- Genre:biography & autobiography
- Sub-genre:Personal Memoirs
- Language:English
- Pages:100
- Paperback ISBN:9798350999570
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Book details
Overview
A retired clinical psychologist with 28 years of experience treating depression, anxiety, and PTSD at Veterans Affairs Medical Centers now turns that same unflinching scrutiny on his own life.
Scenes Through the Narrow Window is a personal essay collection exploring the themes that define the human experience -- forgiveness, grief, loss, gratitude, fear, faith, and the hard-won wisdom that only comes from a life fully examined. Written by a therapist memoir author who has lived both sides of the clinical relationship, these twenty reflective essays offer psychological depth without academic detachment.
For anyone navigating life transitions, retirement, loss, aging, or the search for meaning. and for readers who want reflective nonfiction that honours complexity without demanding certainty. this is the book that meets you where you are.
"Insightful and relatable. Gets deep without being overbearing. True wisdom from a master at self-reflection.
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A therapist memoir written from both sides of the clinical relationship, by a clinical psychologist who spent 28 years serving veterans with depression, anxiety, and PTSD, and who has personally navigated the same struggles he spent his career treating.
Scenes Through the Narrow Window is a collection of twenty personal essays, called Scenes, that explore the moments when clarity arrives uninvited. Dr. Samuel J. Popkin, Ph.D., calls these narrow windows of opportunity: brief, unguarded moments when honest reflection becomes possible before the mind talks itself out of it.
Themes explored across these twenty scenes include:
Forgiveness -- not as a single decision but as a daily practice that demands more than most people expect.
Grief and loss -- and what they teach us that comfort and reassurance never could.
Gratitude -- examined honestly, without the performative optimism that makes most self-help books feel hollow.
Fear -- the kind that outlasts the event that caused it, and how a psychologist learns to sit with it rather than treat it away.
Faith and maturity -- the slow, unglamorous work of becoming someone you can actually live with.
Mental health and personal growth -- explored from the dual perspective of a clinician and a patient, which is what separates this collection from most psychology memoirs on the market.
This is not a self-help book that delivers life lessons from a position of authority. It is a personal growth essay collection written by a retired psychologist who earned every observation the hard way, through decades of sitting with people at their most broken, and through his own reckoning with the same darkness.
Who reads this book:
Readers in retirement or life transition who are looking for wisdom that feels earned rather than packaged. Adults navigating grief, loss, or the particular disorientation of getting older in a culture that has no patience for it. Readers of reflective nonfiction and psychology memoir who are looking for something with real clinical authority behind it. Mental health professionals and veterans seeking perspective on resilience, fear, and the meaning that can be found on the other side of suffering. Anyone who has had enough of performative self-help and is looking for personal essays that honour complexity without demanding certainty.
What readers are saying:
"A must-read for those who seek answers, easily relatable and eye-opening."
"Insightful and relatable, gets deep without being overbearing."
"True wisdom from a master at self-reflection, a keeper."
"A modest, thoughtful life review that values clarity over grandiosity."
Twenty scenes. Twenty narrow windows. The kind of book you read slowly, mark up, set down, and return to when the next narrow window opens.
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