Nineteen Years Ago, Anees Jung Embarked On A Journey That Resulted In The Best-Selling Book Unveiling India, A Poignant And Revealing Look At The Women Of India. In This Sequel, She Returns To Investigate What, If Anything, Has Altered For Their Daughters. Have The Dramatic Changes In The Social Scene In The Wake Of Liberalization, Cable Tv And A General Opening Up Of Society Made Any Fundamental Difference To Their Lives? Do They Possess The Resilience Of Their Mothers, Or Is This A Generation Hovering Uncertainly Between Two Worlds Unwilling To Be Fettered By Tradition And Yet Lacking The Courage To Break Free? As Before, She Finds Stories Of Suffering And Fortitude, Despair And Hope: A Young Rajput Woman In Kutch Defies The Veil, And Her Husband S Command, To Take Up A Job; Ameena In Hyderabad, Rescued From An Ageing Arab Sheikh In 1992 When Barely Twelve, Is Finally Married Off To Another Man More Than Twice Her Age; Young Mothers In Punjab Are Forced To Kill Their Unborn Daughters; A Young Prostitute In Mumbai Fights Drug Addiction And Hate, Determined To Live With Dignity. Journeying Across Forgotten Landscapes, Both Human And Geographic, Anees Jung Paints Yet Another Unforgettable And, At Times, Harrowing Portrait Of Women In India At The Dawn Of The New Millennium.
The women in this book are not extraordinary or famous, and yet their stories and testimonies, narrated here by one of India's best-known women journalists, provide a passionate, often deeply touching, revelation of what it means to be a woman in India today. The women tell of marriage and widowhood, unfair work practices, sexual servitude, the problems of bearing and rearing children in poverty, religion, discrimination, other forms of exploitation ... Yet they also talk of fulfilling relationships, the joys of marriage and children, the exhilaration of breaking free from the bonds of tradition, ritual, caste, religion ... Interwoven with all this is the story of one woman's journey--of how Anees Jung, the author, brought up in purdah, succeeded in shaking off the restricting influences of her traditional upbringing to become a highly successful, independent career woman, still a comparatively rare phenomenon in India. As such, the book is essential reading for anyone wishing to understand the women of India-the silent majority that is now beginning to make itself heard.
Imagery for Pain Relief, the first book of its kind, familiarizes the reader with basic scientific information about pain and mental imagery and shows why imagery is a valuable tool for pain management. Scientifically grounded and easy-to-read, it provides readers with a wealth of practical information, including imagery techniques that have been successfully used in the past. This is a useful text not only for physicians and clinical psychologists, but also for counselors, social workers, nurses, and graduate students in all health related fields, including sports medicine.
Nineteen Years Ago, Anees Jung Embarked On A Journey That Resulted In The Best-Selling Book Unveiling India, A Poignant And Revealing Look At The Women Of India. In This Sequel, She Returns To Investigate What, If Anything, Has Altered For Their Daughters. Have The Dramatic Changes In The Social Scene In The Wake Of Liberalization, Cable Tv And A General Opening Up Of Society Made Any Fundamental Difference To Their Lives? Do They Possess The Resilience Of Their Mothers, Or Is This A Generation Hovering Uncertainly Between Two Worlds Unwilling To Be Fettered By Tradition And Yet Lacking The Courage To Break Free? As Before, She Finds Stories Of Suffering And Fortitude, Despair And Hope: A Young Rajput Woman In Kutch Defies The Veil, And Her Husband S Command, To Take Up A Job; Ameena In Hyderabad, Rescued From An Ageing Arab Sheikh In 1992 When Barely Twelve, Is Finally Married Off To Another Man More Than Twice Her Age; Young Mothers In Punjab Are Forced To Kill Their Unborn Daughters; A Young Prostitute In Mumbai Fights Drug Addiction And Hate, Determined To Live With Dignity. Journeying Across Forgotten Landscapes, Both Human And Geographic, Anees Jung Paints Yet Another Unforgettable And, At Times, Harrowing Portrait Of Women In India At The Dawn Of The New Millennium.
Serving to bridge the gap between differing approaches to psychology, this new text provides some of the most compelling evidence yet for the subjective presence and objective efficacy of the mental image. In this day and age of "dissociation" between physiological psychologists and other psychologists, between cognitive scientist and mentalist, between researchers and practitioners, mental imagery and its psychophysiology pose some intellectually "sticky" problems - and some promising resolutions - that should bind together differing disciplines within psychology.
Healing Images: The Role of Imagination in Health" details the function and capacity of imagination in health. This work consists of 22 chapters and discusses theory, research, and clinical applications. Presented is a brief history of the use of imagery for healing in both Eastern and Western traditions, a review of research that deals with the physiological consequences of imagery and related approaches, and an explanation of how images lead to such bodily changes. "Healing Images" covers the latest theory and research on the relationship between imagery, cerebral laterality, and healing. An attempt is also made to integrate modern systems theory with concepts of information and energy, which disclose the role of imagery and love in health. Imagery and music in health are also discussed.
