Right Book Can Be A Healing Tool!
WellBeing
|Issue 181
A good book can be an absolute pleasure but research shows that the right book can also be a healing tool.
When Rese Rose suddenly became very ill, a friend gave her a gift voucher for an unusual treatment called bibliotherapy. Rose says she was “deeply intrigued at what it may offer, probably because my approach to health has never been completely conventional”.
Bibliotherapy involves using literature to aid mental and emotional healing. The term comes from two Greek words: biblion, meaning book, and therapeia or healing. The term was coined in 1914 by American minister and author Samuel Crothers who described bibliotherapy as a “process in which specific literature, both fiction and non-fiction, was prescribed as medicine for a variety of ailments.”
While the term is relatively new, the benefits of bibliotherapy have been recognised for millennia. The ancient Egyptians, for example, had an inscription above the portal of the library of Pharaoh Ramses II, describing it as “the house of healing for the soul”.
Bibliotherapy was used by medical professionals like Sigmund Freud in the early 20th century. During World War I, as doctors and nurses searched for ways to help soldiers with their mental health, the idea came into its own.
A pioneer of bibliotherapy, Helen Mary Gaskell, described the beginnings of her war library in 1918: “Surely many of us lay awake the night after the declaration of War, debating ... how best we could help in the coming struggle ... Into the mind of the writer came, like a flash, the necessity of providing literature for the sick and wounded.”
Recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in bibliotherapy as studies explore its benefits for common mental health conditions like depression, stress, anxiety, social phobia and addictions.
Bibliotherapy in practice
Dit verhaal komt uit de Issue 181-editie van WellBeing.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN WellBeing
WellBeing
In Season
These are the fruit and vegetables that are currently in season and so will be the freshest.
1 min
Issue 218
WellBeing
Navigating complementary medicines
For practitioners, quality and evidence matter more than ever. SFI Health is raising the bar with gold-standard formulations that don't compromise on clinical integrity.
5 mins
Issue 218
WellBeing
Too much of a good thing
Even well- intentioned health choices can sometimes contribute to unexpected problems.
3 mins
Issue 218
WellBeing
What we've been up to
WellBeing's editor Dana has been soaking up slow moments of warmth this winter.
1 min
Issue 218
WellBeing
Could creatine have a dark side?
Creatine is a multitalented wonder potion we all need to protect us against the ravages of ageing.
3 mins
Issue 218
WellBeing
ACS Distance Education
The secret to a successful career.
3 mins
Issue 218
WellBeing
Yoga for Energy Vampires
In yoga, prana is our life force and acts as a bridge between universal consciousness and matter.
8 mins
Issue 218
WellBeing
Chinese medicine dietary therapy
Food therapy may augment TCM herbal therapy or sustain improvements after herbal treatments have ceased. It may also be used in prevention, to nourish health and prolong life.
3 mins
Issue 218
WellBeing
AcuEnergetics®
AcuEnergetics received widespread attention in the media when founder Kevin Niv Farrow treated the captain of the NSW State of Origin team Boyd Cordner for a calf injury. Since then, the unique treatment modality has continued to capture the attention of other high-profile sports stars.
1 mins
Issue 218
WellBeing
Honouring a legacy in aromatherapy
Our oils are extracted with precision and care to ensure the active plant compounds remain intact, preserving the therapeutic benefits from field to bottle.
3 mins
Issue 218
Translate
Change font size

