Maybe You Should Talk to Someone
A Therapist, Her Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed
Book - 2019
1328662055



Opinion
From Library Staff
Gottlieb, a psychotherapist and national advice columnist, weaves together stories of her life with the stories of her clients' lives in impressive fashion. The engaging writing draws the reader into the world of therapy, focusing on four people's journeys to make sense of their lives. The honest... Read More »
Gottlieb, a psychotherapist and national advice columnist, weaves together stories of her life with the stories of her client’s lives in impressive fashion. The engaging writing draws the reader into the world of therapy and four people’s journeys to make sense of their lives. The honest and trut... Read More »
The way Gottlieb weaves together the stories of her patients and herself is impressive. The storytelling is engaging and reading about people's lives being transformed with hard work and self awareness, and in an honest and truthful way, is inspiring.
From the critics

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Add a CommentStarted Nov 3/20, finished Nov 13/20.
I read this for book club. It wasn't a great discussion read but we were still meeting via Zoom due to COVID. Coworker Lauren passed it along to me. I read it just as dad was dying I found it a really good read especially during that difficult time.
Makes me want to go to therapy! Sounds fun
This has FLOORED me. The amount of information, mostly in brilliant quotes, has dazzled me. The case histories and the insight of the author's personal therapy is something that opened me to changes being possible in my miserable little life!
Hope reading this book is a gift to you as well, whoever you are.
Non fiction novel - modern Mrs Darcy
WOW! An incredibly amazing, spectacular book; it's the best I've read in DECADES!
This book has so many layers . . . On the surface are terms and vocabulary I've needed for years, then there is the story of Ms. Gottlieb's search for therapy, the stories of some of her clients, and a look at the underpinnings of psychology practice, all of which are fascinating.
I'm not a very emotional person, but I found myself so moved I had to stop reading in order to absorb my feelings and clear the tears from my eyes.
I am dumbfounded by the depth of empathy good psychologists find based on the thin premise that a client is asking for help when most of us might want to slap the person and tell them to 'grow up'. This would obviously backfire and exacerbate the problem.
This book is compellingly written by a gifted writer and can be life-changing. It is one that stays with you long after reading it. I'm telling everyone I know how excited I am to have read this. ANYONE can use this book, EVERYONE should!
I think people could consider this a "slow" read because yes, it is telling stories of patients and her own therapist visits but its also giving us therapeutic insight all at once. The type of insights therapy patients take in one week at a time and we as readers get all at once which might turn "overwhelming" to "slow" since we have to sit with thought and not plot. That being said, I think it was beautifully human. It made me cry, laugh and honestly sit with myself while seeing myself in these individuals. I would highly recommend.
Insightful. Not a fast or griping read but glad I read it.
A great book about the lies we tell ourselves, the lies we tell others, and the world of discovering yourself.
Lori is a therapist, but when she strikes trouble in her personal life she knows that the answer isn't 'physician, heal thyself'. She turns to another therapist and discovers that the view is quite different from the other side of the couch. This isn't just Lori's story though, it is the story of her clients and how they work through their issues. You are bound to find something in here that will resonate with you or with somebody you know.