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Can't just stop : an investigation of compulsions  Cover Image Book Book

Can't just stop : an investigation of compulsions

Summary: "Mild compulsions, such as shopping with military precision or hanging the tea towels just so, are something most of us have witnessed, or even engaged in. But compulsions exist along a broad continuum, and at the extremes there exist life-altering disorders. Sharon Begley's meticulously researched book is the first to examine all of these behaviors together--from obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) to hoarding, to compulsive exercise, even compulsions to do good. They may look profoundly different, but these behaviors are all ways of coping with varying degrees of anxiety. With a focus on the personal stories of dozens of interviewees, Begley compassionately explores the role of compulsion in our fast-paced culture and the strange manifestations of this very human behavior throughout history. Can't Just Stop makes compulsion comprehensible and accessible, exploring how we can realistically grapple with it in ourselves and in those we love."--Jacket.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781476725826 (hardback)
  • ISBN: 1476725829 (hardback)
  • ISBN: 9781476725840 (ebook)
  • Physical Description: print
    vi, 296 pages ; 24 cm
  • Edition: First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Simon & Schuster, 2017.

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note: What is a compulsion? -- Obsessive-compulsive disorder, or, Is Fred in the refrigerator? -- With treatment, from blood in a snowbank to a career in Hollywood -- In the shadow of OCD: carrying conscientiousness too far -- Video games -- Smartphones and the Web -- Compulsions past -- Compulsive hoarding -- Compulsive acquiring, or I'll take two -- Compelled to do good -- The compulsive brain.
Subject: Obsessive-compulsive disorder Popular works

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Kirtland Community College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Kirtland Community College Library RC 533 .B44 2017 30775305521065 General Collection Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9781476725826
Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions
Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions
by Begley, Sharon
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Publishers Weekly Review

Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Science journalist Begley (Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain) demystifies compulsive behavior, exploring its history and manifestations and the many difficulties its sufferers face in finding appropriate diagnoses and treatment. Establishing compulsive behavior as the brain's attempt to assuage anxiety, Begley argues that it can serve a useful purpose. She notes that there are socially acceptable compulsive "quirks," such as a baseball player who won't change his "lucky" shorts, and that people turn to compulsive habits to feel more in control, a response that is "hardly pathological." Begley also provides riveting case studies, including a woman who must check her refrigerator repeatedly to ensure that her cat is not inside and a man whose germophobia compelled him to throw out his clothes, shave his head, and abandon his apartment for a series of hotel rooms. A fascinating historical analysis notes references to hoarding in Dante's Inferno and describes an obsessive Victorian-era book collector. Begley also chats with video game creators about their "addictive" products and expresses a healthy skepticism regarding concerns over widespread compulsive Internet usage. Much of the text summarizes well-known scholarship, but Begley's final chapter on brain function in the compulsive mind contains fresh insight that could fundamentally alter how we think of, and treat, mental illness going forward. Agent: Linda Loewenthal, David Black Agency. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9781476725826
Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions
Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions
by Begley, Sharon
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Kirkus Review

Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Science journalist Begley (Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain, 2007, etc.) delves into specific types of compulsive behaviors while also positing a grand theory of what links seemingly disparate obsessions.The main types of obsessive behaviors the author examines include shopping, hoarding of material possessions, constant checking of smartphones, playing video games nonstop, additional quirks that fall into the realm of obsessive-compulsive disorders, hyper-conscientiousness, and hyper do-gooding. What connects those behaviors, Begley suggests, is living with anxiety in contemporary times. Although clinical anxiety can be difficult to measure, the author cites research that it afflicts about one of every five U.S. adults in any given year, about three times the rate of clinically diagnosed depression. Because Begley frames many compulsive behaviors as somewhat logical responses to severe individual anxieties, she does not find the behaviors as worrisome as loved ones of the anxiety-ridden might find them. After all, writes the author, a compulsive response to anxiety can be viewed as a sensible, if exaggerated, coping mechanism. The case studies she provides, sometimes to the point of overkill, can seem alarming. Yet often those compulsions do not directly harm others and partially cure the anxious individuals. Part of the book's fascination can be found in Begley's personal case study, as she gradually shifts her view about compulsive behaviors from frightening to logical. She came to believe that hoarders, video game obsessives, and the like should be considered outliers in American society only to the degree of their behaviors, not the behaviors themselves. Their brains are not broken, she writes. As a result, the extreme behaviors often do not require institutionalization or other such drastic responses. Due to Begley's dense explanations of brain science, the book requires close attention at times, but her captivating, accessible anecdotes of individual cases lead to unforgettable scenarios. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - New York Times Review for ISBN Number 9781476725826
Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions
Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions
by Begley, Sharon
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New York Times Review

Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions

New York Times


January 1, 2017

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company

A FEW WEEKS AGO, I was trying to complete a crucial report. The day before it was due, I spent the afternoon relabeling hundreds of tracks in my 68,000-song iTunes library. The next morning, I put together a spreadsheet of two dozen USB hubs that included links to each product's best and worst online reviews. That night, after I'd missed my deadline, I stayed up until 1:30 a.m. creating a chart of all of the pens I currently own. I've always had a penchant for this type of behavior, but it didn't begin to interfere with my life until I got sober two decades ago. Over the years, I've been given a diagnosis of everything from depression to attention deficit disorder. But what if all of my self-sabotaging and self-destructive behaviors, regardless of what form they took, had the same pathology? What if my compulsive drug use and compulsive organizing and, for that matter, anything that I've felt compelled to do, were all attempts to quiet the unceasing drumbeat of anxiety that is forever pounding out its rhythm in my brain? That, in essence is the hypothesis behind "Can't Just Stop," Sharon Begley's new book. "We cling to compulsions as if to a lifeline," she writes in the introduction, "for it is only by engaging in compulsions that we can drain enough of our anxiety to function." Begley's use of the first-person plural is not just a rhetorical device - according to her, while the type of behavior I exhibit might be on the extreme end of the spectrum, the human condition is all but defined by a ubiquitous anxiety that would cripple us if our compulsions did not give us the illusion of control. Begley, a senior writer at The Boston Globe's life sciences publication Stat, is among the best there is at translating complex science for a general audience. On the whole, "Can't Just Stop" is fastpaced and engaging without being simplistic, and Begley shows admirable restraint in eschewing news-you-can-use prescriptions for how to improve your productivity or otherwise better your life. Begley is strongest in passages where she uses her reportorial eye for detail to unpack complicated ideas with a few choice examples. Take her description of the neurochemistry behind the seemingly irresistible draw to check our phones or try for one more level on Candy Crush Saga. Every now and then, doing so results in an unexpected reward (I once got a job offer via Twitter direct message), and when that happens, the dopamine system goes wild. Now, the next time our phones vibrate, we're primed for another bounty: "Once you get a taste of the pleasure that awaits you, your reward-expectation circuitry lights up like a winning slot machine." When there's no payoff, dopamine levels crash. Calling the dopamine system the reward center of the brain is, according to Begley, incorrect. "Activity in the dopamine circuit is not so much about pleasure as about expecting pleasure, and when we don't get it, we feel driven to seek it out, desperately and compulsively." There are many of these absorbing and satisfying vignettes sprinkled throughout the book. After illustrating how painful obsessive-compulsive disorder can be to those in its grip, Begley elegantly explains the difference between compulsive behavior and O.C.D. For someone with a compulsion, the behavior itself is a coping mechanism for anxiety; that's why so many hoarders find their conduct comforting while those around them view it with alarm. For those suffering from O.C.D., the anxiety is a bridge between the obsession and the compulsion; someone whose fear of germs causes him to wash his hands until they bleed knows his behavior is irrational but is powerless to stop himself. ULTIMATELY, HOWEVER, BEGLEY undercuts herself with the sort of sweeping, overgeneralized assertions that seem to be endemic among popular science books these days. Her facile tendency to view historical figures through the lens of her subject matter is, at times, almost farcical. Hemingway once said, "When I don't write, I feel like crap" (he actually used another word). From that sentence, Begley concludes that his work "sprang not, or not only, from a deep creative impulse and genius ... but from something deeper, darker, more tortured." The comedian Joan Rivers improbably leads off a chapter about compulsive do-gooders: Begley frames Rivers's continuing to work a full slate of gigs until she died in 2014 at age 81 as a need to bring joy and laughter to the masses (or at least "a few dozen well-lubricated customers in a dark Times Square club"). Even more confounding are those times when Begley fails to provide readers with enough evidence for her claims. In one section, she refers to "numerous studies" that support her main thesis: that "anxiety can compel people to create a minuscule piece of their world over which they have some control." The single study that she actually cites, however, has a pretty glaring design flaw. In it, test subjects were given a small objet d'art. Half of the subjects were then informed they'd need to give a talk on their object to an art expert; the other half were told only to look and think about their item. At the end of a set amount of time, all of the participants were told to clean the pieces they had been given. When the subjects who were told to prepare a presentation spent more time cleaning their artifacts, the study's authors interpreted it as an attempt to "regain a feeling of control." That conclusion would be more convincing if all of the test subjects thought they would need to present their object to an expert; since they did not, an equally plausible conclusion is that people are more conscientious about assigned tasks when they think an authority figure will see the result of their effort, regardless of whether they're also anxious about an upcoming speech. Unfortunately, there's no way to know if the other studies Begley alludes to are more persuasive: For some inexplicable reason, she neglected to include source notes, a bibliography or any supporting material whatsoever. I'm well aware that not everyone shares my compulsive need to know why writers are confident their conclusions are correct - but with readers of serious nonfiction becoming increasingly scarce and more and more people swayed by fantasy, it's crucial that those of us who still believe in facts show why it is that we're trustworthy. SETH MNOOKIN, the director of M.I.T.'s graduate program in science writing, is the author, most recently, of "The Panic Virus."

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9781476725826
Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions
Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions
by Begley, Sharon
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Library Journal Review

Can't Just Stop : An Investigation of Compulsions

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Science writer Begley (Train Your Mind, Change Your Brain) delves into the science behind compulsive behavior. While compulsions and addictions are commonly used interchangeably, she describes the differences between the two. She then traces the history of compulsive behavior while including examples. From mild to extreme situations, the case studies and interviews Begley conducted and cites here include compulsions with video games, the Internet, smartphones, exercising, and hoarding. The author also explains the neurology behind compulsions. In addition, she devotes a chapter to altruistic behavior, including acts of generosity and volunteering. An example of such altruistic behavior that she notes is people who donate a kidney to a stranger. Begley emphasizes the stories of the interviewees, while analyzing how compulsions affect society in a fast-paced world. She explains how people can deal with their compulsions and the compulsions of those they care about. Prior science knowledge is not necessary, as this book is written for the general public. -VERDICT In this fascinating read, Begley combines a personal topic with thoughtfulness and sensitivity. Recommended for anyone interested in learning more about compulsive behavior.-Tina Chan, MIT Libs., Cambridge © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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