A Driver's Manual For Drunk Drivers

CAR: Cognitive Apprenticeship Recovery

by Maurice "Mo" Murray


Formats

E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$14.95
E-Book
$3.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 10/2/2013

Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 140
ISBN : 9781491808375
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 140
ISBN : 9781491808382

About the Book

CONCISE CAR® The rubrics of CAR® are similar to other Cognitive Apprenticeship Methodology’s: “Watch It Do It Know It.” CAR’s unique power to facilitate recovery is derived by adding the ingredients of “The Way of Analogy” and “The Concept of The Singular.” You might want to start by first reading Chapter 5 in “Bingo”: The chair’s fixed, relax and sit in it as a way to preempt any confusion about how “The Way of Analogy” is being used in “Relationship Associations.” Here is the traditional (Thomas Aquinas) “Way of Analogy”: Red is Red: and yet a horse is Red, with a “horsey” Redness. CAR® melds this with “The Concept of the Singular” [i.e. Remember Philosophy 101. The Universal Chair of the Greeks was the perfect chair; then came “the Particular” chair (Lounge Chairs); then came “the Singular” chair (your Dad’s old Morris chair with the cigar burns on the right arm)] to get its synergism. CAR® is a “Singular Analogous Relationship Driven” Recovery modality and as such, less easily defined than experienced. CAR® methodology is already at work “within” you even before you start to read these books. You already know (you are ultimately aware) that you are “within the answer.” “The ‘Good News’ is… you are in Recovery now!” This is proclaimed at the beginning of all three books. “The first step in the acquisition of wisdom is silence, the second listening, the third memory, the fourth practice, the fifth teaching others.” Solomon Ibn Gabriol Respectfully submitted… Maurice “Mo” Murray [Reference: The Practice of Cognitive Apprenticeship Recovery. Maurice J Murray, Bowers-Stokesbury Press. Wilmington, DE 1993]


About the Author

Maurice “Mo” Murray proudly labels himself as “a grateful recovering alcoholic.” He is a retired substance abuse counselor and former clinic director of a large intensive outpatient treatment center in the North East. He now lives, high up, in a high rise apartment building in the historic district of Charleston South Carolina with his long hair black domestic blind special needs rescue cat, Jackson (as in Stonewall). Jackson has white paw mittens and a white bib [you can see pictures of Jackson on Mo’s Amazon Author’s Page.] Mo’s apartment overlooks Charleston Harbor and, in the distance, Fort Sumter. Mo, never missing the chance to tell a weak obvious joke, notes that neither have fired any shots lately. The book “CAR®” is the third of his “How To” Recovery Books.