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Have you ever had a good cry? Maybe it is rare for you, or maybe it happens at the drop of a hat. Have you ever wondered about the biology of tears? Have you ever noticed the physical aspects of your emotional tears? Quivering abs? The prick of tears in your eyes? Chest tightening? Throat hurting? Nostrils flaring? Mouth crumpling? Have you ever been scolded or criticized for crying? Would it intrigue you to know that there are significant similarities between emotional tears and orgasm? Join Jayne Wesler to delve into this most baffling of human behaviors: the shedding of emotional tears or,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Have you ever had a good cry? Maybe it is rare for you, or maybe it happens at the drop of a hat. Have you ever wondered about the biology of tears? Have you ever noticed the physical aspects of your emotional tears? Quivering abs? The prick of tears in your eyes? Chest tightening? Throat hurting? Nostrils flaring? Mouth crumpling? Have you ever been scolded or criticized for crying? Would it intrigue you to know that there are significant similarities between emotional tears and orgasm? Join Jayne Wesler to delve into this most baffling of human behaviors: the shedding of emotional tears or, as we know it in the vernacular, a 'good cry.' In this riveting expose, Ms. Wesler illuminates the parallels between orgasm and emotional tears, thereby demonstrating a biological legitimacy to the need for a good cry. Just as sex is the all-time, one-and-only treatment for epididymal hypertension, commonly known as "Blue Balls," a good cry is the only remedy for a frustrated and achy soul-a Blue Heart.
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Autorenporträt
Jayne M. Wesler has played many roles in her life. She is an author, coach, speaker, licensed clinical social worker, and attorney. From the newsroom to the intense hush of psychotherapy sessions in various venues, including a locked psychiatric unit in a large urban hospital, to trying cases in courtrooms in Newark, Trenton, and Atlantic City, New Jersey, Ms Wesler has been both witness to, and actor in, the most intense of human dramas. Trained by experts at GCU and NYU to use her emotions as a tool, Ms. Wesler is able to tap into human experience to help educate and heal others. Ms. Wesler is a partner in the law firm of Sussan Greenwald and Wesler, and for decades has helped students with disabilities obtain the kind of educational programming that helps them achieve success. As a university student, Ms. Wesler worked as a journalist and has always been a writer at heart.