Posts Tagged ‘Stories’
Chicken Soup for the Soul Healthy Living Series Heart Disease: important facts, inspiring stories
Last Updated on Sunday, 6 June 2010 08:21 Written by admin Sunday, 6 June 2010 08:21
Product Description
Endorsed and supported by the Hope Heart Institute!
This new series from Chicken Soup for the Soul – inspirational stories followed by positive, practical medical advice for caregivers and patients – is the perfect blend of emotional support and vital information about heart disease including:
- Understanding your diagnosis
- working with your doctor
- blood pressure and cholesterol
- the DASH diet
- smart exercise
- alternative treatments
- surgery and other options
- attitude and health
- cardiac rehab
- living better with heart disease than you ever have before
Chicken Soup for the Soul Healthy Living Series Heart Disease: important facts, inspiring stories
Tags: Chicken, chicken soup for the soul, Disease, facts, Healthy, Heart, hope heart institute, important, inspiring, Living, Series, smart exercise, Soul, Soup, Stories | Posted under Books | No Comments
Addicted and Mentally Ill: Stories of Courage, Hope, and Empowerment
Last Updated on Saturday, 15 May 2010 08:41 Written by admin Saturday, 15 May 2010 08:41
Product Description
Reconnect with dually diagnosed individuals using stories they can identify with!
Addicted and Mentally Ill: Stories of Courage, Hope, and Empowerment is a powerful tool to recommend to your clients who are dually diagnosed. This book presents vignettes about people with mental illness and addiction whose situations are representative of what goes on in a dual-diagnosis in-patient setting. This nonclinical, easy-to-read resource will give you, your patients, and their family members unique insight on dual diagnosis and how co-occurring mental illness and addiction can be treated with the minimum amount of blame, shame, or poor decision-making.
Addicted and Mentally Ill focuses on the most significant issues surrounding these individuals, such as:
dual diagnosis and the family system—how family can help or hinder treatment
the reasons why dually diagnosed clients resist treatment
the fear of losing self-identity in treatment
the misunderstandings about dual diagnosis—from the perspectives of the client, family members, and professionals in medicine and social work
the role of hope, empowerment, and spirituality in recovery in dual diagnosis
what the patient/client and family members can do to improve treatment options
Addicted and Mentally Ill is unique for its storytelling format, consisting of brief tales and short explanations you can recommend to clients and families with limited clinical knowledge or time. This innovative tool answers many of the questions that dually diagnosed individuals may have and helps them learn of the issues surrounding their illness as well as their addiction. For those professionals who provide direct counseling to these clients or patients, this book offers an interesting and nonthreatening way to help them learn about treatment options.
The stories in Addicted and Mentally Ill confront the life problems specific to dually diagnosed individuals, including:
alcohol, drugs, and self-medication
the difficulties of building trust in group therapy settings
psychotropic medications
illnesses such as bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, depression, and personality disorders
suicide
Addicted and Mentally Ill: Stories of Courage, Hope, and Empowerment
Tags: Addicted, alcohol drugs, Courage, dual diagnosis, Empowerment, Hope, Mentally, spirituality in recovery, Stories | Posted under Books | No Comments
Climbing the Mountain: Stories of Hope and Healing after Stroke and Brain Injury
Last Updated on Monday, 12 April 2010 08:20 Written by admin Monday, 12 April 2010 08:20
- ISBN13: 9781577491927
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
An inspiring anthology of stories by stroke/brain injury patients and their family members. The stories chronicle the amazing transformations in communication and cognitive abilities that can occur on a patient’s road to recovery.
Climbing the Mountain: Stories of Hope and Healing after Stroke and Brain Injury
Tags: After, amazing transformations, Brain, brain injury patients, Brand New, Climbing, Healing, Hope, Injury, Mark, Mountain, remainder mark, Stories, Stroke | Posted under Books | 4 Comments
Head Cases: Stories of Brain Injury and Its Aftermath
Last Updated on Wednesday, 31 March 2010 08:23 Written by admin Wednesday, 31 March 2010 08:23
- ISBN13: 9780374531959
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product Description
Head Cases takes us into the dark side of the brain in an astonishing sequence of stories, at once true and strange, from the world of brain damage. Michael Paul Mason is one of an elite group of experts who coordinate care in the complicated aftermath of tragic injuries that can last a lifetime. On the road with Mason, we encounter survivors of brain injuries as they struggle to map and make sense of the new worlds they inhabit.
Underlying each of these survivors’ stories is an exploration of the brain and its mysteries. When injured, the brain must figure out how to heal itself, reorganizing its physiology in order to do the job. Mason gives us a series of vivid glimpses into brain science, the last frontier of medicine, and we come away in awe of the miracles of the brain’s workings and astonished at the fragility of the brain and the sense of self, life, and order that resides there. Head Cases “[achieves] through sympathy and curiosity insight like that which pulses through genuine literature” (The New York Sun); it is at once illuminating and deeply affecting.
