An Essential Guide for Clients and Therapists
This thoughtful, witty, and empathic book has already helped over 100,000 readers break through conflicts and transform their personal and professional relationships. Experienced therapist Mike Nichols provides vivid examples, easy-to-learn techniques, and practical exercises for becoming a better listener—and making yourself heard and understood, even in difficult situations.
Are you a good listener? Take this comprehensive quiz and find out!
Visit www.guilford.com/ebooks to see more than 400 titles now available in e-book format.
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Guilford Press was founded in 1973, with a full-time staff of one. We've since grown to over seventy times that number, and have built an international reputation as a publisher of books, periodicals, software, and audiovisual programs in mental health, education, and the social sciences.

- "How Family and Close Friends Can Help Trauma Survivors," eight helpful tips from Life After Trauma, Second Edition, are featured on PsychCentral.com.
- "Seven Ways to Access Your Inner Cheerleader," an exercise from The Procrastinator's Guide to Getting Things Done, is excerpted on PsychCentral.com.
- Donna M. Mertens, author of Transformative Research and Evaluation, received the 2009 Paul F. Lazarsfeld Theory Award from the American Evaluation Association.
- Doug Sprenkle, author of Common Factors in Couple and Family Therapy, will receive the American Family Therapy Academy (AFTA) 2010 Award for Distinguished Contribution to Family Therapy Theory and Practice.
- The Mindful Path to Self-Compassion: Freeing Yourself from Destructive Thoughts and Emotions by Christopher Germer has been selected by Library Journal as one of the best consumer health books of 2009.
- Principles and Practice of Sex Therapy, Fourth Edition, edited by Sandra R. Leiblum, PhD, has won the 2010 SSTAR (Society for Sex Therapy and Research) Health Professional Book Award.
- Sally Rogers, PhD, author of the Early Start Denver Model for Young Children with Autism, was interviewed by Tara Parker-Pope for the NYTimes "Well" blog.

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