect us from environmental dangers. These protection mechanisms, which can include anxiety, depression, instant gratification, pessimistic thoughts, and immobilizing thoughts, are the mind's way of attempting to regulate our behavior and stop us from doing what it perceives as dangerous. Smith explains that only after we have found a set of values, i.e., "the principles and standards that drive us toward meaningful action," can we act deliberately against what the mind dictates. Many exercises in introspection (some quite difficult) are provided to help achieve this aim, as well as strategies, case studies, and suggestions of lifestyle changes. VERDICT Despite plenty of humor and numerous examples, this discussion of the human psyche is complex-covering emotions, thoughts, moods, and the internal battle between our primitive and higher minds. Still, though it lacks the simple explanations necessary for wide appeal, the book will nevertheless please serious readers of psychology.-Maryse Breton, Bibliotheque et Archives Nationales du Quebec, Montreal (c) Copyright 2011. 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.