Well
Navigating Fearful and Uncertain Times
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Audible会員プラン 無料体験
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ナレーター:
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Dr Mary Gunn
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著者:
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Dr Mary Gunn
このコンテンツについて
Present times are indeed uncertain for us all, as global warming accelerates and the world slowly emerges from a COVID-19 pandemic.
In such times it is natural to feel fear for ourselves, for our loved ones, for our planet. So, how do we learn to live freely and respond to such challenges?
When Dr Mary Gunn was diagnosed with cancer, her first reaction was fear and to fight the disease aggressively for the sake of not only herself but her young children and husband. But when it came back - and turned out to be incurable - she knew that she couldn’t live the rest of her life in fear.
After many dark nights of the soul when terror kept her awake, Mary learned to embrace a new approach to life: to accept all the joy and sorrow, safety and danger, certainty and unpredictability...in essence, to live freely.
Dr Mary Gunn’s remarkable memoir offers mindfulness tools for resilience and shows how we can all use acceptance, compassion and love to live courageously, magnificently. Backed up by many years of experience, her story will help you find personal stability within the surrounding instability and newly courageous ways of responding to evolving situations both personal and global.
©2022 Dr Mary Gunn (P)2022 Saraband批評家のレビュー
“[Well] will surely be helpful to anybody with a serious illness or, indeed, anybody affected by chronic fear.” (Richard Smith, British Medical Journal)
“An insightful, compassionate account of living WELL in the shadow of death; a book for everyone by an inspiring woman." (Professor Liz Grant, director of the Global Health Academy, University of Edinburgh)
“A poignant yet heart-warming account of a journey - at times over very challenging terrain - told with honesty, humour, and wisdom.... Profound, selfless and uplifting, this book...[is] not only a must-read for doctors and health care professionals, [but] for anyone who wants to live well.” (Stewart Mercer, professor of primary care research, University of Glasgow)