Michael Paul Mason is one of an elite group of neurological experts who appear in the wake of tragic accidents and illnesses and coordinate care that can last a lifetime. In Head Cases, Mason writes about his encounters with survivors of brain injuries as they struggle to map and make sense of the new worlds they inhabit. We meet a snowboarder whose life became permanently surreal after an errant jump; an “ultraviolent” child who has lost the brain’s instinctive check on the impulse to strike out at others; a young man who cannot cry; and an Iraq war veteran whose odd maladies suggest that brain injury will be the war’s most conspicuous legacy.
Underlying each of their stories is an exploration into the brain and its mysteries. When injured, the brain must figure out how to heal itself, reorganizing its physiology in order to do the job, and Mason shares a series of vivid glimpses into brain science, the last frontier of medicine. With personal stories as well as clearly written science, he shows the miracles of the brain’s workings and the fragility of the brain and the sense of self, life, and order that resides there. Head Cases echoes both Oliver Sacks and Raymond Carver, and is at once illuminating and deeply affecting.
“In Head Cases, Mason deftly conveys the frustrations and inequities of traumatic brain injury . . . Mason describes the day-to-day life on a brain injury ward, where the staff may wear kickboxing pads into one patient’s room, rain gear into another’s. He explains that emotional tears, unlike the tears produced by, say, cutting an onion, contain manganese; since depressed people have high manganese levels, one theory holds that crying helps lower the levels. Mason describes a trip to Iraq and its miraculous Balad Hospital, where Air Force surgeons have treated the bulk of the 10,000 traumatic head injuries the war on terror has so far occasioned (and that’s just the American heads) . . . Mason performs a valuable service by calling attention to the plight of the brain injured . . . I had come to think of neurological dysfunction as an almost fanciful affliction, its victims like characters in a work of magical realism. Mason has provided a needed, and sobering, account of reality.”—Mary Roach, The New York Times Book Review
“In these cases, and several others like them, Mr. Mason’s accomplishment is formidable, restoring to each subject a measure of human dignity, achieving through sympathy and curiosity insight like that which pulses through genuine literature. These are not people whose lives have ended, he suggests, only changed, and we recognize in their jagged, altered lives something like allegories for our own experience.”—Casey Schwartz, The New York Sun
“As a writer, Mr. Mason stakes out a position midway between Oliver Sacks and Oprah Winfrey. He goes light on the science, presenting his case studies primarily as human dramas. We meet the loved ones, revisit the hometowns, relive in minute detail the horrific accidents that caused the injuries.”—William Grimes, The New York Times
“Vivid, heartbreaking [and] movingly written.”—The Seattle Times
“These stories are really engaging and would be enlightening to any neuroscientist who wants to find out more about the human outcomes of brain injury . . . A passionate series of vignettes that sympathetically illuminates what happens to people after brain injury.”—Nature Neuroscience
“Mason’s words will touch your heart but more importantly open your eyes to the harsh realities endured by mounting numbers of traumatic brain injury survivors.”—Michael Wallis, Tulsa World
“Mason visited Iraq, so his experiences will give readers information they’ve been sheltered from too long. But no less vivid, heartbreaking or movingly written are other cases. In ‘The Hermit of Hollywood Boulevard,’ for instance, a snowboard crash left a young man with more than 120 seizures monthly. After exhausting his options as well as his family’s finances, he committed himself to a psychiatric crisis unit, his only venue for free care.”—Irene Wanner, The Seattle Times
“There’s no shortage of books on neurological patients with brain injuries, but Head Cases, . . . is one of my recent favorites. Mason brings a unique perspective to the tragic tales, as he’s not a neurologist or a neuroscientist. Instead, he’s a brain injury case manager based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, so the stories are as much about the bureaucratic maze of insurance claims as they are about the hippocampus.”—Jonah Lehrer, author of Proust was a Neuroscientist
“Mr. Mason, with the compassion and astute observation of a skilled case worker, relates story after story that are as captivating and inspiring as they are sobering and heartbreaking.”—Dr. Walt Larimore, co-author of His Brain, Her Brain
“Using the words and actions of brain injury survivors, Head Cases poignantly chronicles the everyday struggles, search for help, and hope for recovery after traumatic brain injury. Mason brings educated insight to readers who are blissfully unaware of the life-altering, often debilitating, aftermath of neurotrauma. Head Cases is a must-read glimpse into what life with brain injury is really like.”—Susan Connors, President, Brain Injury Association of America
“Mason describes in detail the devastating effects of brain damage, the myriad ways the brain tries to compensate for that damage, and the frustrations of trying to get appropriate care. Mason writes that the patients he represents ‘may not even know I exist.’ But he is, as he puts it, their v



