Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, Her Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed by Lori Gottlieb
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I enjoyed reading this book, a lot.
Lori Gottlieb, the author, a practicing therapist in LA, writes a moving, funny and witty memory recounting her experience seeing a therapist after a sudden breakup. She has to deal with this crisis while at the same time helping others sort out their own problems. The mental image of a therapist quietly crying at her desk moments before talking to her patient is quite something (sad? hilarious? fascinating? all the above)
The author confides with us the inner stories her patients shared with her (identifying details altered for privacy) the stories are good, they are educational, poignant and engaging. Their stories tell us something about ourselves in a way that make it easy to face because it's presented in a non-threatening way.
The book is powerful because it's honest. The author makes herself totally vulnerable by revealing her insecurities and her issues with the whole world while also explaining that flaws don't make us defective, it makes us human.
I liked that the book is funny and the engaging style keeps the reader turning the pages.
I still had a lot of questions about the stories (how did things turn out with X, Y and Z? ) there is closure for some of them, but not all. I guess that's not the point of the book.
I love it when a book shows me new ways to understand the world, this book does exactly that. The inner world of the human mind is a vast universe that deserves our attention. Good Read.
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