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Poe's Heart and the Mountain Climber: Exploring the Effect of Anxiety on Our Brains and Our Culture
 
 
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Poe's Heart and the Mountain Climber: Exploring the Effect of Anxiety on Our Brains and Our Culture [Hardcover]

Richard Restak (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 23, 2004
Are you bombarded by a constant media feed of global terrorism, war, and rising unemployment rates—and by a mind-numbing array of ads that urge you to “ask your doctor” about the newest anti-anxiety medications? If it sometimes feels as if this country is having a collective anxiety attack, then you won’t be surprised to learn that more than 19 million Americans suffer from some form of acute anxiety.

Poe’s Heart and the Mountain Climber tackles this situation head-on, with a fresh perspective and a straightforward approach to exploring and understanding our anxiety before it paralyzes us.

After interviewing many experts on anxiety, and reflecting on his own many years treating anxious patients (as well as experiencing more than a few anxious moments himself), Dr. Richard Restak has organized this book around one primary principal: the best way to manage anxiety in these anxious times is to learn about it and put that learning to practical use. His message is vital and empowering: anxiety is not a mental illness that must require medication, but often a normal, biological response to stress.

Anxiety is part of our genetic makeup. We wouldn’t be alive today if our ancestors had lacked the ability to anticipate dangers and threats. Anxiety is as natural a part of our existence as breathing, eating, or sleeping, and it is closely linked to our powers of reasoning. Unlike any other species, only we are able to envision future possibilities. As a result, we aren’t tethered to the here and now, but can imaginatively anticipate the good things that might happen to us. But we can also envision the bad things and, as a result, experience anxiety. We can’t have one without the other. Anxiety, therefore, isn’t something to be eliminated but, rather, something to be understood. Anxiety is only undesirable when it becomes extreme.

This groundbreaking book teaches us to view anxiety not as a burden, but as a stimulus for greater accomplishment and enhanced self-knowledge. We will function at our best when we stop working to deny our anxiety or trying to escape it and instead learn to accept its presence in our lives and transform it into the positive, creative energy from which it stems.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

If it's true that we live in an age of anxiety, says Restak, a neuropsychiatrist and professor at George Washington University Medical Center, then our best defense is to learn as much as we can about anxiety and what causes it. Restak (Mozart's Brain and the Fighter Pilot) examines anxiety from both a cultural and physiological point of view. Unlike fear, which is based on a real, external threat, anxiety is an emotion of tension or dread originating from within. Restak details research conducted with animals and, in some cases, humans that reveals the workings of various brain parts involved in the creation of anxious feelings. The amygdalae (two small structures on either side of the brain), for example, receive and evaluate signals that trigger hormonal and chemical responses. In our age of information overload, overstimulated amygdalae can lead to overproduction of anxiety. Restak believes some anxiety is necessary—studies show that people with certain kinds of brain damage have no anxiety and act impulsively and self-destructively. But excessive anxiety can spark phobias, panic attacks and other anxiety disorders. Although this is not a self-help guide, the author does suggest strategies for relieving anxiety, such as avoiding TV hype and instead seeking solid information about anxiety-arousing events.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Restak has written extensively about the brain and mental health, and in this brisk volume, he addresses anxiety. Explicating this vague but palpable emotion, Restak differentiates it from its kindred feeling of fear, which is intense but transitory, whereas anxiety asserts a more diffuse but continual presence in the mind. Restak illustrates anxiety both with social examples (such as dread of a terrorist attack) and individual cases from his medical practice. Making the point that it has effects both beneficial (alerting a person to genuinely dangerous situations) and incapacitating (fretting about catastrophic but statistically improbable situations), Restak exudes empathy with instances of his personal experiences. That style will engage readers throughout as he explores significant experiments in neuroscience on anxiety; several clinical diagnoses, such as obsessive-compulsive disorder; and various medications commonly prescribed for anxiety. On the other side of the anxiety coin, Restak discusses risk-taking folks who intentionally court anxiety. For general readers, Restak dispels worry about worry and tenders sensible strategies for quelling it. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Harmony; First Edition edition (November 23, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1400048508
  • ISBN-13: 978-1400048502
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,230,911 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Two things this book is NOT, January 17, 2007
By 
This review is from: Poe's Heart and the Mountain Climber: Exploring the Effect of Anxiety on Our Brains and Our Culture (Hardcover)
1- Literary Criticism
2- Self Help (despite offering some anxiety minimizing suggestions),

This book explores the experience of anxiety from a neurological point of view. It is a fascinating historical and scientific exploration of the structure and function of our brain as it relates to anxiety.

