<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>The Fear of Doing Nothing is a critique of psychotherapy through the lens of a young practitioner training in the field. Hazanov recounts the stories of the most moving, challenging, and memorable patients he worked with during his 6 years of training. This book follows him from the beginning of his training, at the peak of his doubt and skepticism, to its end, where he finally starts to believe in psychotherapy.This is a book for an intelligent and skeptical reader who is not convinced that psychotherapy is a worthwhile endeavor and questions its usefulness and merit. In the book, the author attempts to understand what can and cannot be achieved in psychotherapy and reflects on its place today.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>In the spirit of Mikhail Bulgakov's <i>A Young Doctor's Notebook</i> and <i>Sandeep Jauhar's Intern</i>, this is a deeply honest, searching examination of psychotherapy based on the experiences of a young sceptical trainee in New York City meeting his first patients.</p><p>"Why is psychotherapy different from talking to a friend?" Hazanov asks. "Because generations of self-interested therapists told us so?"</p><p>Through ten linked stories, we follow Hazanov as he navigates the maze of psychological theories he's been taught, facing the alarming dissonance between them and the tragic reality of his patients' lives. "How does psychotherapy work? And why do people not get any better?" Frustrated by fancy jargon and unrealistic depictions, Hazanov is on a quest to dispel the myths of psychotherapy and discover its essence. In <i>The Fear of Doing Nothing</i> he illuminates the intimacy, vulnerability and messiness of the therapeutic encounter, providing his answer to the question of what psychotherapy is.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"Imagine a rich blend of 20th-century Russian literature and philosophy, a 21st-century journalist's approach to the very real and gritty problems of under-served people, an Irvin Yalom-like focus on the inner and outer worlds of patients, and a first-person account of a beginning therapist's quest for integrity. You'll be intrigued by and admire Hazanov's journey." --<b>Barry A. Farber, Ph.D.</b>, Professor of Clinical Psychology, Columbia University, and author of <i>Secrets and Lies in Psychotherapy</i>--Barry A. Farber, PhD<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Valery Hazanov</b> was born in Moscow and raised in Israel. He received his PhD in clinical psychology at Columbia University and trained at various hospitals and clinics in New York City. Before training as a psychologist, he had worked for several years with juvenile delinquents, managing the Jerusalem district of a national program to stop youth crime. He is a former fellow of the American Psychoanalytic Association and the Columbia Psychoanalytic Center. He lives in Jerusalem.
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