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"This Book Is Cheaper Than Therapy" by Liz Kelly, a clinical social worker and therapist, intended to offer mental health strategies when professional capacity is limited. Kelly establishes the book as a resource, clarifying that client stories are fictionalized accounts based on her clinical and personal experiences. The content focuses on practical advice across several key areas, including understanding authentic self-care (distinguished from quick fixes), managing the inner critic and cognitive distortions, emotional regulation techniques, the importance of healthy boundaries and communication (especially for people-pleasers), navigating grief and loss, and finally, seeking meaning over fleeting happiness through values-based goals. Kelly also dedicates significant space to the mind-body connection, explaining the nervous system's role in stress, the impact of alcohol, and offering advice on finding and affording professional therapy when needed.
By Diana E"This Book Is Cheaper Than Therapy" by Liz Kelly, a clinical social worker and therapist, intended to offer mental health strategies when professional capacity is limited. Kelly establishes the book as a resource, clarifying that client stories are fictionalized accounts based on her clinical and personal experiences. The content focuses on practical advice across several key areas, including understanding authentic self-care (distinguished from quick fixes), managing the inner critic and cognitive distortions, emotional regulation techniques, the importance of healthy boundaries and communication (especially for people-pleasers), navigating grief and loss, and finally, seeking meaning over fleeting happiness through values-based goals. Kelly also dedicates significant space to the mind-body connection, explaining the nervous system's role in stress, the impact of alcohol, and offering advice on finding and affording professional therapy when needed.