Senin, 02 Desember 2013

Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial,

Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

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Whose Couch Is It Anyway?  Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D



Whose Couch Is It Anyway?  Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

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Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving your Millennial, by Los Angeles based Phyllis Goldberg, Ph.D. and Rosemary Lichtman,Ph.D., explores the impact on five different families after an adult child boomerangs home.Taking the beleaguered Mom as their focus, they bring over thirty years of clinical experience to the pressing challenges of families in flux, delivering keen insights and effective strategies for moving forward.

Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1501286 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-05-03
  • Released on: 2015-05-03
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

Review Just as you're ready to kick up your heels with the new found freedom of an empty nest, it fills up again, this time with a full-fledged adult or someone who s supposed to be. Whose Couch Is It Anyway? provides great solutions,clearly and cleverly told. Blissfully free of psychological jargon, it just has answers. --AR Taylor: Sex, Rain and Cold FusionAs the mother of millennial children, torn between wanting them to live at home again and wanting to help them prosper in the new world order, I found the case studies in Whose Couch Is It Anyway? refreshingly authentic. Lichtman and Goldberg offer insight into the universal condition of parenthood and provide practical solutions for how to move forward with purpose. --Anne Kreamer: Risk/Reward: Why Intelligent Leaps and Daring Choices Are The Best Career Moves You Can MakeThis valuable book is full of warmth, insight, and helpful advice on managing the inevitable stressors that arise when adult children move back home. The authors wisdom and experience come through on every page. --Shelley Taylor, Ph.D.: The Tending Instinct: How Nurturing Is Essential to Who We Are and How We Live

About the Author Phyllis Goldberg, Ph.D. and Rosemary Lichtman, Ph.D. have been good friends and colleagues for 35 years. Having guided thousands of clients in their individual private practices, they offer a wide range of professional knowledge and experience. They blog at HerMentorCenter.com and publish a monthly newsletter, Stepping Stones. Both are graduates of Dr. Martin Seligman's Authentic Happiness coaching program, and apply positive psychology in their mentoring work. Whose Couch Is It Anyway? is a joint collaboration about letting go of boomerang kids and teaching smart strategies to help tackle family transitions head-on.


Whose Couch Is It Anyway?  Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

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Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. I was studying in preparation to be the best mother I could be By Jennifer When my kids were little, I remember reading every book I could get my hands on about parenting and childcare. In fact, even before they were born, I was studying in preparation to be the best mother I could be. Yes, I was one of those moms-to-be waddling around with headphones on my belly. I think most moms are like that; we want to know what to do to give our children the best start in life. We want our children to have all the things we had, and didn’t have. So, we read and visit and blog and even listen to the advice of older women in the checkout line. We want to know all of the theories out there for giving our child an advantage and a strong foundation for life. The problem is that as our kids get older and move into adulthood, there is very little information out there about how to handle the transition from mother of a child to mother of an adult. Not even the grocery store checkout lines offer the sage advice of nearby observers anymore. It’s tough, and although many of the friends I talk with are struggling with the same issues, we feel isolated and alone in handling them.Fortunately, there are now some experts offering support and guidance for those of us moving into the latter stages of parenting. In their recently published book, Whose Couch Is It Anyway?, Phyllis Goldberg, Ph.D. and Rosemary Lichtman, Ph.D., beautifully unravel the stories of five unique families going through the natural bumps in the road along the path between family life with children and family life with adult children. The pair has worked in the field of counseling for over 30 years with families of diverse backgrounds and experiences. The book focuses specifically on parenting Millennials, young adults, often called boomerang kids, who come and go from home, as they transition into adulthood.First and foremost, the authors set readers’ minds to rest; we are not alone. Citing a wealth of research, Goldberg and Lichtman summarize the cultural and economic conditions that have led to many families finding themselves in a new paradigm. Our world has changed and in response, so has the family framework. Many parents are left asking where they go from here and how they navigate this world for which they have very little precedent.Goldberg and Lichtman weave guidance and suggestions through the telling of composite stories of families searching for the answers to these same questions. The primary character in each story is a mother but also includes rich character development of connected family members which facilities a full appreciation of the layers and complexities involved in family dynamics. No single reader may find herself completely outlined in any one of the stories but may recognize features of her own struggle within them all.As storytellers, Goldberg and Lichtman succeed in revealing the truth of struggle and growth in a way that offers the practical guidelines of a self-help book but reads like a novel. The stories are interesting and impactful. The depth of detail about each character engenders a personal connection; the reader empathizes with the characters and roots for their success. The advice and suggestions Goldberg and Lichtman offer, through the counsel they offer to clients in each story, is simple and practical. As one couple deals with a middle child returning home just as they think they will be able to start traveling the world, the narrator deftly guides the family though the process of setting boundaries and drawing up a contract to keep interactions between parents and adult child civil and productive. Each family member is given a chance to be heard and is allowed input into determining the new family dynamics. The scenario may be close enough to reality to provide helpful ideas but removed enough to prevent defensiveness or resistance that could prevent growthThrough the diverse make-up of the families in the stories, Goldberg and Lichtman address matters that may relate to some non-traditional families but also connect to issues many families have in common.So, whose couch is it anyway? It’s mine, and, it’s yours. It’s open to the one inclined to listen and stretch and learn and grow.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Warm, thought-provoking stories about relationships across generations By Richard Newman, Ph.D. Each of the book’s five chapters portrays a family scenario involving complex interpersonal relationships. The book’s authors, Phyllis Goldberg and Rosemary Lichtman, are family therapists who deal everyday with such scenarios. Over the years, Goldberg and Lichtman have compiled and condensed “stories” from their vast experience. Here, they share stories and discuss how they’ve personally listened to and counseled family members.Scenarios typically involve a Millennial child (actually an adult) who has returned home to live with a mother (and father). Often there are hassles involving financial and personal matters, intrusiveness, and limit setting. There can be differences between parents’ memories of the millennial when he or she was a “child” and parents’ perceptions of the millennial in the present, as an adult. Likewise, the millennial’s perceptions of present-day parents may not jive with his or her memories of earlier parenting. When millennials are sandwiched between their parents and their own spouses and young children, situations can become complicated and dysfunctional.The book is extremely thought-provoking. It can be useful for training counseling and coaching professionals, and it can be useful for individuals who encounter difficult family situations and scenarios in their personal lives. Different generations “occupying the couch” at different times form the core of real-life dramas---sometimes tragic and sometimes even humorous.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Boomer parents, this one's for you By Liane Kupferberg Carter When your kids are small, there’s a wealth of parenting books available to coach you through developmental issues and milestones. There’s also a veritable cottage industry of books to help you navigate the shoals of adolescence and tackle the transition to post-secondary education. However, despite the fact that there are more than 20 million millennials (adult children ages 18-34) living with their parents, there aren’t too many books to help you parent those adult children who fail to launch.Until now.Whose Couch Is It Anyway? is the joint collaboration of two therapists with more than 30 years of clinical experience helping families. Casting a keen eye on the boomerang generation, Dr. Goldberg and Dr. Lichtman offer compassionate, practical advice via case studies of five composite families so compelling and richly detailed that they read like short stories. Wise, warm, and written in accessible, lively language, this thought-provoking book is essential reading for would-be empty nesters, and the professional coaches and therapists who work with them.

See all 16 customer reviews... Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D


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Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D
Whose Couch Is It Anyway? Moving Your Millennial, by Phyllis Goldberg Ph.D, Rosemary Lichtman Ph.D

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