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| View Larger Image | Neural Path Therapy: How to Change Your Brain's Response to Anger, Fear, Pain, and Desire by Matthew McKay, David Harp
| | List Price: | $14.95 | | Price: | $10.17 | | You Save: | $4.78 (32%) |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 514627 | | Studio: | New Harbinger Publications |  | | Binding: | Paperback | | Number Of Pages: | 141 | | Publication Date: | December 31, 1969 | | Publisher: | New Harbinger Publications |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Book Description When we set out to describe the problems this book can help fix—the stressful and anxiety-provoking conditions of everyday living—we quite simply ran out of space. It’s no secret that life is tough, and that each passing year isn’t making it any easier. Whether you’re more stressed by politics, the environment, your relationships, major life changes, or just the daily task of keeping food on the table, it’s easy to let life knock you down and hard to get back up again. But this book offers readers a chance at a different way of life. It shows them how to accept their lives as they are, regard the events of each day with nonjudgmental awareness, and stop obsessive thoughts from compounding their feelings of helplessness and frustration. The first part of the book introduces you to the basics of neural network learning theory. The basic idea is that neural pathways strengthen with use and weaken with disuse. While certain events are likely to provoke a hardwired neural response in us, we are capable of creating new neural paths with no more than a thought. Instead of letting automatic triggers dictate our responses to painful events, we can use this characteristic of our nervous systems to short-circuit the responses that lead to painful thoughts and emotions. The second part teaches you five easy-to-learn skills for dealing with stress—breath counting, thought watching, compassionate awareness, softening to pain, and wise mind. Together, they make up a set of skills that readers can take with them anywhere, a kind of portable therapy. Once learned, the techniques in this book can be used to cope with many different situations. Combined with each other, they become a powerful tool for creating happiness, compassion, and well-being. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 4 reviews)
| Making a hash of a hash  Reading this book felt like the mental equivalent of wading through a chest high lake of molasses in diver's boots (the kind that go with a canvas suit and a copper helmet). It was hard work and and ultimately pointless.
(I did read it through to the end - in the hope that "with so much fertiliser there must must be a pony!" There wasn't.)
It isn't that the book is totally devoid of good ideas, it isn't. But a few good ideas, mostly borrowed from elsewhere, don't make this book worth buying, especially when there are far better books on the same topics.
To paraphrase Dr. Johnson - the ideas herein are new and valuable.
Unfortunately, that which is of value isn't new. And that which is new is of little or no value.
Although the book is presented as offering a "new" approach to dealing with destructive emotions (well, new in 1999), the simple fact is that the "neural path therapy" approach is little more than an amalgamation of part of Albert Ellis' REBT (Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy) and what is often referred to as Breath Meditation.
Over the course of the 141 pages of the main text these two topics are reviewed over and over again - but without really adding anything of any significance to the material in the first two or three chapters other than some rather off-beat ideas on how this will affect your brain.
Like the novel idea that breathing meditation will build what the authors call "mental muscle".
It's only when you read the description on page 4 that you discover that "mental muscle" isn't about muscle building at all, it's simply learning to focus your attention on your breathing. Which any halfway decent book on meditation will explain, and probably with more clarity and less mumbo jumbo.
The fact is that you could get a lot more useful information from most if not all of Albert Ellis' books currently in print - such as "How to Keep People From Pushing Your Buttons". Whilst any beginners guide to mediatation will show you how to use breathing meditation to develop a calmer response to life's little ups and downs (and the big ones, too).
Having said that, both "Neural Path Therapy" and Ellis' books tend to concentrate on resolving symptoms rather than resolving underlying causes. This may be seen as a wise precaution - no book can reasonably claim to be sensitive to the needs of every reader, and it would be more than a little foolish to believe/claim that a book can be a satisfactory substitute for face-to-face communication with a genuinely skilled counselor/therapist.
Bottom Line: If you think this kind of material could be of use to you, please be good to yourself and check out Albert Ellis' books and David Burn's "Feeling Good" books before you think of wasting your money on this superficial a supremely underpowered waffle.