I enjoyed it thoroughly. Students of the neurological and cognitive sciences will probably do so as well.
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12 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars This book gave me anxiety, March 31, 2006
This review is from: Poe's Heart and the Mountain Climber: Exploring the Effect of Anxiety on Our Brains and Our Culture (Hardcover)
I should have paid more attention to the small shrift in the title of "Poe's Heart and the Mountain Climber : Exploring the Effect of Anxiety on Our Brains and Our Culture" by Richard Restak. Generally, the book is Neither about Poe Nor about Mountain Climbers. IT IS ABOUT ANXIETY and is heavily geared toward scientific enthusiasts and/or medical students. I seriously believe that if an anxiety suffering patient picks up this book by the time he/she reaches the end, he/she would've experienced an increase in anxiety symptoms.

For me it started unexpectedly with the lengthy exploration of how best to define what anxiety is...page after page, test after test...But I quickly brushed aside any fears of growing anxiety associated specifically with my worries of wasting my time yet again with a bad book and proceeded to read.

More pages followed with more definitions and tests and again the same feelings creped up on me of time wasted again. This time I listened to these feelings and found them to be true especially after the medical terminology kneed me in the groins of my brain with statements like

"... the next time you're feeling anxious, think about the brain circuitry that underlies your anxious responses: the role of the amygdala, the conditioning responses, and, most of all, the power of the frontal lobes to override or at least moderate the ..."

or
"...During the evolution of our brain, the massive growth of the prefrontal cortex resulted in an increase in back-and-forth traffic between that area and the amygdala...."

and also

"...But despite their inability to recall seeing the fearful face, PTSD veterans show an exaggerated amygdala response on íMRI testing, a response that varies directly with the severity of their PTSD symptoms..."

By the time I reached the Epilogue, I was hyperventilating. Thankfully, it proved the most helpful portion of the book and it is in this portion that the author redeems himself from causing my anxiety.

While in his "Mozart's Brain and the Fighter Pilot: Unleashing Your Brain's Potential" mr. Restak give frequent and helpful advices within each chapter of the book, he does this only in the Epilogue of this book. My advice, unless you absolutely need to know how anxiety is linked physiologically with your mind, skip to the Epilogue. My overall impression is that a lot of the information in this book is unnecessary unless you are planning to go to med school or are preparing for a scientific conference on the brain and its imbalances.

- by Simon Cleveland
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4.0 out of 5 stars Don't judge a book by its cover, July 22, 2009
This review is from: Poe's Heart and the Mountain Climber: Exploring the Effect of Anxiety on Our Brains and Our Culture (Hardcover)
As with Restak's other works on neuroscience, this book provides fascinating examples and insights into the the way the brain experiences the world. This time the emphasis is on the sometimes destructive and sometimes surprisingly useful experience of anxiety to mental and physical health. Restak is a highly respected neurologist and the author of over a dozen books, so I'm sure the information contained within is well researched and credible, but there is one superficial yet glaring flaw in this edition that, were it not for Restak's excellent body of work, might have made me wonder about the reliability of the information inside. That flaw is the image on the cover of Poe above the image of a mountain climber reaching a mountain summit. The problem is that the image is not Edgar Allan Poe, but Mark Twain. It was such a distraction that I finally had to remove the cover to enjoy the book. I guess you could say that it caused me anxiety (say, maybe it's one of the author's clever experiments). Disregard the insult to Twain (he was never a fan of E.A. Poe), and you'll be enlightened and surprised by the insights of a brain expert who not only knows and loves his subject, but knows how to make it accessible to the layperson.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
UNFORTUNATELY, OUR BRAIN isn't very proficient at probability estimation. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
fixed decks, anxiety episodes, anxious person
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Mountain Climber, Gambling Task, United States, Paul Gonzales, Richard Restak, Columbia University, Rollo May, The Tell-Tale Heart, Washington Post
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Front Cover | Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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