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“Finally! The book that helps you deal with irrational, impossible people.” — Oprah’s Book Club 2.0
Let’s face it: we all know people who are downright irrational. No matter how hard you try to reason with them, it never works. So what’s the solution? How do you talk to someone who just won’t listen? What can you do with an unrealistic boss, an angry spouse, or an overly emotional friend?
You can’t win by ignoring the insanity &mash; and you can’t argue it away. But you can stop it cold. Top-ranked psychiatrist and communication expert Mark Goulston shows you how in Talking to “Crazy”, a life-changing book for everyone trapped in maddening personal or professional relationships.
Goulston unlocks the mysteries of the irrational mind, and explains how faulty thinking patterns develop. His keen insights are matched by a set of counterintuitive strategies proven to defuse crazy behavior, along with scripts, examples, and exercises that teach you how to use them. You’ll learn:
● Why people act the way they do
● How instinctive responses can exacerbate the situation — and what to do instead
● When to confront a problem and when to walk away
● How to activate the Sanity Cycle — which quickly transforms you from threat to ally
● How to use 14 simple, but effective communication techniques, including assertive submission flattery, the kiss-off, and more
● And much more
You can’t reason with unreasonable people — but you can reach them. This powerful and practical book shows you how.
272 pages, Paperback
First published October 21, 2015
This is the second title I’ve read from “business psychiatrist” Mark Goulston, and this strikes me as a vast improvement over my one-off taste of his earlier writing.
The author’s use of “crazy” in the title refers not to actual insanity but to the garden variety everyday twisted thinking that we humans often recognize in others (e.g., the “crazy cat lady”). This is a book of strategies and suggestions to help the reader retain her own peace of mind while dealing with people that can’t be reasoned with logically. The majority of the book is aimed at dealing with this level of malformed thinking.
However, Goulston concludes this volume with a section of tips, tricks, and ideas for dealing with those with actual mental illnesses, and that section is worth the price of the book. The main gist of this section is a warning to readers not to waste time reasoning with this kind of person but to leave therapeutic suggestions to the professionals, for the help this person needs is beyond the ken of a well-meaning but untrained amateur adviser.
A tip of the cap and an extra Goodreads star goes to the author for writing the only mental health guide that quotes the legendary singer/songwriter (and former Chicago mailman) John Prine’s song “Hello In There.”
My rating: 7/10, finished 8/25/23 (3854).