Ashley Posted April 29, 2018 Share Posted April 29, 2018 Book Club – Month: May Chosen by the Derby OCD Support Group About Book Club The purpose of the book club is not to review the book, but to encourage those affected by OCD to engage in the self-help resources available to them; and to promote discussion to allow the community, and possibly even some of the authors, to help readers understand aspects of the book they struggle to work through. Helping to create and maintain a recovery focussed mindset. If you’ve already read a book, no harm and many advantages of re-reading! Sometimes it’s just fun to read and help others understand a book. Break free from OCD Book Discussion To be discussed at the monthly OCD Support Groups (end of May / start of June) by participating groups. To be discussed on the OCD-UK forum at: www.ocdforums.org/index.php?/topic/81872-new-ocd-book-club-may-break-free-from-ocd/ Via the OCD-UK Twitter feed at the end of May, and with the hashtag #OCDBookClub Summary from all of the above will be placed on the main OCD-UK website during June. We politely request the following guidelines when discussing…. Give others time to read the book, so no spoilers until towards the end of the reading period. The OCD-UK forums do have a spoiler code should you wish to discuss in advance. If you disagree with something that another member of the book club or author has said. It is okay to disagree as long as it's done respectfully. Keep on topic, but feel free to introduce information that is relevant to the discussion (historical facts, bio details, book background, related authors or topics). Book Discussion Topic Suggestions What helped you. What you didn’t realise previously. What you don’t understand. How can you apply a book suggestion to your own OCD scenario? Etc.. Accessing the Book Buy/order from any bookshop (quote the following ISDN code: 0091939690) Buy from OCD-UK at: www.ocdshop.com/product_info.php?products_id=163 Buy from Amazon at: www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0091939690/ocduk02-21 Available freely through the Reading Well Books on Prescription scheme with more details at: www.reading-well.org.uk/books/books-on-prescription/common-mental-health-conditions/obsessions-and-compulsions The book for the June OCD Book Club will be chosen by members of the OCD-UK discussion forums and announced by the last week in May. Link to comment
Ashley Posted May 1, 2018 Author Share Posted May 1, 2018 We have quite a few getting involved in this away from the forum, be great to get a few of the forum regulars reading/rereading this book during May? Link to comment
Running Lover Posted May 1, 2018 Share Posted May 1, 2018 5 minutes ago, Ashley said: We have quite a few getting involved in this away from the forum, be great to get a few of the forum regulars reading/rereading this book during May? Hi. Do you have to actively attend a meeting though? Sorry I’m confused but interested. Thanks Link to comment
lostinme Posted May 1, 2018 Share Posted May 1, 2018 26 minutes ago, Running Lover said: Hi. Do you have to actively attend a meeting though? Sorry I’m confused but interested. Thanks Hi Running Lover, no it’s going to be discussed via the support group, the forum and twitter Link to comment
Running Lover Posted May 1, 2018 Share Posted May 1, 2018 Just now, lostinme said: Hi Running Lover, no it’s going to be discussed via the support group, the forum and twitter Oh that’s good then I would definitely be up for this. I live in the sticks and my nearest support group is hours away! Link to comment
lostinme Posted May 1, 2018 Share Posted May 1, 2018 No probs, you can still join in via the forum Link to comment
gingerbreadgirl Posted May 1, 2018 Share Posted May 1, 2018 I'm up for this. It's a great book. Link to comment
snowbear Posted May 1, 2018 Share Posted May 1, 2018 I'm in. I have a largish collection of OCD related books on my kindle, but embarrassingly I don't think there's a single one of them I've read cover to cover. Book club will be the push I need to re-read and this time finish them! Link to comment
Angst Posted May 2, 2018 Share Posted May 2, 2018 It’s a great choice for a book for the reading club. I had therapy with one of the authors and she said the writing team deliberately tried to make the book accessible to as many readers as possible. If you compare it with another good book, Overcoming OCD, which broadly covers the same ground, there are far fewer technical terms from psychological science. Do you intend to go chapter by chapter? Link to comment
