Elliot Greene

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Elliot Greene



Average rating: 4.28 · 46 ratings · 7 reviews · 7 distinct works
The Psychology of the Body ...

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4.23 avg rating — 39 ratings — published 2003 — 5 editions
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The Psychology of the Body

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2013
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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 3 ratings2 editions
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[ THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE BOD...

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Muscle spasms & cramps: An ...

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Quotes by Elliot Greene  (?)
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“People with a compressed structure, out of necessity, have crushed, numbed, and muffled their feelings. Not only do they need space, but it sometimes takes them long periods of time to be able to feel and then articulate their feelings. As a result, they often have markedly delayed reactions to events and people.”
Elliot Greene, The Psychology of the Body

“People with an entertaining rigid structure are brought up in environments in which the parents are uncomfortable with expressing feelings. This is not to say that the parents do not care, but they do not express feelings like affection, warmth, and caring or feel comfortable with expressing such feelings (Keleman). The experience within the family is not one of intimacy and true interchange of feeling. To contend with the situation, the child may learn to draw out the parents by being cute, entertaining, or charming. Although being charming is something most children do naturally to some extent, the difference in the case of people with an entertaining rigid structure is that this becomes the primary mode of relating.
Furthermore, the entertaining rigid structure pattern is reinforced as the parents respond primarily to the child's charm, rather than to their own feelings. Therefore, such children effectively learn that they will not get the reaction they crave without using that behavior. At the same time, these children are also developing or have developed a discomfort with intimacy that is similar to that of their parents. As a result, people with an entertaining rigid structure as adults act out this pattern in which they are energized or emotionally fed by being able to cause another person to be attracted to them, but they become anxious if the person becomes too close or expresses "real" feeling. Love is what they are really craving, and they think they are getting it, but are not. In other words, they have mistaken the energy of attraction for love.”
Elliot Greene, The Psychology of the Body

“Because they cannot be direct, they must attract the other person toward them without becoming vulnerable themselves. Imagine what it would be like it you had to use magnetism instead of asking or reaching out directly to get emotional contact.”
Elliot Greene, The Psychology of the Body



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