This new text is a state-of-the-art collection of essays representing varying points of view about dreams and the major research conducted in dream therapy today. Renewed interest into serious dream investigation in recent years has supplied a variety of conceptual and research applications into dream study. At long last, "Dream Images: A Call to Mental Arms", brings these current works together, in one complete, comprehensive volume.
Consists of a description of a multitude of imagery techniques that have been grouped into four categories: hypno-behavioral, cognitive-behavioral, psychodynamic/humanistic and humanistic/transpersonal.
Sages of various traditions and ages have reiterated that we must incorporate the inevitability of death into the fabric of life to experience life's breadth and beauty. Imagery is an important tool in dealing with death, and this book is devoted to exploring many facets of this fascinating issue. It begins with an overview of ancient and modern approaches to the use of death imagery for therapeutic purposes, including a discussion of its possible benefits. Chapter 2, specifically exploring Stephen Levine's contributions in this area, shows that only by opening up to the reality of death can one make living a conscious process of growth. A number of excellent imagery-based experiential exercises are discussed in detail. Chapter 3 demonstrates the significance of confronting death through mental and artistic images; it discusses six examples of death-related religious and existential works of art.Recently there has been an upsurge of interest in near-death experiences and their salutary effects on attitudes, beliefs, and values. Of particular interest here are increases in spirituality, concern for others, an appreciation of life, and an enhanced sense of meaning and purpose in life. Chapter 4 presents a detailed critical overview of this field of investigation, with special emphasis on the transformatory after-effects of near-death experiences. Of all the major religions in the world, Buddhism is at the forefront of exploring the topic of death and dying and developing specific meditative exercises for confronting death.Chapter 5 presents an in-depth treatment of death imagery in Buddhist thought. Exploring the use of hypnosis for death rehearsal, Chapter 6 continues the theme that confrontation with death can lead to healthful consequences. A variation of this technique, hypnotic suicidal rehearsal, is also discussed: it seems to be effective for use with clients who are contemplating suicide. Case examples clarify the details of the process.Over the years, several clinicians have proposed the use of imagery for reconstructing death-related events and thereby facilitating the grieving process for individuals who are experiencing symptoms rooted in unfinished grieving. Chapter 7 gives an exhaustive account of the use of imagery for unresolved grieving, including a number of case histories. Researchers have perhaps devoted more time and energy to the investigation of death anxiety than any other death-related topic. Chapter 8 reviews the literature on death anxiety and death imagery, and demonstrates a core connection between the two phenomena. The authors claim that death imagery has the potential not only to ameliorate death anxiety but also to lead to a more authentic existence.In Chapter 9, the authors explain how death imagery can be used constructively in death education; they present several practical suggestions and specific guided imagery exercises. The volume closes with a presentation of a detailed death-imagery experiential exercise aimed at encountering death to enhance our appreciation of life. The reader will notice this thread running steadily throughout the book. This comprehensive book devoted to the role of death imagery in health and growth, perhaps the first of its kind, will be helpful in changing the rather sinister view of death, prevalent in our culture, to a deeper appreciation for its enhancing potential.
Train your mind as a social, financial, spiritual problem-solving and illness-dissolving machine. Neuroscience of Mind Empowerment, Epigenetics, Neuroplasticity, Meditation, and Music Therapy, by Anees Akhtar and Dr. Nasim Khan, introduces the frontiers of research in the fields of Neuroscience and Mind Science. Your state of optimistic and pessimistic mind can alter your genetic makeup in response to your thought patterns. Your soft-wired, neuroplastic, brain will grow and it can be enhanced by a positive attitude and higher aims in your life your mind can alter its anatomy and physiology, to establish a healthy and strong body, when you train it according to the guidance described in this book. Further, this book aims to encourage exploration of the research in combatting neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental diseases and conditions such as Parkinsons, Alzheimers, some other dementias, and some neurodevelopmental-spectrum disorders, such as Autism through music therapy, meditation, and mindfulness.
The women in this book are not extraordinary or famous, and yet their stories and testimonies, narrated here by one of India's best-known women journalists, provide a passionate, often deeply touching, revelation of what it means to be a woman in India today. The women tell of marriage and widowhood, unfair work practices, sexual servitude, the problems of bearing and rearing children in poverty, religion, discrimination, other forms of exploitation ... Yet they also talk of fulfilling relationships, the joys of marriage and children, the exhilaration of breaking free from the bonds of tradition, ritual, caste, religion ... Interwoven with all this is the story of one woman's journey--of how Anees Jung, the author, brought up in purdah, succeeded in shaking off the restricting influences of her traditional upbringing to become a highly successful, independent career woman, still a comparatively rare phenomenon in India. As such, the book is essential reading for anyone wishing to understand the women of India-the silent majority that is now beginning to make itself heard.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.