taurean Posted May 2, 2018 Share Posted May 2, 2018 On 1/5/2018 at 23:11, snowbear said: I'm in. I have a largish collection of OCD related books on my kindle, but embarrassingly I don't think there's a single one of them I've read cover to cover. Book club will be the push I need to re-read and this time finish them! Perhaps book club will be the compulsive urge to finish a book that you need, snowbear Link to comment
Ryukil Posted May 3, 2018 Share Posted May 3, 2018 Well, I ordered a physical copy of this book off of Amazon. I have had it on Kindle for a while (have not read the entire thing) but somehow I feel having it in my hands and being able to underline and mark things will work better for me. I really hope this book will help me! Of course, since I'm not in the UK, I won't be able to make it to any discussions, haha. Link to comment
taurean Posted May 16, 2018 Share Posted May 16, 2018 Sure you won't. But the face-to-face discussions will be in local support groups; the forum discussion will no doubt be online I have the paperback book and have read it and it is factual educational and helpful with lots of guidance on a CBT basis. But I am not in a position to re-read it at the moment - will leave that honour to all you others. Link to comment
Chirpy Posted May 20, 2018 Share Posted May 20, 2018 I am up for this as well. Just brought the book from ocd UK. Reading it now Link to comment
Ashley Posted May 22, 2018 Author Share Posted May 22, 2018 Glad you are all liking the project idea. Anybody fully read the book yet? I haven't re-read it, but will do over the next week. Link to comment
taurean Posted May 22, 2018 Share Posted May 22, 2018 Like you Ashley I haven't re-read it yet - but yesterday it emerged from a remover's box, so it is now available and I too will re-read it and look forward to the discussion Ps love the extra emojis Link to comment
lostinme Posted May 22, 2018 Share Posted May 22, 2018 I’m half way through the book and what an amazing difference two years make Link to comment
taurean Posted May 22, 2018 Share Posted May 22, 2018 I think I will be looking for the gamechanger factors in the book - the things that, from my experience, I know will really make a difference for sufferers. Even now, just from memory and without having re-read the book yet, I can think of some; so should be an interesting discussion. Link to comment
Ashley Posted May 23, 2018 Author Share Posted May 23, 2018 GBG, I am so sorry, because of my error I realise your helpful post about the book was removed, I am so sorry. Link to comment
gingerbreadgirl Posted May 24, 2018 Share Posted May 24, 2018 don't worry at all Ashley!! I'll try and recreate it later, perhaps some other things will come back to me Link to comment
taurean Posted May 24, 2018 Share Posted May 24, 2018 I think you suggested Brainlock or Pulling The Trigger as the next book. Link to comment
Ashley Posted May 28, 2018 Author Share Posted May 28, 2018 So what's the book for next month? (we can still discuss this one) Pulling the Trigger is easy to read and a mix of self-help with first-hand, so a bit different. Shall we go for that? Link to comment
gingerbreadgirl Posted May 28, 2018 Share Posted May 28, 2018 My thoughts on "Break Free" are that it delves much deeper and more clearly into the cognitive stuff than other books around on OCD. It explains the rationale behind Theory A/Theory B and other cognitive techniques, explaining that the purpose is not to build evidence for theory B being certain, but to build evidence for the likelihood of theory B being true. Theory A/theory B also builds evidence for how compulsions keep the fear alive. The book also looks at the purpose behind exposure. I'd always been under the impression that exposure is about desensitisation/habituation (which it is I think), but it's also about building behavioural evidence. Exposure should be experiments testing a particular theory (e.g. "is theory B more likely to be true? Or is theory A more likely to be true?") and then carrying out an experiment to test this, learning lessons and building evidence along the way. My one criticism isn't really a criticism per se, but something I think should be made clearer. I think that cogntiive techniques are extremely important but shouldn't be used as a compulsive search for certainty. In the past I have totally deluded myself into thinking that "just one more vicious flower diagram and everything will slot into place" or "I'll do exposure once I've got all my evidence for theory B" etc. It can become compulsive and /or a tool for procrastination if done incorrectly, all the while kidding yourself you're making progress. I think this should be emphasised more in the book. Link to comment
taurean Posted May 28, 2018 Share Posted May 28, 2018 Nicely summarised GBG. I am still reading parts of the book so my own take will follow. Link to comment
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