Momma and the meaning of life : tales of psychotherapy
(Book)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Published
©1999 Perennial, 2000., New York, NY :
Status
Shirlington - Adult Nonfiction
616.8914 YALOM
1 available

Copies

LocationCall NumberStatus
Shirlington - Adult Nonfiction616.8914 YALOMAvailable

Description

As the public grows disillusioned with therapeutic quick fixes, people are looking for a deeper psychotherapeutic experience to make life more meaningful and satisfying. What really happens in therapy? What promises and perils does it hold for them?No one writes about therapy - or indeed the dilemmas of the human condition - with more acuity, style, and heart than Irvin Yalom. Here he combines the storytelling skills so widely praised in Love’s Executioner with the wisdom of the compassionate and fully engaged psychotherapist.In these six compelling tales of therapy, Yalom introduces us to an unforgettable cast of characters: Paula, who faces death and stares it down; Magnolia, into whose ample lap Yalom longs to pour his own sorrows; Irene, who learns to seek out anger and plunge into it. And there’s Momma, old-fashioned, ill-tempered, who drifts into Yalom’s dreams and tramples through his thoughts. At once wildly entertaining and deeply thoughtful, Momma and the Meaning of Life is a work of rare insight and imagination.

More Details

Format
Book
Edition
First Perennial edition.
Physical Desc
ix, 257 pages ; 21 cm
Language
English
ISBN
0060958383, 9780060958381

Notes

General Note
With new afterword.

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Yalom, psychotherapist and author of When Nietzsche Wept (1992) and Lying on the Couch (1996), uses his experiences with patients and his own life challenges to explore the process of psychotherapy and the search for meaning in life. He begins this collection of six stories with his dreams about his mother several years after her death. He recalls a difficult woman and wonders at her continued hold on him until he is able to reconcile their relationship in his dreams. Paula is a patient with a voracious cancer eating at her organs but not sapping her sense of life. Their roles are blurred as the doctor is captivated by Paula's self-assurance and spirituality even in the face of her death, an admiration that allows her to "educate" him. Another story recounts a distrustful, almost hostile, relationship between a psychotherapist and a female patient. She begins to open up when she accidentally gets hold of the doctor's notes and defends herself against his off-the-cuff remarks. Throughout, Yalom absorbingly recounts the resilience some patients bring to the task of healing themselves and is brutally frank about the limitations of modern medicine. --Vanessa Bush

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Publisher's Weekly Review

Following the "tales from the clinic" formula that helped make his Love's Executioner a bestseller, psychiatrist Yalom reveals much more of himself this time around. He starts with a soul-baring account of his relationship with his mother, in Yalom's description a domineering woman who was intensely proud of her famous son. Their dance of mutual fear, control and deceit instilled patterns that took Yalom years to unlearn. Committed to egalitarian, mutually enriching relationships with his patients, Yalom tells of his grandiose fantasies of rescuing distressed damsels, as well as of his abiding need for a consoling mother figure. He found one such in Magnolia, a 70-year-old black woman working through her own feelings of childhood abandonment by her widowed mother. Another patient, Paula, a woman with terminal breast cancer, initially radiates an inner serenity but eventually unveils to Yalom her "anger rock," the symbolic repository of her pent-up rage and despair. We also meet Martin, an elderly, wheelchair-bound man whose exhausted caretaker son mocks his suicide attempt; Rosa, an 80-pound anorexic who is fed intravenously; Irene, an imperious surgeon who agonizes over her husband's terminal illness; and Linda, a furious divorc‚e whose privacy was abusively violated as a girl by her father. Yalom's therapeutic encounters, as recorded here, are often painful crucibles of personal transformation, in which people grow in unexpected ways by releasing reservoirs of guilt, fear, sadness, anger and denial. Author tour. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

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Library Journal Review

Psychiatrist and gifted storyteller Yalom (Love's Executioner) returns with six engaging tales of psychotherapy. In this collection, which includes two fictional narratives, Yalom explores his own dreams and fantasies, relationships with colleagues, and work as a hospital therapy group leader and director of research projects. Whether dealing with issues raised by his memory of the quintessential Jewish mother or supporting a widow working through her grief, Yalom reveals his thoughts, feelings, and reactions with sensitive honesty. Along the way, he portrays the therapeutic process as a journey of discovery for both patient and psychiatrist. Highly recommended for all collections.ÄLucille M. Boone, San Jose P.L., CA (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.
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Kirkus Book Review