January 02, 2007 | | Excellent, practical, and easy to follow  This book offers simple and effective guidance on changing your thought patterns. If you are looking for a way to let go of fear, anger and anxiety caused by thoughts that seem to "take over" and keep you in a "mental maze" that gets you nowhere, the easy steps outlined in this book will help change the way you think. The authors really make it easy to learn to change from automatic "fight or flight" responses to "relax and release." April 12, 2006 | | Neural Path Therapy - Simple and effective  I don't usually read self-help books. My girlfriends give them to me (implying there is something seriously wrong with me) and I read them out of respect. I find the area sometimes interesting but rarely useful. The problem, as I see it with most of these books, is that either they are so academic that you can't apply what you learn to your own life, or they are so filled with stories about "people just like you" that you spend most of your time self-diagnosing from someone else's life. Neural Path Therapy goes straight to the issues: it is one of the few therapy books that provides a useful and practical plan for the stresses in life that often overwhelm us. This is a book you can use.
Neural Path Therapy begins by explaining how our sometimes puzzling brains work, on a neurological level. When we think, when we respond to outside stimuli, we develop neural pathways: neurological routings in our brain for all those thoughts. I tried to think of this as if the brain was setting up it own postal delivery system. The thoughts/emotions had to be driven from point A to point B for delivery. The more you drive from A to B the deeper the ruts in the road get. But what if the "package" being delivered is the equivalent of a letter bomb? How many of our thoughts are unwanted: stressful thoughts, angry thoughts, depressive, disturbing thoughts, thoughts of self-doubt or ugly self-image thoughts - thoughts that undermine who you are and what you achieve. How do we stop the delivery of negative thoughts - how do we get out of those ruts we've created? The authors McKay and Harp don't try to steal you away from other methods of professional therapy or treatment you might be following, they just want to supply you with a simple, readily available tool to manage these thoughts.
The authors first help you become aware of the thoughts that act as "triggers" to emotional discomfort; they encourage you to recognize the mental pathways that engender self-destructive thinking. Through simple breathing exercises you are taught to step back and observe these thoughts, to see them as "mental objects" which are within your ability to manipulate. Then you choose how to react to these thoughts. As simple as this sounds, it is extremely effective. While the book goes into greater depth later about how to "react" when you are examining these thoughts, just getting to the point where I can see my anger, or pain, or angst as only a damaging "object" inside my mind has been extraordinarily helpful to me. The system McKay and Harp have provided in their book expects only that it be applied - like any good methodology it requires practice. I can't recommend this book strongly enough.
November 14, 2005 | | Neural Path Therapy by McKay  This work is a popular outgrowth of the alternative medicinal
approaches to the mind and to stress management. The authors
provide different techniques ranging from breathing control to
thought management in order to reduce stress or as an alternative
to the flight/fight phenomena. The book describes how to develop
mental muscle via guessing and imagining. The brain pathways are
dendrites which receive and transfer information to cell bodies.
Information from dendrites end up in the axon. The work encourages us to shed anger and to use breathing techniques to diffuse the point of no return. Specifically, focused mental attention can be applied to breathing exercises almost like a musician utilizes a pentameter scheme.
Superlearning by Ostrander and Schroeder describes the mechanics
of breathing exercises, as follows: (Delacorte & Confucian Press)
" The objective of this exercise is to learn to breathe in rhythm, and through rhythmic breath control, to slow down body/mind rhythms. Sit comfortably in a chair or lie down on a
couch or bed. Put yourself into a very relaxed state. Make sure all parts of your body are relaxed. Close your eyes and take a
very deep breath through your nose. Inhale as much air as you can
hold comfortably. Try to take in just a little bit more air.
Now exhale slowly. Feel a deep sense of relaxation as you exhale."
The Lozanov Institute develops these techniques as well as others. In addition, Dr. Lozanov points to "infantilization"
for adults. This process restores the ease with which a small
child learns, and a child's spontaneity, receptivity and
memorization abilities.
According to the author, pain is unfulfillment which indicates
that we are not in total control. A pyramidal structure is
provided to limit pain or flight/fight phenomena. The structure
consists of the following:
- refocus for mental muscle
- stress coping
- self-love
- compassion
- spiritual
The refocus mechanism is at the bottom of the pyramid and the
spiritual dimension is the highest form of learning.
This book provides an important enhancement to classic
psychiatric theories of the flight/fight phenomena and Freud's
concept of the Id. As such, the work translates some very
complex medical terminology into simple English for application
by ordinary people. October 25, 2005 | |
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