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L**K
Great condition, great seller!
When I ordered this book, I knew it was an old books, so I expected a book that was beat up, but this book came to me in great condition. All pages were here and none were wrinkled or torn or scribbled on. Clean and crisp. The binding is still intact and good. The seller was great! Even sent a little hand written note to me thanking me for buying it and wishing me well! Will definitely order from this seller again next time I have a need! (The highlighter marks are mine, all the pages were clean when I got the book.)
A**A
Good read for all humans
I liked how the author is humble yet very knowledgeable in his approach.
J**N
Bought for my Son
Bought this for my 18 year old Son. My older Brother, his a Uncle highly recommends this book and is currently reading it with him.
P**D
Interview style was best part. Unconditional positive regard for client with authentic communication.
Carl Rogers is great. 4 stars because contains great ideas.Took off one star because he rambles on and on.If you are interested in psychology, the key is to recognize patterns of psychotherapy.The Carl Jung, Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow, David Burns school is positive and optimistic which is helpful to people.People need hope and meaning to be energized and happy.
A**R
Great read!
Read this book for my courses CBT and Life Coaching and I would advise it to others doing any similar courses/studies.
A**R
Amazing book
It a amazing book
R**Y
A classic
Rogers's introspective style can make for a slow start, but you soon get caught up in his sophisticated yet plainly stated view of psychotherapy. This is one of his later works, after some refinments in his methods and the adoption of the "person-centered" orientation. This book represents a distillation of the ideas that transformed the counseling profession forever.
W**N
become a better person. "
This is where humanism began. And helps one decide " how can I, with my particular experiences and mindsets, become a better person."
S**G
Psychology for Christians, No Truth Involved
Rogers is credited as the founder of the person centred counselling system in the 1950s. Which he copied off Eldon Mayo's Hawthorn program in the 1920s (listen, don't talk; give your whole attention to them, or pretend to; never argue or give advice).Mayo's work was to increase factory productivity. Carl Rogers lived at a time when language from psychology was invading family life, and he exploited this. He melded his strong Christian background with "modern" workplace psychology to create a cultural meme. It's all about redemption after the fall. Our early childhood affects everything (so he says) but we still all have the chance to be saved (to grow in his words). Hallelujah! It's a cultural frame that fits perfectly with capitalism. Self self self (couched as Person centred so that it doesn't seem as narcissistic as it is). How can a 12 year old girl who wants to transition really know that this is right (Tavistock was successfully sued by one such Autistic girl)? What if the client is Autistic?The meme works well as, just like Christianity, it explains why the world is what it is (why some people are hosed), and offers redemption, if you follow the rules. It's very adaptable as there is no science involved, so you can explain contrary emotions; it uses words rather than feelings (words can be interpreted any way). It both makes one responsible for one's mental well-being, while removing any notion of moral culpability. It's all about self reliance and putting the self at the centre of the world. Which chimes with capitalism and endless choice. And why it has been successfull. It is rocket fuel to endless markets, including the markets for love and sex. Rogers worked for the CIA for many years under cover of the Human Ecology Fund. Similar to the "Men Who Stare at Goats" project. He tried to explain this away by saying that it wasn't very successful. But it lasted over 10 years?If you need this book you could do with a true friend. Rather than an ersatz one that Rogers says will work.
R**H
Of historical interest only.
This book may have been groundbreaking in its day, but its day was a long time ago. Originally published in 1961,and mostly written in the ten years preceding that, it is very dated now. Despite the views of some Amazon reviewers, things have moved on since then. It's like reading a book on the history of transport that ends with the invention of the bicycle.Rogers's tedious writing style doesn't help - he has to justify, qualify and over-analyse everything - but the real problem is the repetitive content: the book takes 400 pages to present Rogers's one main idea that if you allow people to talk, and talk, and talk without disagreeing or directing them, they will eventually come to understand themselves better and reach some degree of self-actualisation.The included examples from his clients in therapy are barely coherent and demonstrate nothing worthwhile; one of his clients begins to talk about bodily symptoms at their FORTY SECOND hour-long session. Some therapists would use this as a starting point - the somatic bridge - not by arriving there after a year of analysis. Rogers gives no specific examples of what conditions were helped by his methods, and it appears his practice was mainly about giving educated Americans a vehicle to talk about themselves.You can talk forever about your emotional problems but all you will do is displace them or suppress them more effectively and they will remain unresolved. This book offers no solutions for real people and the fact that people are still reading it and referring to it shows that some people are still happier avoiding real problems than they are at dealing with them.
B**R
Not just for therapists
A must read for anyone truly interested in understanding themselves or others. You don't need to be in a counselling/psychology/psychotherapy situation for this to appeal. It is the one of the most insightful books written on how we develop as a person, how to become whole and to understanding what it means to be human. Carl Rogers is truly awakened when it comes to understanding the whole person. He is a pioneer in the field of mental well being and his work has been pushed to the side in exchange for others methods designed as a quick fix and quick turnover of getting people off waiting lists for therapeutic services. If more people worked in this way, we would be a much healthier society on every level.
R**O
The embodiment of the PC approach
This book is essential if you want to understand how Carl Rogers developed his theory, and then his practice. If you read this, and you are a student counsellor, you get an example of what being authentic feels like to a witness. Nice perk is, you learn what tutor to trust. In other words, while recounting his life and his decisions, Rogers models being authentic, empathetic, and having unconditional positive regard - as opposed to faking the core conditions. At the end of the book, you come to understand that person centered counselling isnβt just a modality, but a way of being instead.
M**R
Easy listening
Well read classic therapy book. So good to have it on audio for us dyslexics.... I am sure there is a market for more audio therapy books that someone could tap in to. The narrator is very easy to listen too and the collection of papers is very helpful for beginners and more experienced therapists or professionals wanting to know more about Rogers approach.
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