0
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
I Don't Want to Talk About It: Overcoming the Secret Legacy of Male Depression
by Terrence Real
Sponsored
Synopsis
A bestseller for over 20 years, I Don’t Want to Talk About It is a groundbreaking and hopeful guide to understanding and destigmatizing male depression, essential not only for men who may be suffering but for the people who love them.
Twenty years of experience treating men and their families has ...
Twenty years of experience treating men and their families has ...
A bestseller for over 20 years, I Don’t Want to Talk About It is a groundbreaking and hopeful guide to understanding and destigmatizing male depression, essential not only for men who may be suffering but for the people who love them.
Twenty years of experience treating men and their families has convinced psychotherapist Terrence Real that depression is a silent epidemic in men—that men hide their condition from family, friends, and themselves to avoid the stigma of depression’s “un-manliness.” Problems that we think of as typically male—difficulty with intimacy, workaholism, alcoholism, abusive behavior, and rage—are really attempts to escape depression. And these escape attempts only hurt the people men love and pass their condition on to their children.
This groundbreaking book is the “pathway out of darkness” that these men and their families seek. Real reveals how men can unearth their pain, heal themselves, restore relationships, and break the legacy of abuse. He mixes penetrating analysis with compelling tales of his patients and even his own experiences with depression as the son of a violent, depressed father and the father of two young sons.
You May Also Like
Praise of Folly
Erasmus
Fat City
Leonard Gardner
I'm Sad and Horny
Haley Lu Richardson
Smooth Sailing (In Rough Waters): AKA A Guide to Living At Sea while the Casino Pays for it all or How to Consistently WIN AT THE CASINO!
Scott A. Astin
Lovelight Farms
B.K. Borison
American Literary Criticism From the Thirties to the Eighties
Vincent B. Leitch