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8 Reviews
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Living With What...?,
This review is from: Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression (Hardcover)
If you were raised, as I was, with parents who believed it was simply not all right to feel certain feelings; then, as I have, you will find this book liberating and very helpful. After reading the book, I wanted to particapate in a workshop session based on these writing and lead by the author. Because it took place with art therapy students at a graduate school in New York, NY where I live and practice psychotherapy, I was able to attend. What happened during the workshop class seemed nothing short of amazing as everybody in the group discussed their experience of new feelings while doing exercises from the book. Being given access to new parts of our feelingful life is a very useful gift -- that's what this book delivers! Dr. Capacchione vividly describes the nine different areas of feeling and put forth ways that each of us, through simple, doable, exercises might bring forth those feelings in our own experience. I realized, while working with the ideas in this book, how I have avoided experiencing certain feelings that I surely must be having during a work day. But, why was I not able to feel all my feeling, all the time, and use the whole range of them to construct a better way of living? Dr. Capacchione's has written a guidebook for living in a new way, for engaging in a new process which is constructive and developmental in core ways . Like many baby boomers, I, too, was trained from early childhood that any sign of certain feelings; curiosity (killed the cat), anger (bad), self interest (selfish), thoughtfulness (sullen) would make me into a "not nice person". This old notion from my youth, methodically suppressing and repressing whole areas of feelings, within me, in order to be a 'nice' person, became a very bottled-up, unhealthy way to live. It has become clear to me from reading this book that my living must include the art of feeling as I go into the fullness of adulthood and maturation. The good news is that the work of learning to live with feelings is not too difficult. In fact, a lot of feelings are just plain fun, as I think you'll find this book to be. Take heart. Living life more fully and more naturally will bring about change for the better. This wonderful book has opened up a whole new area of understanding and healthy expression for me, my colleagues, students and patients. I highly recommended it to you. Marilyn H. Hamlin, PhD.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Unique, Complete, and Effective Approach to Emotions Work,
By beverly staley (Rancho Santa Margarita, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression (Hardcover)
This is like having a series of workshops in a book. One can have his own workshop experience in whatever arts media and feelings arena he desires. Capacchione invites, indeed encourages the reader to experience, accept and express his emotions using an entire menu of sensory, experiential exercises. Offered for our pleasure are drawing, collage, painting, clay, music, dance, mask making and voice dialog. She explains the positive outcomes of using arts media to express feelings, useful examples from her workshops participants and invaluable resources for further study. This author is an artist with a background in psychology. She has done an extensive amount of work in the expressive arts field, including authoring many self-help books in this genre. I found this book to be a very positive, hands-on tool to use myself and to use with my clients.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good practical book for learning to work with feeling through artistic expression,
By
This review is from: Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression (Hardcover)
This is a very practical book for working with feelings in a non-cognitive way. It is especially geared toward reclaiming buried feelings through the use of artistic expression. It contains many useful activities using a variety of mediums and for many people this type of work is quite powerful. I work in the psychology field and while I don't focus on this area as a specialty, I have witnessed the power of these techniques first hand. These ideas have also been useful to me in my own self-development work.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What we all need to help us with the turmoil of last year,
By A Customer
This review is from: Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression (Hardcover)
Lucia Capacchione uses all of the artistic modalities to touch those emotions which are often difficult to express. She leads the reader through a series of easy to follow directions and exercises which helps you tap into emotions and then interpret your own words and pictures. Whether you are an artist or a novice, you will be guided through this self discovery process and given samples and testimonials along the way. Capacchione helps you capture, express and understand the your feelings which will release you and allow you to move on. I loved the format of her books, unlike most of the therapuetic books on the market, she offers you exercises that you can do without needing an instructor, follow up projects to expand the process and sample drawings and stories which anyone can relate to. If you are still feeling the effects of the 9-11, this book allows you to process those emotions in the privacy of your own home.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
WARNING: Same book as The Art of Emotional Healing,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression (Hardcover)
This is the same exact book as the more popular "The Art of Emotional Healing", which was published in 2006 (several years later), and unfortunately has an entirely new ISBN so there's no way to know they're the same book except for seeing the table of contents are the exact same. Amazon has no way of knowing it's the same book. Also, Amazon has this documented as a 400 page book (yet more confusion) and yet the table of contents shows only ~250. I hope all this was a minor oversight by the publisher and not done deliberately. The publishers apparently changed between editions, so I'd imagine that's why. Seems screwy, to not make it at least somewhat clear that it's the same book.
Get "The Art of Emotional Healing" instead.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Treat yourself,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression (Hardcover)
You owe it to yourself to not only buy this book, but to read and do all the exercises in it. These methods have made a big difference in people's lives including my own.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Simple but good,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression (Hardcover)
As an experienced Art Therapist I found this book to be a little simplistic and repetitive of other books I've read, however for the therapist just starting out it would be very helpful and gives many ideas. This book is well set out and easy to read and has many exercises which can easily be applied to work with clients.
Much of the information in this book is the same in Lucia Capacchione's other book "The Art of Emotional Healing" so I wouldn't recommend buying both as there is much repetition between the two. J Thomas
6 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
old concepts presented without feeling,
By A Customer
This review is from: Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression (Hardcover)
Lucia Cappachione has written a number of reasonably good books for the popular press over the past decades-- unfortunately, this newest book indicates that she has nothing left to say that is new or innovative. The exercises and examples are tired and over-used and are not "pioneering" as she claims. I am disappointed that a fine publisher like Tarcher fell for this material and added it to their line of self-help books. The reader who is looking for something substantial on how art taps emotions might look to Pat Allen's Art is a Way of Knowing. Living with Feeling lacks both depth and feeling and substance. I hope that Cappachione will someday take a risk and really dig down deep for some new material that will help readers once again use art as healing in a meaningful way and that she will quit rushing to get another book out onto the shelves just to make a quick sale. |
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Living with Feeling: The Art of Emotional Expression by Lucia Capacchione (Hardcover - June 4, 2001)
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