
Being
Why it's harder to be human than a hamster or a herring
$29.60
- Paperback
384 pages
- Release Date
30 June 2026
Summary
Being human is hard.
From early childhood, we start to become aware of the difficulties we must all inevitably face. We will battle an inner critic across the entirety of our life. We will never truly know those around us, and time will destroy all we create. Death becomes a reality, and we cannot escape the knowledge that it is coming for us all. These are the problems of being.
Many other complications emerge from the awareness of our own mortality. How do we find meaning, c…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781761471438 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1761471430 |
| Author: | Rachel E. Menzies, Ross G. Menzies |
| Publisher: | Allen & Unwin |
| Imprint: | Allen & Unwin |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 384 |
| Release Date: | 30 June 2026 |
| Weight: | 444g |
| Dimensions: | 29mm x 155mm x 234mm |

Rachel E. Menzies
Dr Rachel E. Menzies is a Lecturer and Research Fellow at the University of Sydney. She completed her Honours, Masters, and PhD degrees in psychology at the University of Sydney. Dr. Menzies published her first paper on death anxiety and mental illness in Clinical Psychology Review as an undergraduate student. Her experimental work on death anxiety and psychopathology has been published in leading journals in clinical psychology. She has been invited to deliver numerous keynote and plenary addresses at national and international conferences. In 2021, she won the national PhD Prize from the Australian Psychological Society (APS) for her work on death anxiety, its role in psychopathology, and its treatment. In 2023, she was awarded the national APS Early Career Research Award. Dr. Menzies has published six books on existential issues. Her book Mortals, co-authored with her father, has received several national and international book prizes, including the Nib People’s Choice Prize and the American Psychological Association’s 2023 William James Book Award. She serves on the editorial board of Death Studies and the Board of Directors of the International Society for the Science of Existential Psychology. In addition to her academic work, Dr. Menzies is a clinical psychologist and Director of the Menzies Anxiety Centre. She lives with her husband and daughter in the inner city of Sydney.
Professor Ross G. Menzies completed his undergraduate, masters, and doctoral degrees in psychology at the University of NSW. He is currently Professor of Clinical Psychology in the Faculty of Health at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS). In 1991, he was appointed founding Director of the Anxiety Disorders Clinic at the University of Sydney, a position he held for over 20 years. He is the National President of the Australian Association for Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (AACBT). He served as the editor of Australia’s national CBT journal, Behaviour Change, for 17 years and has trained psychologists, psychiatrists, and allied health workers in CBT globally. Professor Menzies is an active researcher with three decades of continuous funding from national competitive sources. He has produced 10 books and more than 230 journal papers and book chapters. He was the President and Convenor of the 8th World Congress of Behavioural and Cognitive Therapies (WCBCT) in Melbourne in 2016. He is the President-Elect of the World Confederation of Cognitive and Behavioural Therapies (WCCBT). Ross runs a large private practice in Glebe, where he has been based for 25 years. He lives in the inner-west of Sydney with his wife, youngest children, and two labradoodles.
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