![]() As she travels deeper into her psyche with Wendell, she enters uncomfortable emotional terrain, including grief, loss, anxiety concern a mysterious illness that doctors have been unable to diagnose, fear towards being halfway done with her life, and resentment toward the "happiness book" she is supposed to be writing.Īt the same time she goes on this therapeutic journey with Wendell, Gottlieb takes the reader into her own therapy office so they can follow along as she works with four patients: John, a narcissistic, phone-addicted television writer, Rita, an elderly woman who plans to commit suicide on her seventieth birthday, Julie, a recently honeymooned woman in her forties dying of cancer, and Charlotte, a lonely millennial struggling with alcoholism and toxic relationships with men. When the man she was going to marry suddenly breaks up with her, Lori finds herself on the couch of an eccentric, avant-garde therapist, Wendell, who helps her rediscover her own vulnerability, self-compassion, and to edit the self-narrative she did not realize she had been telling herself. ![]() ![]() In this nonfiction work, psychotherapist Lori Gottlieb chronicles several months of therapy with a small handful of patients alongside her own journey as a therapist and as a patient. ![]() The following version of this book was used to create the study guide: Gottlieb, Lori. ![]()
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