Feeling Great
The Revolutionary New Treatment for Depression and Anxiety
by David D. Burns
Should I read this?
appears in Depression.
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Why recommended
appears in Depression.
Recommendation Signals
Recommendation proof is sourced from public posts, interviews, reading lists, and cited references.
No verified recommendation proof available yet.
Appears In

Not sure if this is the right fit?
Consider The Antidote by Oliver Burkeman. Recommended by 6 sources.
“Begins by upending upbeat self-help promises and proceeds through anecdote-rich thought experiments, philosophical references, and plainspoken reframes that encourage tolerating failure and uncertainty. The most useful part is its steady permission to stop optimizing every outcome and to treat worry as information rather than an enemy. Its main limitation is structural: the author returns to the same counterintuitive claims via multiple detours, so the book can feel repetitive and impressionistic rather than tightly procedural.”
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Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.
Feeling Great
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