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Book details
  • Genre:PSYCHOLOGY
  • SubGenre:Clinical Psychology
  • Language:English
  • Series title:Cinematherapy
  • Series Number:1
  • Pages:211
  • eBook ISBN:9781483551647

The Motion Picture Prescription

Watch This Movie and Call Me in the Morning

by Dr. Gary Solomon

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview
The Motion Picture Prescription: watch this movie and call me in the morning® THE FIRST BOOK WRITTEN ON THE SUBJECT OF ‘CINEMATHERAPY’®, USING MOVIES AS THERAPY. From time to time we are left dazed and confused, clueless about how to be triumphant when confronted with the challenging moments of our lives. Enter Dr. Gary Solomon, aka The Movie Doctor®. His book is the first of its kind with a listing of healing stories from the movies. We can see how the right story can show us how others coped, and help us heal. Here is an easy-to-use, comprehensive healing guide to help you, your family, and your friends, resolve problems-everything from addictions, abuse, stalking, money, abandonment, alienation, bigotry, marital conflict, adoption, sex, physical illness, and much, much more. Open the pages and get a glimpse of the healing magic that movies can bring.
Description
The Motion Picture Prescription: watch this movie and call me in the morning® THE FIRST BOOK WRITTEN ON THE SUBJECT OF ‘CINEMATHERAPY’®, USING MOVIES AS THERAPY. From time to time we are left dazed and confused, clueless about how to be triumphant when confronted with the challenging moments of our lives. Enter Dr. Gary Solomon, aka The Movie Doctor®. His book is the first of its kind with a listing of healing stories from the movies. We can see how the right story can show us how others coped, and help us heal. Here is an easy-to-use, comprehensive healing guide to help you, your family, and your friends, resolve problems-everything from addictions, abuse, stalking, money, abandonment, alienation, bigotry, marital conflict, adoption, sex, physical illness, and much, much more. Open the pages and get a glimpse of the healing magic that movies can bring. When I was a child there were some movies that touched me in a way that was different than all the westerns and war movies that were the popular cinematic features of the day. I liked movies that could make me feel things. Now, I didn't exactly know what my feelings were back then, but whatever was happening when I watched movies, I liked it. I found I was interested in biographies or real-life stories, which seemed more real to me. I liked hearing about people's lives, learning about their personal experiences, and sharing their emotions. The Great Houdini, The Thomas Edison Story, and The Benny Goodman Story all meant more to me than any action movie that everyone else was watching. I preferred movies that had a message, and when one of those movies came on the television, I got lost-lost in a world that protected me from the fear, pain, and abuse that were my constant reminders that life was not a happy place to be. At school I struggled my way through, hated my way through. I didn't learn to read or write until I was twelve. In those days schools just passed kids like me along to the next grade; I simply became the next teacher's problem. It wasn't a very happy time, but I had my movies and eventually my music, so nothing else mattered. Even though I quit high school to go on the road with a rock band, by some miracle I learned to read and write, and eventually I graduated high school with my class. And somehow, some way, after two junior colleges and a state college, I made my way to the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) where I entered into the Department of Psychol­ogy. I wrote my papers, took my tests (went to the ever-popular war protests to meet girls), and struggled to pass my classes. Come hell or high water, I was going to get that piece of paper that everyone said would never be mine. No matter what was going on in my life, my interest in movies was never far behind. It was the late sixties, times were changing, and so were the movies. I got entrenched in Easy Rider, especially the message it sent about drugs and the evil that drugs bring to anyone who sells or uses them. I got buried in Clockwork Orange, particularly the society in chaos portrayed in that movie. How could we evolve into such a negative, violent world? Surely Vietnam and the Beatles hadn't brought us to that point. My experience with movies kept calling me to watch more and more stories with special messages. I would go out on a date and take whomever I was seeing at the time to a movie. Afterwards we would sit and talk for hours about the movie's message. I learned that movies broke the ice on a date and also released the real me that was hiding inside. What was even better was that my dates and my new friends felt the same way.
About the author
Dr. Gary Solomon is a retired tenured professor of psychology. Dr. Solomon fathered, defined and popularized Cinematherapy®, a form of therapy using movies for their therapeutic messages. The Motion Picture Prescription® is Dr. Solomon's first book on the subject of Cinematherapy®. His other two books on the subject of Cinemaparenting® are Reel Therapy and Cinematherapy. As a psychologist and an expert on the subject of psychiatric diagnosis and has written two books on psychiatric disorders, A Psychiatric Diagnosis Primer and Psych 101. Using his understanding of psychiatric disorders, he wrote a novel, A Ballad for Allison Porter, a psychological thriller. Being the creative person he is, Dr. Solomon has written two plays. Boxcar, the story of Woody Guthrie and Cannibals and Headhunters, a psychologist decent into madness. Dr. Solomon likes to call himself a "wordsmith" and has written many books on word play, as well as a children's book, Why is Brian so Fat?. Dr. Solomon's most recent book is HOA: Crisis in America, a most unique FREE on-line book about the effects on homeowners who live in Homeowners Associations (HOAs). **** To learn more about Professor Solomon: hoaacademy.com, hoacrisisinamerica.com, hoasyndrome.com, pitythepoorfool.com, hoaboardmonitoringservices.com, or cinema-therapy.com. **** To contact Professor Solomon or to engage him as an expert witness: Dr. Robin Huhn, 702.812.4599 or robinhuhndc@gmail.com.