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DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

The Narrowing

Alexandra Shaker

How understanding the relationship between anxiety and the body can help us to understand ourselves

Barcode 9781472295613
Hardback

Original price £17.24 - Original price £17.24
Original price
£17.24
£17.24 - £17.24
Current price £17.24

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Release Date: 04/03/2025

Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: Philosophy & Spirituality
Label: Headline Home
Language: English
Publisher: Headline Publishing Group

How understanding the relationship between anxiety and the body can help us to understand ourselves
An exploration of the connection between anxiety and the body by a clinical psychologist who herself has experienced anxiety throughout her life

'A powerful reframing of anxiety' Anna Mathur, author of The Uncomfortable Truth

'Compassionate, thoughtful and nuanced . I loved this beautiful, brilliant book' Lucy Jones, author of Matrescence

'A transformative and compassionate exploration of anxiety' Galit Atlas, Ph.D., author of Emotional Inheritance

Most of us are intimately familiar with anxiety, and with its increasing hold on our minds, our hopes and plans, and our bodies. But how well do we really understand it, and what can we do to transform it into something new - into resilience, or courage, or creativity?

In this extraordinary book, Dr. Alexandra Shaker, a clinical psychologist, takes us on a journey through the body - from brain to blood to heart to guts - to examine the connections between our emotional, psychological, and physical lives. She unravels what the body can teach us about anxiety, and what we can learn from our long cultural history of the anxious impulse.

Melding psychology, neuroscience, history, and literature, she considers why-despite all the checklists and scientific advancements-we are still struggling to outrun our oldest terrors, and how a new approach focused on accepting anxiety as part of the human condition can help revolutionise our relationship with it.