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The Bodymind Workbook: Exploring How the Mind and Body Work Together

The Bodymind Workbook: Exploring How the Mind and Body Work Together
By Debbie Shapiro

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Product Description

The BodyMind Workbook is a new and exciting exploration of the relationship between the body and the mind, showing how conflicting attitudes, fears, and repressed feelings can all directly influence the body and its functioning. The author describes in detail the various bodymind patterns and languages used, from the type of tissue structure involved to the part of the body affected. She explains how our states of mind can influence such illnesses as high blood pressure, heart trouble, nervous disorders or even cancer. She also emphasises how illness and disease give us a chance not only to transform our physical health, but also to facilitate healing on a deeper level. As we discover and understand the messages behind the physical disorders, so we can bring about personal resolution and self-discovery.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #286900 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-02-04
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Debbie Shapiro was born in 1953 in England, but now divides her time between England and America, writing, teaching and leading workshops. She has spent the last 20 years studying and practising meditation, psychology, body language and the healing arts. She is married to Eddie Shapiro, author of Inner Conscious Relaxation, and together they teach a variety of holistic health seminars.


Customer Reviews

An unfortunate combination of woolly thinking and rigidity1
Well this book certainly raised my levels of salivary cortisol - a marker for stress.

As a complementary practitioner the underlying thesis that body, mind and spirit are exquisitely interfaced, and not separate entities, is one I absolutely adhere to; nevertheless 'pop psychology' and rigid assumptions that if you have A wrong with you it means B, are as wrong and unhelpful as Cartesian assumptions that bodymind and spirit are disconnects.

There may be much that is gold hidden within these pages, however i will never discover it as by page 18 I had discovered so much that was FACTUALLY wrong - i.e. anatomical assumptions, never mind the suppositions on which Shapiro then confidently asserts based on those initial errors, that I ended up scribbling 'rubbish' - 'check your anatomy!' etc across every page. I have better things to do than pick apart all the errors which I'm sure are scattered within, from the number of them within the first 18 pages, but will ditch this book.

Just for the record 'the vegus (sic) nerve from the hypothalamus' - VAGUS originates from the medulla; 'after conception the spine is the first part of the body to develop' - actually the circulatory structures come first, so the somatospiritual conclusions Shapiro draws from the bones BECAUSE 'the spine is the first part of the body to develop' are themselves based on a premise which is flawed.

Does this matter, or am I just a hair splitter? Well actually, I think it DOES matter. Shapiro draws some pretty rigid and inflexible meanings from dis-ease, and she does this by citing hard and fast facts which are at times lacking in accuracy. If her FACTS are erroneous, should we trust the conclusions?

I absolutely concur with the idea that there can be energetic and emotional impact and meaning to all our 'dis-ease', but I'm afraid that a doctrinaire, rigid analysis of why YOU have this disease because THIS is the meaning of that disease is deeply flawed and suspect. The day that I give rigid interpretations and explanations of the psychospiritual nature of dis-eases to my individual clients will be the day I know it is time to hang up my therapist's hat (not that i wear one!) I would not presume to be so crass - and, frankly, I have had clients who from too much reading of doctrinaire 'new age' analyses of illness compound their own discomfort by feeling guilty for having 'brought disease upon myself through my ......' whatever the pop analysis was - and incidentally, each writer of such doctrinaire this means that analysis draws different conclusions! Which self appointed guru is the 'right' one?

A writer whom I have much more empathy with in this field, Caroline Myss, who originally seemed to espouse some of the same conclusions as Shapiro, Hay etc, has moved beyond the doctrinaire into a much deeper understanding of our relationship with dis-ease, and rejects a simplistic psychospiritual analysis.

Not every broken bone, Ms Shapiro, represents 'a cry for help, for affection and attention a cry that begs to be dependent on others' nor does every bruise to the leg mean 'we are mentally resisting the direction we are taking' - that must mean the entire cricketing and hockey fraternity are receiving their sporting injuries through mental resistance every time they get thwacked on the leg by a ball!

As for 'problems with the heart indicate a self-centredness and conflict with expressing or feeling love' deeply compassionate and loving individuals also die of heart attacks!

This book represents unattractive new age fundamentalism, as blinkered and closed minded as those on the other side who view the body as just a machine, and the 'soul' as a delusion