Tal Ben Shahar pone a disposición de los lectores una guía para la felicidad en forma de diario con ejercicios semanales pensados para todo un año. Mediante los innovadores principios de la psicología positiva que imparte en sus exitosos cursos de la Universidad de Harvard, el profesor Ben-Shahar presenta una serie de técnicas diseñadas por él mismo para ayudar a las personas a aumentar su felicidad y encontrar un sentido pleno a su vida. 52 semanas de nuevos ejercicios, meditación y autodescubrimiento Un diario de tus pensamientos, tus emociones y tus progresos. Con iluminadoras citas de filósofos, psicólogos, artistas, escritores, científicos y emprendedores de éxito. Este no es un libro corriente de autoayuda de los de usar y tirar, sino un diario que completarás tú mismo con tus propios retos y desafíos, con preguntas estimulantes y pautas necesarias para la reflexión y el descubrimiento personal. Las actividades diarias estimularán tu creatividad y aumentarán tu capacidad de autocontrol, para el logro de una mejor calidad de vida y... sí, para ser más feliz.
Tal Ben-Shahar (Hebrew: טל בן-שחר, also known as Tal David Ben-Shachar) is an Israeli teacher and writer in the areas of positive psychology and leadership.
Tal Ben-Shahar taught at Harvard, where his classes on Positive Psychology and The Psychology of Leadership were among the most popular courses in the University's history. Today Tal teaches at the Interdisciplinary Center, Herzliya.
Tal received his PhD in Organizational Behavior from Harvard University. His dissertation, completed in 2004, is titled "Restoring Self-Esteem's Self-Esteem: The Constructs of Dependent and Independent Competence and Worth." Additionally, he also holds a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) from Harvard in Philosophy and Psychology. His undergraduate thesis, completed in 1996, is titled "Honesty Pays: Bridging the Gap Between Moral Theory and Practice."
Tal consults and lectures around the world to executives in multi-national corporations, Fortune 500 companies, educational institutions, and the general public. Topics include leadership, education, ethics, happiness, self-esteem, resilience, goal setting, and mindfulness. He is the author of the international best sellers Happier and Being Happy, which have been translated into 25 languages.
This is wonderful... I started doing this on my own, and was discussing with my hubby. We have "weekly check-ins" where we go over family items, dicuss where things are at with the kids, how things feel in our home, how we are feeling personally and as a couple, and what we currently need from one another. This has been amazing for our relationship! We decided to make this gratitude journal part of our check-ins. A few things I have loved: "What you focus on expands, and when you focus on the goodness in your life, you create more of it." Tal-Shahar suggests thinking of five things each day you are truly grateful for, and watch how the goodness in your life will expand because you will be focusing on goodness and gratitude.
He talks about how most attempts at change FAIL, because of a focus on self discipline and will-power. He asks readers to define very simple daily rituals that will ultimately lead to an important goal, and then, one at a time, incorporate each ritual until it is as much a habit as brushing your teeth. He says " if we hold our personal happiness as a value and want to become happier, then we need to form rituals around that too..." or habits and behaviors that support those values. He highly encourages exercise as a ritual, and I found it interesting that people diagnosed with major depressive disorder who exercised thirty minutes three times a week did as well as patients taking antidepressants. Those on meds were FOUR times more likely to relapse than those who exercised. He did not say they were by any means the same, or that nobody needs medication, but said "not excercising is like taking a DEPRESSANT." Wow.
He talks of the importance of leisure or PLAY, the need to create meaning in our lives. So far, I am finding so much of this book laced with messages on letting go of perfectionism, finding the lessons in everything, cultivating authenticity and practicing it daily, forgiving ourselves for imperfections and "failures, and finding meaning and joy in the journey of life as we learn to live whole- heartedly and with gratitude.
Overall, I really like this book. Each chapter is short enough, and the exercises are the best part in my opinion. You will find some repetitive chapters as you reach the few last chapters. I respectfully disagree with a few chapters in this book. But other than that, I was looking forward to reading this book every day.
A fantastic, easy-to-read and apply overview of positive psychology applications, each supported by research, to increase pleasure and meaning in our lives. I highly recommend this book!
The book itself is not bad, but the blank papers are such a waste of money and resources— we already have enough wastes, do not print more. Also the book is not very organized. One week it’s talking object A, next week it’s talking about object B and then 4 weeks later it somehow jumps back to A.
Desde Leader Summaries recomendamos la lectura del libro Practicar la felicidad, de Tal Ben-Shahar. Las personas interesadas en las siguientes temáticas lo encontrarán práctico y útil: habilidades directivas, crecimiento personal y psicología positiva. En el siguiente enlace tienes el resumen del libro Practicar la felicidad, Reflexiones prácticas para conseguir una vida gratificante: Practicar la felicidad
Some interesting thoughts about happiness and how to improve your life. The form of journal is not very good, and about 50 weeks is too much for our internet age.
A great journal/workbook to keep track of gratitude and utilize some tools for keeping up with your own happiness. I highly recommend this one and taking the time to work on the exercises. Even though it took me longer because I had to take my time to work through some of the prompts so that I got the most out of it, I loved this journal/book.