This book is the biography of American Psychologist Albert Ellis. This is the translated work of the famously written originally in Marathi. He was one of the greatest psychologist,the pioneer of REBT (Rational emotive behavior therapy) & forerunner of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT).Throughout his life right from his childhood it is an intriguing journey of his matured & self reliant behaviour despite an absentee father & a neglectful mother.During his college life how he becomes self confident, self-talks, distancing himself from the 'self' and then analyzing the situation (which I feel is a consistent phenomena in Indian Philosophy-Buddhism, Vendanta etc).How he forms opinion about freedom of speech, sex, sexuality, marriage & the quest for perfection sticks with the reader for a long time.
Thing which impressed me was his obsession for reading &quest for knowledge . A good mirror for the present times where we are ensconed firmly in our digital bubble & come to surface only when reality hits hard. His work on himself by self counseling even after two failed marriages , decision to be in a live in relationship back then, struggle to continue education, work and how to balance both is amazing. How REBT shapes up &his work gains global prominence is great.He lived a frank, unapologetic life &chose to live life on his own terms. To people who don't know him, he was way ahead of his time in his views& work but was not a rebel without a cause. He made conclusions only on the basis of critical evaluation.The English translation is decent, doesn't get entangled in jargon & his ideas are presented lucidly.The 5 takeaways for me:
1. Think rationally keeping emotions aside.
2. Stay away from:
-I MUST do well
-Others MUST treat me well
-The world MUST be easy
3. Read a lot 4. Quest for perfection and staying away from mediocrity 5. Follow your passion and self faith.A dizzying array of topics that he dealt with include everything from child psychology to liberalization of sex, sexuality to fidelity in marriages to facing violence , death & suicidal thoughts and gives insights into the mind of the person who changed the face of psychology
4.5/5