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Mad, bad and sad. From the depression suffered by Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath to the mental anguish and addictions of iconic beauties Zelda Fitzgerald and Marilyn Monroe. From Freud and Jung and the radical breakthroughs of psychoanalysis to Lacan's construction of a modern movement and the new women-centred therapies. This is the story of how we have understood mental disorders and extreme states of mind in women over the last two hundred years and how we conceive of them today, when more and more of our inner life and emotions have become a matter for medics and therapists.
This volume collects a series of writings exploring the notion, the experience and the representation of madness from different disciplinary perspectives and in different cultural contexts.
Maggy Van Eijk knows where the best place to cry in public is: the top deck of a bus, right at the front. She also knows that eating super salty liquorice or swimming in an icy cold pond are things that make you feel alive but aren't bad for you. Turning 27, Maggy had the worst mental health experience of her life so far. She ended a three-year relationship, was almost fired (twice), went to A&E over twelve times, saw three different therapists and had three different diagnoses. But she didn't let that year stop her. Taking pen to paper, Maggy started writing lists. Lists to remind her when she's anxious or when the world won't stop spinning, that everything will be okay, whether it's starfishing her heart out in bed first thing in the morning, or just simply phoning a friend. In her brave and important book, with a brand new chapter, Maggy lays bare the true reality of mental illness in the hope it can help others come out the other side too.
2019 Moonbeam Children’s Book Awards Winner 2020 Mom’s Choice Awards® Gold Recipient An engaging and interactive story showing children ages 3-6 the power of breath when dealing with new and difficult emotions. Read aloud and breathe along with this sweet story teaching children how to navigate powerful emotions like anger, fear, sadness, confusion, anxiety, and loneliness. With rhythmic writing and engaging illustrations, Breathing Makes It Better guides children to breathe through their feelings and find calm with recurring cues to stop and take a breath. Simple guided practices, like imagining you are a tree blowing in the wind, follow each story to teach children how to apply mindfulness techniques when they need them the most.
Explores how different things make us feel.
A book about feelings featuring Barney, the purple dinosaur.
Trust your "feelings" with this resource designed to help students understand and deal with the way they feel. Each day a new emotion is the focus with lesson topics including "Happy", "Sad", "Mad", "Scared", "Surprised", "Nervous", "Grumpy", "Excited", and "Embarrassed". Social Studies, Health and Language Arts all in one teacher guide. Each lesson includes a brainstorming activity, a study of new sight words, a spelling activity, work in the activity book, work in the writing book and playing the match game. This Social Studies unit provides a teacher and student section with a variety of lessons, activities, crossword and word search to create a well-rounded lesson plan.
Mad, bad and sad. From the depression suffered by Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath to the mental anguish and addictions of iconic beauties Zelda Fitzgerald and Marilyn Monroe. From Freud and Jung and the radical breakthroughs of psychoanalysis to Lacan's construction of a modern movement and the new women-centred therapies. This is the story of how we have understood mental disorders and extreme states of mind in women over the last two hundred years and how we conceive of them today, when more and more of our inner life and emotions have become a matter for medics and therapists.
Build character, learn empathy, and identify emotions with students in grades PK–1 using Happy, Sad, Jealous, Mad! This 96-page book includes stories and reproducible activity pages that explore the facial and body language of feelings and the vocabulary of emotions. This resource book includes stories that students can read in any order with a teacher or parent. A teacher's guide includes suggested activities, guided questions, and discussion-starting emotion cards. The book supports NCTE, NCTM, and NAEYC standards.
This book - in conjunction with the volume LNAI 5755 - constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Intelligent Computing, ICIC 2009, held in Ulsan, South Korea in September 2009. The 214 revised full papers of these two volumes were carefully reviewed and selected from a total of 1082 submissions. The papers are organized in topical sections on Supervised & Semi-supervised Learning, Machine Learning Theory and Methods, Biological and Quantum Computing, Intelligent Computing in Bioinformatics, Intelligent Computing in Computational Biology and Drug Design, Computational Genomics and Proteomics, Intelligent Computing in Signal Processing, Intelligent Computing i...