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The Dark Side of the Light Chasers

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 8 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 8 weeks
Debbie Ford explains that the dark side of our personality should not be hidden. By denying our dark side, we reject these aspects of our true natures rather than giving ourselves the freedom to live authentically. Here she shows that it is possible to acknowledge and accept our so-called weaknesses, proving that these qualities may be important, hidden strengths. For example, perhaps some 'selfishness' can save us from exhaustion and resentment. Full of illuminating stories and practical exercises, Debbie Ford shows us how to reconcile our darker impulses and find the gifts they offer. Your life will be transformed when you unconceal, own, and embrace your shadow.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Debbie Ford spent 15 years of her life dependent upon drugs and alcohol, denying herself true happiness. She experienced the dark side of herself (her shadow) and spent years in therapy desperately grasping for truth and fulfillment. Ford shows no restraint in the description of her enlightened path. Her deliberate and convincing narration is delivered with a conviction to help others through her own "hard-knock" discoveries. She tells the listeners how to embrace the darker corners of their souls to permit them wholeness and self-love. B.J.P. (c) AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 1, 1998
      Everyone possesses the entire range of human traits and emotions--"the saintly and the cynical, the divine and the diabolical, the courageous and the cowardly"--contends Ford, a faculty member of California's Chopra Center for Well-Being. The problem, as Ford (and Freud) define it, is that in growing up, people suppress those behaviors, thoughts, feelings and characteristics that are unacceptable within their particular environments. But rather than daily sessions on the couch, Ford advocates re-imagining and reclaiming lost aspects of self, urging readers to "unconceal" and embrace those traits buried in their "shadow," in order to find their "gift." She offers exercises designed to bring such traits to the surface, including directed self-questioning; listing one's characteristics for closer examination of positives and negatives; and "discharging toxic emotions" physically. Her advice is often drawn from anecdotes of experiences with friends and in workshops that she has taught or attended, and from her own struggles with various aspects of her personality. What some will see as disarming simple methodology may seem shallow to those with a more analytical bent. But even those not looking for the "Resistant Rita," "Lovegirl Laurie," "My-way Marvin" or "Competent Ken" locked inside them may find him or her in spite of themselves.

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  • English

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