Available Formats
Hardback
Published: 1st March 2025
Paperback, Large Print Edition
Published: 4th February 2025
Paperback
Published: 28th January 2025
Shift: How to Manage Your Emotions so They Dont Manage You
By (Author) Ethan Kross
Ebury Publishing
Vermilion
1st March 2025
4th February 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Mind, body, spirit: thought and practice
152.4
Hardback
288
Width 161mm, Height 244mm, Spine 27mm
482g
A myth-busting, science-based guide that addresses the timeless question of how to manage your emotional life using tools you already possess - from the bestselling author of Chatter. 'I cannot think of a better time for a book like Shift or a better author to write it' - Angela Duckworth Whether it's anxiety about going to the doctor or boiling rage when we're stuck in traffic, our lives are filled with situations that send us spiralling. But as difficult as our emotions can be, they are also a superpower. Far from being 'good' or 'bad', emotions are information. When they're activated in the right way and at the right time, they function like an immune system, alerting us to our surroundings, telling us how to react to a situation, and helping us make the right choices. But how do we make our emotions work for us rather than against us Acclaimed psychologist Dr Ethan Kross has devoted his career to answering this. In Shift, he offers up groundbreaking research and dispels common myths - for instance, that avoidance is always toxic or that we should always strive to live in the moment - and provides a new framework for shifting our emotions so they don't take over our lives. Filled with actionable advice, cutting-edge research, and riveting stories, Shift puts the power back into our hands, so we can control our emotions without them controlling us - and help others do the same.
Ethan Kross is one of the world's leading experts on controlling the conscious mind. An award-winning professor at the University of Michigan and Ross School of Business, he is the director of the Emotion & Self Control Laboratory. He has participated in policy discussion at the White House, and has been interviewed about his work on Good Morning America. His pioneering research has been featured in the New York Times, New Yorker and the New England Journal of Medicine and Science.