Bold move A 3-step plan to transform anxiety into power

Luana Marques

Book - 2023

"A Harvard-based psychotherapist presents a clinically-proven three-step method to overcome anxiety and achieve goals that is based on the lessons she learned growing up in poverty in Brazil"--

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Subjects
Genres
Self-help publications
Published
New York, NY : HarperOne, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Luana Marques (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
viii, 295 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 281-295).
ISBN
9780063277014
  • Introduction: Am I Enough?
  • Part I. The Stuff that Keeps Us Stuck
  • 1. Anxiety Is Painful but It Is Not What Is Keeping You Stuck
  • 2. The Superpower You Never Knew You Had
  • Part Ii. Shift
  • 3. Brain Chatter: Retreating to Avoid
  • 4. The Brain As A Faulty Predictive Machine
  • 5. Shirting to Overcome Avoidance
  • Part III. Approach
  • 6. The Pressure Cooker: Reacting to Avoid
  • 7. There's Science Behind Your Inner Hothead
  • 8. A Move That Changes the Game
  • Part IV. Align
  • 9. Should I Stay or Should I Go? Remaining to Avoid
  • 10. But Why Do I Stay?
  • 11. Calibrating Your Inner Compass
  • Part V. Conclusion
  • 12. Becoming Bold by Being the Water, Not the Rock
  • Gratitude
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Marques (Almost Anxious), an associate psychology professor at Harvard, draws on personal experience and cognitive and dialectical behavior therapy principles to lay out a promising plan intended to help readers surmount anxiety and other internal barriers to success. Abandoned by her father at age 10, Marques grew up dealing with poverty and an ever-present sense of inadequacy. She moved to America from Brazil to pursue a doctoral degree, and began a career marked by workaholism and burdened by a desperation to fit in. These responses, she writes, were rooted in fear and avoidance spurred by childhood trauma, and she learned to deal with them by treating others with anxiety as a clinician. She explains how psychological avoidance of perceived threats can result in reacting (fight), retreating (flight), or remaining (freeze), leading to a self-reinforcing cycle of negative habits. Solutions include shifting one's perspective (it's important to "make better predictions based on the best information we have available... while challenging our old expectations"), sitting with painful feelings instead of dodging them, and living according to one's personal values. Marques molds complex neuroscientific concepts into relatable and realistic advice (readers shouldn't practice her tools on "the most challenging situation" their lives, she writes; baby steps are the best bet) and discussions of her own trauma are refreshingly candid. Readers who feel their anxiety is insurmountable should give this a look. (June)Correction: An earlier version of this review incorrectly stated that the author dealt with binge-eating as a child.

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