Vinegar Into Honey: Seven Steps to Understanding and Transforming Anger, Agression, & Violence by Ron Leifer - ISBN: 9781559392938
Paperback
Our desires and our fears are woven into a tangled web of conflicts. We want both to eat dessert and to be thin. We want money but don‘t want to work. Anything that threatens our sense of self and its striving for happiness is perceived as a threat to our very lives—the response to which i…

Vinegar Into Honey: Seven Steps to Understanding and Transforming Anger, Agression, & Violence

Seven Steps to Understanding and Transforming Anger, Agression, and Violence

$23.75

  • Paperback

    143 pages

  • Release Date

    15 February 2013

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Summary

Our desires and our fears are woven into a tangled web of conflicts. We want both to eat dessert and to be thin. We want money but don’t want to work. Anything that threatens our sense of self and its striving for happiness is perceived as a threat to our very lives - the response to which is defensiveness, anger, aggression, and violence. “Vinegar into Honey” proposes a new paradigm for understanding the relationship between stress, anxiety, anger, and depression. Leifer provides detailed in…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781559392938
ISBN-10:1559392932
Author:Ron Leifer
Publisher:Snow Lion Publications
Imprint:Snow Lion Publications
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:143
Release Date:15 February 2013
Weight:191g
Dimensions:11mm x 142mm x 215mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“Easily one of the best books on understanding and transforming anger, aggression, and violence that I have ever read.”–Albert Ellis, founder of Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy and author of A Guide to Rational Living “Vinegar into Honey is well grounded in wisdom Dharma and fertilized by western psychology, clearly showing in seven steps how to understand and work with our feelings of anger.”–Lama Surya Das, author of Awakening the Buddha Within

“Dr. Leifer’s thoughtful fusion of Western and Buddhist insights provides us with a lucid analysis of the psychodynamics of anger and a practical workbook for dealing with aggression in our daily lives.”–Stephen Batchelor, author of Buddhism Without Beliefs

”[Leifer] describes the process of transforming suffering into equanimity and compassion–central in Buddhist psychology and practice–in a lucid style using case studies of people just like us…a very practical manual.“–Mandala

“Violence has been with us throughout human history but it reached new heights in the twentieth century with wars, ethnic and religious brutality, and the use of weapons of mass destruction. It is lamentable that more has not been done to stem the tide of aggression. [In Ron Leifer’s] seven-step guide to understanding and transforming anger…. He has some cogent things to say about…the ways in which our desires our aversion and our self-interest fuel violence; the important role of patience in coping with suffering; and the challenge of relaxing and remaining serene when things are going badly for us and we are stressed out.”–Spirituality and Practice

“This is a very practical book on how to transform our anger and negative emotions … . Leifer provides detailed instructions for working with our negative mental states and each of the steps he proposed reflects views and methods drawn from Buddhist tradition.”–Eastern Horizon

“Leifer’s seven-step process is a practical one from developing awareness of the many faces of anger to opening one’s heart to both the goodness and pain in life…. I was struck by his reflections … particularly helpful.”–Tricycle

About The Author

Ron Leifer

Ron Leifer, MD, is a psychiatrist with more than forty-five years’ experience in the practice of private psychotherapy. He trained in psychiatry under Thomas Szasz and became a Buddhist practitioner in 1980 when he became a student of Khenpo Karthar Rinpoche. He founded the Ithaca Dharma Society and teaches meditation. He is the author of In the Name of Mental Health and The Happiness Project and more than fifty articles in professional journals on psychiatry and the interface of Buddhism and psychotherapy. He lives in Ithaca, New York.

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