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The Van Gogh Blues by Eric Maisel
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The Van Gogh Blues: The Creative Person's Path Through Depression

by Eric Maisel

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603101,003 (4.5)1
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New World Library (2007), Paperback, 272 pages

Member:douglaseby
Collections:Your libraryRating:
Tags:mental health, creativity
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While there are parts of this book I really enjoyed, there were other parts I did not. Treatment of audience is a little uneven. I have been working my way through this book with a neighborhood friend. I found the first four chapters interesting, the next few a little more exciting, the chapters about brokenness and addiction less helpful or interesting than I hope for, but the last two chapters were worth the price of the book.It uses case studies and suggests resources and exercises. Some are excellent. ( )
  medievalmama | May 1, 2009 |
Acclaimed singer Alanis Morissette, promoting her album Jagged Little Pill in 1995, reported feeling a "dissonance in the midst of all the external success.. I was expected to be overjoyed by it, and at the same time I was disillusioned by it."

This kind of "crisis of meaning" - which many highly talented and creative people experience - is addressed in the book as a key element in depression.

Psychotherapist and creativity coach Eric Maisel acknowledges that medication or biological treatment, as well as therapy may help in alleviating depression, but he emphasizes that "Creators have trouble maintaining meaning... Not creating is depressing."

In addition to a number of perspectives and insights by artists, the book provides information and cognitive behavioral strategies from a variety of psychologists and creativity coaches to help deal with meaning crises that can erode creative expression and mental health.
  douglaseby | Apr 1, 2008 |
One of the few books I could easily get at the library but feel it would do much more use if I owned this. Eric Maisel is wonderful and I feel like I should be reading many more of his books because they provide insights that can be looked at from many perspectives. ( )
1 vote aarrrggghhh | Jul 27, 2007 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 157954570X, Hardcover)

From The Van Gogh Blues ...

"...virtually 100 percent of creative people will suffer from episodes of depression. Why virtually 100 percent? Because every creative person came out of the womb ready to interrogate life and determine for herself what life would mean, could mean, and should mean. Her gift or curse was that she was born ready to stubbornly doubt received wisdom and disbelieve that anyone but she was entitled to provide answers to her own meaning questions."

Creative people of all kinds look for understanding, empathy, and meaning in life. That is what they do, what they work with. This will often lead to depression-- but not because understanding, empathy, and meaning are not possible. They are simply not always on terms that are easy to accept. This depression of creative people does not have to be physiological, nor does it necessarily respond to pharmaceutical treatments.

Dr. Eric Maisel, an internationally known expert on the creative process and best-selling author, has developed a four-step plan for engaging this type of depression and moving past it. Using examples of famous creators like Vincent van Gogh and Fyodor Dostoyevsky and not-so-famous creators who have struggled with this kind of depression, he shows that despite the difficulty, creative people hold the ability to forge relationships, repair themselves, and create meaning in an utterly unique and powerful way. Dr. Maisel's approach legitimizes creative people's own instinctual beliefs that standard treatments are not the answer.

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 11 Jun 2009 23:13:52 -0400)

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