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Past Event

Maybe You Should Talk to Someone: A Therapist, HER Therapist, and Our Lives Revealed

The New York Times bestseller Maybe You Should Talk to Someone takes readers into both Lori Gottlieb’s therapy office where she sees patients and her own therapist's office, where she lands after a crisis. But really the book is about the universal human condition.

Gottlieb writes about topics that make people think differently about themselves and the world around them: love and loss, meaning and mortality, gender and culture, parents and children, female appearance, regret and redemption, hope and change. In any given year, 30 million Americans sit on a therapist's couch, but there's still stigma around mental health struggles. Gottlieb will talk about this cultural moment in mental health, which factors are contributing to the anxiety/depression/loneliness, what really goes on in a modern-day therapy room (from both sides—as patient and therapist), and what we can do in our daily lives to take control and feel better.

MLF Organizer
Patty James
Notes

MLF: Health & Medicine

This is a free, online-only program; register to receive a link to the live-stream video

Donations to support our online programming are welcome and can be made during the registration process

August 6, 2020

United States

Speakers
Image - Lori Gottlieb

Lori Gottlieb

Psychotherapist; Author, Maybe You Should Talk to Someone; Advice Columnist, The Atlantic; Co-Host, "Dear Therapists" Podcast, iHeart; Twitter @LoriGottlieb1