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School for Anxious Parents: Childhood Fears

In the second book of the ‘School for Anxious Parents’ series, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Athanasios Alexandridis returns with yet another important issue that concerns the majority of parents: children’s fears.
Children’s Fears, the second book in the ‘School for Anxious Parents’ series, emerged, like the first, Children’s Loves, from recorded evening discussions between the author and a group of parents. Parents who are concerned about what is happening to their children, at home, at school, in society. Concerned because they do not rest on their laurels but seek to learn. Starting each time with a specific question from a parent, placing it within its broader context and offering theoretical and scientific insights, the dialogue then, the book now, seeks to provide answers and raise new questions. All this seems, and is, very serious, but, as the reader who allows themselves to be drawn into the atmosphere of each ‘evening’ will discover, the narratives, at times moving, at times tragicomic, ultimately find relief thanks to Socratic maieutic irony—towards oneself and others—and resolution thanks to their organisation through psychoanalytic discourse. For how else can one cope with the anxieties of death, the loss of loved ones and places, illness, and disability, which arrive very early on and torment the child’s soul? How can one respond to all this, especially when it concerns not imaginary situations but real ones, involving loved ones or even the child themselves? And how can one talk to children about the ever-present violence, crisis and terrorism? ​
  • Author Athanasios Alexandridis
  • Text editing Maria Simeonidou
  • Cover design Eftychia Liapis
  • Pages: 288
  • ISBN: 978-960-572-234-0
  • Publication: 2018
  • Date of publication: 29/05/2018
  • Dimensions: 17 x 24 εκ.
  • Categories: Books, Humanities & Social Sciences, Ψυχολογία, Parents & Children

_Your children don’t want to go to summer camp: how do you deal with this?_ _Do you believe this experience will benefit them – whilst also offering you a childcare solution for the period when schools are closed?_ Psychiatrist, child psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Athanasios Alexandridis offers advice on the occasion of his new book ‘Children’s Fears’.

– Child it

_Is fear disruptive or constructive? How can it have positive effects?_ Athanasios Alexandridis, on the occasion of his new book _Children’s Fears_ from the series “School for Anxious Parents”, talks to Giorgos Kiouzis on Press Publica.

– Press Publica

"...As you read it, you’re sure to find dozens of things you’ll relate to; you’ll cry, you’ll laugh, you’ll be moved to thought. By studying it, you’ll view your children, your partner and, of course, yourself differently. With more love, with more care. After all, as Alexandridis points out, to face our fears, a sense of adequacy in our relationships is very important. Let us therefore strive to have fulfilling, good relationships, built on love, and in this way we will stand not as equals, but at least with dignity, in the face of that which breeds the greatest fear: the radically incomprehensible."

– Peliou Papadia, Talk

"...The unknown breeds and provokes fear. It is what frightens – simply startles or panics – and parents, who experience their own daily losses, must manage their own fears whilst also supporting their children. So, to the question of who a child’s fear concerns – the child or the adult who was once a child – the answer can only be ‘Everyone’. A book about childhood fears concerns everyone, because apart from the fact that we all feel fear, we have all been children."

– Maria Soubert, Theathinai.com

"...Through these two books, parents and teachers alike can read the concerns of other parents and perhaps find, within these texts, answers to issues that may be troubling them as well. Without being a manual of instructions, these two books bring to the table issues that have concerned us all or will concern us, and which we may not have had the courage to raise for discussion until now."

– Zoe Koskinidou, Red Fox

"...All this and much more is explored in great depth in this book, which every parent—and indeed anyone who loves and spends time with children—needs to read. Because, as we adults read this book, we ultimately come face to face with our own fears – fears that have been forgotten or ‘put to one side’ – which we encounter in the children we love. And ultimately, through this dialogue that unfolds before us, we realise our own active role in ‘children’s fears’, and this is the starting point for things to change! So let us lose ourselves in reading without fear..."

– Magdalini Georgiakou, Psychologynow.gr

"...I think that by reading A. Alexandridis’s books, you build a strong framework for understanding and assessing yourself and your fundamental structures. Because we are all afraid. And as we grow up, we tend to fear more and more irrational things. I know more adults than children who are afraid of planes crashing, more adults who are afraid of death. What are children afraid of?"

– Apostolos Pappos, Elniplex.com

Athanasios Alexandridis

Athanasios Alexandridis is a psychiatrist, child psychiatrist and training analyst of the French Psychoanalytical Association (APF), the Hellenic Psychoanalytic Society (EPSE) and the International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA), and holds a PhD in Medicine and Philosophy (Psychology). From ‘The Body Image of Schizophrenics’ (1982) to the present day, he has published a large number of papers at Greek and international conferences, in journals, and in collective and individual books. His main areas of interest are psychoanalytic theory, psychoses, archaic and collective traumas, psychosomatics, psycholinguistics and aesthetics. Since 1992, he has been systematically publishing his poetic work alongside his psychoanalytical writings, exposing himself and the reader to the dissonance and discord between the two discourses.

Visit the author’s personal page here

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School for Anxious Parents: Childhood Fears

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