Katherine Sharpe
Goodreads Author
Born
Arlington, VA, The United States
Website
Twitter
Genre
Member Since
April 2008
URL
https://www.goodreads.com/katherinesharpe
More books by Katherine Sharpe…
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Katherine
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Another book I inhaled really quickly at the beginning of summer. I bought it a couple of years ago (was it Briefly Noted in the New Yorker? Or something?) and it had been sitting on my shelf. Something possessed me to pull it down. The title and the p ...more |
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"I have a special little shelf where I keep the books that are better than wonderful, the books that resonate so deeply they make my heart ring like a bell. It has taken me fifty-five years to place a mere ten books on that shelf. This is the tenth."
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"There's a lot to find charming about Ms Hempel Chronicles, a fictional memoir of a seventh-grade teacher. Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum has a talent for capturing the quirks of humanity, and all of her characters are lovingly drawn. Her descriptions of middl"
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Katherine
rated a book really liked it
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This was a re-read for me, but I guess I never wrote a review the first time. I completely love this book! I admire the uniqueness and consistency of Bynum's tone here. She writes really good sentences with excellent verbs, there is an incredible dens ...more |
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Katherine
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| 3.5 stars. I liked this one fine, I just didn't find it as rich and luminous as A Man's Place. It probably didn't help that I read this book second and that it covers a lot of the same ground, just with a focus on the other parent. I think the themes ...more | |
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Katherine
rated a book liked it
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| 3.5 stars. I liked this one fine, I just didn't find it as rich and luminous as A Man's Place. It probably didn't help that I read this book second and that it covers a lot of the same ground, just with a focus on the other parent. I think the themes ...more | |
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Katherine
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Katherine
made a comment on
Barbara’s review
of
Mind Over Back Pain: A Radically New Approach to the Diagnosis and Treatment of Back Pain
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I wonder, though, if both things can be true: couldn't great stress make the body more vulnerable to the bacteria that cause ulcers? Mind/body!
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"All the stars!! If I could give this book more than 5 stars I would. If a book can make your pain go away, that is all that matters. I’m surprised that anyone is even mentioning anything about writing style, etc. People complain that he is repetive a"
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Katherine
rated a book it was amazing
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A old book, but an awesome introduction to / take on the mind-body connection, and helpful to me personally in thinking about some ~health stuff.~ One thing I haven't seen called out in other top reviews is that I think Dr. Sarno is extremely wise on ...more |
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“Karen Horney was a German psychoanalyst who emigrated to the United States in the 1930s. I hadn’t heard of her, and I’d been looking for something else when I found her book Neurosis and Human Growth wedged into a bottom shelf next to some of the heavyweights of twentieth-century psychology, but its strange old title called out to me, and on a whim I took it home. Horney’s premise was that, in childhood, most people suffer from the feeling of being small and powerless in a dangerous world; she considered the feeling so common that she called it “basic anxiety.”
― Coming of Age on Zoloft: How Antidepressants Cheered Us Up, Let Us Down, and Changed Who We Are
― Coming of Age on Zoloft: How Antidepressants Cheered Us Up, Let Us Down, and Changed Who We Are
“Elliott argues that enhancement technologies fascinate and aggravate us because they alert us to a contradiction in our national value system. On the one hand, America prizes success, and life here is organized around the heated pursuit of it. America is a democracy with a high degree of social mobility; we’re all searching for anything that might give us a competitive edge over our neighbors. (We are also, most likely, looking over our shoulders at whatever our neighbors might be using to get ahead, simultaneously judging them for using it, and wondering where we can get some ourselves.) On the other hand, Americans are also devoted to the idea of personal authenticity. We believe it’s important to be our “real” selves and are ever fearful of losing touch with our inmost natures in the push of worldly ambition. Self-discovery and self-actualization aren’t just enjoyable activities; they’re social demands. In America, Elliott believes, we tend to think of life as a never-ending process of figuring out “who we are” and then striving to live in such a way that we can enact the interests and proclivities that make us unique. This focus on the self as a guiding principle may partly stem from the secular nature of our society. In America since the late nineteenth century, Elliott writes, “finding yourself has replaced finding God.”29 Being who we really are is nothing short of a moral imperative—maybe the strongest one we modern Americans have. These two drives—on the one hand, to succeed; on the other hand, to be who you really are inside—often come into tension.”
― Coming of Age on Zoloft: How Antidepressants Cheered Us Up, Let Us Down, and Changed Who We Are
― Coming of Age on Zoloft: How Antidepressants Cheered Us Up, Let Us Down, and Changed Who We Are
“She believed that children attempt to soothe their fears and insecurities by resorting to their imaginations, beginning to picture a version of themselves that embodies all the traits that the child, or the people around her, find most admirable. By adolescence, these imaginings begin to solidify into the image that Horney calls the “ideal self.” Our ideal selves are the smartest, the kindest, the shrewdest, the most lovable—depending on how we want to see ourselves. But what starts out as a protective fantasy quickly becomes an instrument of self-torture too, giving rise to the tricky system of inner conflicts and secondary insecurities that Horney called neurosis. Specifically, she wrote, neurotics suffer from the strain of their own doomed quest to become the superhuman image they have created. They flagellate themselves with a barrage of statements that include the word should. The “shoulds” are the demands that must be satisfied in order to transform the neurotic person into his idealized self—and his failure to live up to them leads to the slow, seeping growth of self-hate.”
― Coming of Age on Zoloft: How Antidepressants Cheered Us Up, Let Us Down, and Changed Who We Are
― Coming of Age on Zoloft: How Antidepressants Cheered Us Up, Let Us Down, and Changed Who We Are
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message 1:
by
Jessica
Apr 20, 2008 12:44PM
Yay, Katherine!
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