9,49 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

This brief text is a bold, indeed audacious, attempt to do exactly the opposite of the training goals for mental health and legal professionals. Dr. Beaber directly instructs his readers on how to live their lives, unadulterated by any coherent philosophy. Instead, Dr. Beaber tracks the premise that happy and successful people make a small number of right decisions in a few critical areas. He directs the reader to these critical life areas and cogently gives life instruction. Furthermore, he teaches the methodology of constructing life rules that lead to personal enlightenment.

Produktbeschreibung
This brief text is a bold, indeed audacious, attempt to do exactly the opposite of the training goals for mental health and legal professionals. Dr. Beaber directly instructs his readers on how to live their lives, unadulterated by any coherent philosophy. Instead, Dr. Beaber tracks the premise that happy and successful people make a small number of right decisions in a few critical areas. He directs the reader to these critical life areas and cogently gives life instruction. Furthermore, he teaches the methodology of constructing life rules that lead to personal enlightenment.
Autorenporträt
Dr. Beaber's background and training reflect a peripatetic journey through intellectual diversity. He was originally trained as a clinical and forensic psychologist, and then later he trained as a lawyer specializing in criminal and civil trials. His social commentary has appeared in major and minor news publications, and he has often served as an analyst for various TV docudramas. More specifically, Dr. Beaber did his undergraduate work at UCLA and then received this masters and doctoral degrees in Clinical Psychology at USC. He spent one year as a psychology intern at the Long Beach Veterans Hospital, followed by a one-year fellowship in clinical psychology at Cedars Sinai Medical Center. After this, he undertook a second fellowship in the Department of Psychiatry at the USC Medical School. After his formal training, Dr. Beaber spent a short time as the director of a county mental health program in Ventura Country, followed by his acceptance of a faculty position teaching in the General Medicine/ Family Medicine residency-training program and the UCLA Medical School. While teaching, seeing patients, and doing some limited research, Dr. Beaber consulted with prosecutors, courts, and defense counsel on the mental states of serial killers, sex offenders, and other sociopathic offenders. After developing a reputation as an accomplished expert witness, Beaber abruptly changed course and began studying law. He graduated Order of Coif and as an Editor of the UCLA Law Review from UCLA Law School. After, training under two federal judges, he went on to practice law in the areas of complex business civil litigation and criminal defense for many years, trying cases in both state and federal court. Additionally, he served as the outside general counsel to a publicly traded company. In the final analysis, however, Beaber believes his greatest accomplishment has been raising and nurturing his two children. His daughter is a delightful and wise psychologist in Northern California. His son is an intellectually diverse neurologist specializing in multiple sclerosis, who has created a nuclear family with two children that would be any father's delight.