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What To Do When Feeling Blue
 
 

What To Do When Feeling Blue [Kindle Edition]

Rebecca Johnson
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Product Description

What To Do When Feeling Blue is a book written especially for women who are trying to beat depression. In this book you will learn Five Quick Things You Can Do to Start Feeling Better and 100 Ways to Beat Depression. The ideas range from simple things like inhaling essential oils to boost your mood to repeating affirmations to make yourself feel better. Rebecca Johnson created this book during a time when she was going through depression. Now she finds joy in life and is free of depression. The ideas in this book could also work for you. By reading this book you will increase your life satisfaction and also make other people happy too.

Rebecca Johnson, M.Ed. has appeared in The Wall Street Journal and Los Angeles Times. She created The Rebecca Review and a website called Seasoned with Love. She has posted over 4,000 reviews at amazon.com. Her writing can be found at hundreds of websites.

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 110 KB
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0068UQXPM
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #443,393 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I Loved It!, January 7, 2012
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This review is from: What To Do When Feeling Blue (Kindle Edition)
If you suffer from the blues from time to time you will find this book most beneficial. When you have depression it can be hard to think of ways to get out of it. Rebecca has 100 ways to help you on your way out of it. You could try a couple ideas every day. This book has practical advice and tips on how to combat depression. I found it very helpful in dealing with my own blues. It will lift your spirits and give you hope. There are so many, many good tips but one of my personal favorites was, "Simplify Your Life. Cut back on the complexities of your everyday existence. Learn to say no sometimes and nurture your spirit". In January most times people start feeling blue, what a good time it is to buy this today! What To Do When Feeling Blue is truly inspirational and has been a great addition to my Kindle book collection.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Delivers What It Promises, January 1, 2012
By 
Theo (Australia) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: What To Do When Feeling Blue (Kindle Edition)
First, I would like to thank the author for very graciously providing me with an electronic copy of the text for reviewing purposes.

That taken care of, there are many positive things to say about this work.

The first thing you need to know is that it contains exactly what the product description says it does. The description states that "In this book you will learn Five Quick Things You Can Do to Start Feeling Better and 100 Ways to Beat Depression". That pretty much covers what you'll find inside. Essentially it's a list of a hundred and five suggestions, most of which are stated in only a sentence or two. Thus, it's not quite what most of us would think of as a "book". But if you put aside your preconceptions, that doesn't have to be a bad thing. Far too many self-help and self-improvement titles are padded out with filler that, in actual truth, doesn't really add much. This one cuts to the chase.

The next thing that the author should be lauded for is that she makes it very clear right from the outset that reading this work should not be a substitute for psychotherapy. Depression - real depression - is a very serious illness requiring serious medical help. Again, the author is to be commended for being so candid with her readers on this issue.

But beyond all that, how about the one hundred and five suggestions that are the real basis of this work?

Are they any good?

Well, I'm no psychologist, but I did do a double major in psychology way back when, so I do know a bit about the discipline. And I can tell you that it's quite obvious to me that so does the author. Many, perhaps most of her suggestions have a real basis in psychological science. They offer simple, concrete ways of implementing well established scientific findings.

Just to begin with, it's obvious to me that the author is well aware of the physical basis of "the blues". Just following a few of her suggestions about diet and exercise alone is likely to have a major impact on your mood.

Similarly, many of her suggestions revolve around learning to challenge and redirect your own negative "self talk". Again, this is a proven technique with a real basis in scientific research.

Another scientifically well grounded aspect of this work, but one that is likely to prove more controversial, is that some of the suggestions do bring God into the picture. This is grounded in real science because it is well established that those with a more spiritual approach to life are happier and live longer. At the same time, not every reader will actually believe in this "God" fellow.

On this front, I think it's important to remember that as with any self-help manual, or any manual at all for that matter, it's up to you to decide what to accept and what to reject, and what needs some tailoring to fit with your own unique approach. It's worth mentioning here that even the famous atheist philosopher Bertrand Russell (some might call him the Richard Dawkins of his day) was of the view that the mystical "sentiment" at least had some value. We all of us have the ability to access the underlying spiritual experience without necessarily having to buy into any particular belief system. On a more immediate level, it's also well worth mentioning that many of the suggestions in this work represent an extremely practical form of "spirituality". Most involve helping others, including the very down to Earth suggestion to simply take a child to the zoo. Here again there is a real basis in science to what the author is saying: helping others is extremely well established as a very effective way of making ourselves happier.

On a more trivial level, essentially the same issue crops up in that a handful of the suggestions do appear to be geared towards women more than men - or perhaps I should say, to stereotypically girly activities rather than more butch ones. If you're a guy, baths in scented oils are unlikely to be your thing.

But hey, by all means give it a whirl!

Theo.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Some Healing Suggestions From One Who Has Been There, December 10, 2011
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This review is from: What To Do When Feeling Blue (Kindle Edition)
Rebecca Johnson is a highly respected and widely read reviewer here on Amazon.com. She shares with us that she has had extended periods of depression or feeling blue and through her own ingenuity she has created this eBook as a guide to those many people who have the signs and symptoms of depression (she lists these in an erudite but accessible manner and reminds the reader to visit to a physician in addition to following her suggestions for `treatment') and then proceeds to share a warmly informative and entertaining list of techniques to utilize in both combating and treating the `blues'.

This is a difficult book to review because giving away too much of the contents may give the idea of how Rebecca has managed to counteract the periods of depression she has experienced. It is this reader's opinion that here is a very practical source for ideas on how to deal with the blues - a state of mind and body that probably each of us frequently faces or is facing at present if we are truly honest. What Rebecca offers is an extended list of ways in which to alter thinking and behavior - self helps to get through those periods. She opens with her own back ground and then immediately offers `Five quick things you can do to start feeling better: Start exercising (walking, pilates, yoga), Eat healthy foods, Read books on happiness, Take lots of warm baths with essential oils and sea salts, Listen to new music and watch movies.'

But where she is most tender and caring is following these five `must do' steps with an extended list of simple ways to combat blues. Some of these wonderful ideas include join a walking club, volunteer, go stargazing, plan a picnic, review on Amazon.com!, but not spend too much time isolated on computer, place quotes around your home, start a scrapbook, take early morning walks, redecorate a room, turn off the news, listen to the rain, eat by candlelight, write a poem, breathe, listen to a symphony, allow your self to grieve is you have lost someone, nibble chocolate, repeat affirmations to help you heal, give yourself permission to be happy and on and on.

Few others have taken the care and time to create such a gift to mankind. Were more people willing to share the way Rebecca John shares this world would be a more peaceful and loving place to live. Everyone should read this book. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED! Grady Harp, December 11
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