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Longing for Dad: Father Loss and Its Impact
Longing For Dad Whether you lost your father through death or divorce, or you wished he would have said "I love you" instead of his being a good provider, you may harbor unresolved hurt in your soul. This hurt--father hunger--masquerades as other symptoms du jour like low self-esteem, fear of intimacy, marital strife, poor work performance, or addictions to food, sex or alcohol. Dr. Beth Erickson shows you how to identify, validate and heal the pain surrounding father loss. By sharing compelling case studies of men and women, and her own personal struggle to accept her father's death, she guides you through the healing process. After reading the dialogues and completing action exercises, you will fill the hole in your soul and emerge from the journey at peace with yourself and your relationship with your father.

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From a Reader...

Dr. Beth writes clearly about absent fathers from both her personal experience and a clinical standpoint. This is an excellent work because she succeeds in conveying important and complex psychological theory for laypersons to incorporate into their journey of healing.

Dads fail often and easily in their children's mind. But such failure is rarely, if ever, purposely intended by Dad. It is difficult for some suffering adults to know and believe today, based on lingering childhood experiences, and not seeing the best of Dad, that his deeds were not planned. This is largely due to the fact that, as kids, they had difficulty seeing their father's own personal struggles and social-cultural realities outside of their own needs as kids. In this respect, it is easy to understand that little boys and girls can't organize their feelings properly--or as Dr. Erickson calls it in an "abstract" manner: kids only really care about their own survival, central importance, and how much they deserve love while growing up. And this is good... However, unfortunately, what children fail to grasp as they pass through their childhood without an appropriate father, is that fatherhood is awfully difficult and that Dad's apparent behaviour should not lead a child to blame him or herself for what appears to be a lack of loving from him.

Many grown men and women carry flawed imprints of 'childish' conclusions with them into adulthood. Well, sometimes Dad was just a plain jerk... In any case, adults manifest it through agression, fear of men (boyfriends), feelings of inferiority around groups of men, passive aggression, and a host of other ways. Grown men and women often pass their feelings of inadequacy due to father loss to their own children by acting out like their own father. Cycles can perpetuate if left unchecked.

Dr. Beth sets out different sources and impacts of father loss. One major strength of this book is that her typologies and descriptions of causes and effects of father loss speak to any affected reader's situation and history. This is done without making the reader feel boxed in or categorized.

Another major strength is the inclusion of several helpful appendices. They include meaningful and insightful comments and 'instructions' for spouses and potential therapists. These provide supporters to 'get on the same page' before, during and after the reader's healing journey.

For readers that are ready to accept the painful process of introspecting into the dad-child dynamic, this book helps as a guide towards forgiving Dad, overcoming grief, and, hey, maybe even getting your Dad back at some appreciative level.

Thanks Dr. Erickson; good luck fellow travellers.

 

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"The Best Part Of Your Life"

A Harvard business school professor conducted an interesting study. The goal was to isolate the elements that make for superior, average, and poor performance of CEOs. The one commonality that research isolated among the CEOs ranked as superior was that they all had a good marriage. So a successful marriage is quite literally a business, as well as a personal, asset.

Designed for executives, successful entrepneurs, and their spouses, this program is a jump start to deepening the intimacy in your marriage. In plain words, it will make your marriage the safe haven and the asset you've always wanted it to be. Some may say, "My marriage is already good enough." But tell the truth. Is it all you really hoped it could be? Would your spouse say the same thing?

Far too many settle for a quote "so-so" marriage. They stay mired in mediocrity. Or they leave the marriage altogether and become part of the 56% of marriages that end in divorce.

Join Dr. Beth July 17 - 20, for the kick-off 'The Best Part of Your Life' program which is a retreat to be held at Fresky Resort and Spa, Scottsdale, AZ. This will be followed by ;six monthly teleseminars, four half hour coaching sessions to be used either by the couple or one of the individuals, e-mail access to Dr. Beth, and emergency telephone access at a special, unpublished number.

For more information write drbeth@drbetherickson.com and register at The Best Part of Your Life

 

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Teleseminar Series 
"What You Think Is What You Get"
Thoughts are the steering wheel of your life.  They take you where you will go, whether you intend to go there or not.
Empirical evidence finds:  1) there is an intimate connection between thoughts, feelings, and behavior; and 2)  patterns of thoughts and emotions have a radical effect on body chemistry. 
 
Happiness is in your head, not in your genes.  People who think positively experience more satisfaction, are more engaged with life, find more meaning in life, have higher hopes, and probably even laugh or smile more regardless of their life circumstances.
What if the thoughts in the back of your mind are negative and undermine your confidence?  What if you live afraid to make a move for fear it may not be just the right one?  What if these thoughts cause you to procrastinate when taking action is necessary?  What if you isolate, hiding out rather than reaching out?  Any of these coping styles will diminish your success while increasing anxiety and depression.
Once you remove roadblocks that both result in and come from your fear, you will be surprised at how effortless succeeding becomes.  Join Dr. Beth in a four-session teleseminar series to learn strategies for taming the tiger of negative thinking.

 

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