Tag Archives: simple

Five Simple Steps to Emotional Healing: The Last Self-Help Book You Will Ever Need [Paperback]

Five Simple Steps to Emotional Healing: The Last Self-Help Book You Will Ever Need

From Publishers Weekly

For those scared off by the seemingly endless self-help road and amenable to New Age philosophy, Gloria Arenson, a psychologist specializing in energy and power therapies, presents Five Simple Steps to Emotional Healing: The Last Self-Help Book You Will Ever Need. Arenson practices and ardently recommends Meridian Therapy, a technique stemming from acupressure that allows people to decrease their levels of stress without professional help. By tapping on eight different spots on their bodies, practitioners can alleviate anxiety, the impacts of trauma, compulsive behaviors and any number of other difficulties. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Review

Gary H. Craig founder of Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) Gloria Arenson has brought the startling new techniques of energy psychology to the public in such a readable way that now anyone can have the keys to emotional freedom. — Review

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Real Education: Four Simple Truths for Bringing America’s Schools Back to Reality (Paperback)

Real Education: Four Simple Truths for Bringing America's Schools Back to Reality

From Publishers Weekly

Murray, coauthor of The Bell Curve, believes our educational system’s failures stem from the fundamental lie that every child can be anything he or she wants and that such educational romanticism prevents progress. Four simple truths, he asserts, would prove better: children have different abilities, half of the children are below average, too many children go to college, and America’s future depends on the gifted. Murray takes care with his first point, discussing various types of abilities instead of the oft-maligned I.Q. measure; however, he does believe that test scores reflect ability. He argues that there are only a limited number of academically gifted people and these are America’s future leaders, that only this elite can enjoy college productively and that the nongifted shouldn’t be channeled by their high school counselors into training for that college chimera, which wouldn’t make them happy anyway. Further, he argues, if the Educationa (more…)