Six long psychotherapy narratives'four based on actual cases, two fictional'that comprise a worthy sequel to the author's bestselling Love's Executioner: And Other Tales of Psychotherapy (1989). Yalom, author of many other books on psychotherapy, focuses here on how life can be enriched by emotionally integrating close encounters with loved ones' deaths and with one's own mortality. What particularly makes this book worth many times its price is a stunning piece entitled ``Seven Advanced Lessons in the Therapy of Grief.'' Here Yalom captures seven years of work with the emotionally frozen if often acerbic Irene, who during adolescence lost a beloved brother in a car accident and is about to lose her husband to brain cancer. He vividly describes such therapeutic concepts as ``rage grief,'' the way in which a bereaved person often feels an acutely heightened sense of his or her mortality, and how flashes of intense anger between patient and therapist can paradoxically strengthen the bond between them. In all these pieces, Yalom also illustrates his approach of actively exploring the ``here and now,'' or in-session emotional dynamics, even when this involves either side expressing particularly erotic, hostile, or other charged feelings. With the single exception of one passage, where Yalom reports at too great length on a therapists' seminar on countertransference (strong feelings the clinician has for the patient), he again displays the great narrative drive and wit evident in Love's Executioner. At least as much as that book, Momma and the Meaning of Life contains some truly profound observations on death, the sometimes desperate attempts to modify one's personality so as to live more fully, and other human struggles. These six engrossing narratives are very valuable gleanings from a master therapist's professional and personal experience. (Author tour)

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Booklist Reviews

Yalom, psychotherapist and author of When Nietzsche Wept (1992) and Lying on the Couch (1996), uses his experiences with patients and his own life challenges to explore the process of psychotherapy and the search for meaning in life. He begins this collection of six stories with his dreams about his mother several years after her death. He recalls a difficult woman and wonders at her continued hold on him until he is able to reconcile their relationship in his dreams. Paula is a patient with a voracious cancer eating at her organs but not sapping her sense of life. Their roles are blurred as the doctor is captivated by Paula's self-assurance and spirituality even in the face of her death, an admiration that allows her to "educate" him. Another story recounts a distrustful, almost hostile, relationship between a psychotherapist and a female patient. She begins to open up when she accidentally gets hold of the doctor's notes and defends herself against his off-the-cuff remarks. Throughout, Yalom absorbingly recounts the resilience some patients bring to the task of healing themselves and is brutally frank about the limitations of modern medicine. ((Reviewed August 1999)) Copyright 2000 Booklist Reviews

Copyright 2000 Booklist Reviews
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Library Journal Reviews

Psychiatrist and gifted storyteller Yalom (Love's Executioner) returns with six engaging tales of psychotherapy. In this collection, which includes two fictional narratives, Yalom explores his own dreams and fantasies, relationships with colleagues, and work as a hospital therapy group leader and director of research projects. Whether dealing with issues raised by his memory of the quintessential Jewish mother or supporting a widow working through her grief, Yalom reveals his thoughts, feelings, and reactions with sensitive honesty. Along the way, he portrays the therapeutic process as a journey of discovery for both patient and psychiatrist. Highly recommended for all collections.ALucille M. Boone, San Jose P.L., CA Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Following the "tales from the clinic" formula that helped make his Love's Executioner a bestseller, psychiatrist Yalom reveals much more of himself this time around. He starts with a soul-baring account of his relationship with his mother, in Yalom's description a domineering woman who was intensely proud of her famous son. Their dance of mutual fear, control and deceit instilled patterns that took Yalom years to unlearn. Committed to egalitarian, mutually enriching relationships with his patients, Yalom tells of his grandiose fantasies of rescuing distressed damsels, as well as of his abiding need for a consoling mother figure. He found one such in Magnolia, a 70-year-old black woman working through her own feelings of childhood abandonment by her widowed mother. Another patient, Paula, a woman with terminal breast cancer, initially radiates an inner serenity but eventually unveils to Yalom her "anger rock," the symbolic repository of her pent-up rage and despair. We also meet Martin, an elderly, wheelchair-bound man whose exhausted caretaker son mocks his suicide attempt; Rosa, an 80-pound anorexic who is fed intravenously; Irene, an imperious surgeon who agonizes over her husband's terminal illness; and Linda, a furious divorcée whose privacy was abusively violated as a girl by her father. Yalom's therapeutic encounters, as recorded here, are often painful crucibles of personal transformation, in which people grow in unexpected ways by releasing reservoirs of guilt, fear, sadness, anger and denial. Author tour. (Sept.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Yalom, I. D. (2000). Momma and the meaning of life: tales of psychotherapy (First Perennial edition.). Perennial.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Yalom, Irvin D., 1931-. 2000. Momma and the Meaning of Life: Tales of Psychotherapy. ©1999: Perennial.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Yalom, Irvin D., 1931-. Momma and the Meaning of Life: Tales of Psychotherapy ©1999: Perennial, 2000.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Yalom, I. D. (2000). Momma and the meaning of life: tales of psychotherapy. First Perennial edn. ©1999: Perennial.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Yalom, Irvin D. Momma and the Meaning of Life: Tales of Psychotherapy First Perennial edition., Perennial, 2000.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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