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Regret
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Regret

Developmental, Cultural, and Clinical Realms

Regret

Developmental, Cultural, and Clinical Realms

BySalman Akhtar
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2017
eBook Published 8 May 2018
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780429479489
Pages 258 pages
eBook ISBN 9780429904257
SubjectsBehavioral Sciences
KeywordsDepressive Position, Experience Regret, Anticipatory Regret, Psychic Regret, Conscious Regret
Get Citation

Get Citation

Akhtar, S. (2017). Regret. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429479489
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Missed opportunities, unfulfilled dreams, and broken promises are the stuff of everyday life and so is regret, the emotion that accompanies them. Unlike remorse which is consequent upon the realization that one has hurt a loved one, regret revolves around a wistful sense of having let oneself down. Middle aged and elderly individuals are specially prone to regret ; the wish to reverse what one did wrong gets intensified as time left to live becomes shorter. Regret also carries with it the potential of masochistic self-flagellation which conceals the omnipotent belief that things could have been otherwise; the fact that life is what it is thus gets denied and eclipsed. The author's edited volume on regret addresses this inoptimally studied emotion from developmental, cultural, and clinical vantage points. It deepens our understanding of regret, enhances our empathy with 'spilled-milk' hand-wringing, and sharpens our technical skills to help persons burdened by chronic regret.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|66 pages
Developmental Realms
chapter One|22 pages
The capacity for regret in children and adolescents
BySusan L. Donner
View abstract
chapter Two|20 pages
Regret, resolution, and reparation in marital relationships
ByJoan Lachkar
View abstract
chapter Three|22 pages
The trajectory of remorse to regret in old age
ByShahrzad Siassi
View abstract
part II|67 pages
Cultural Realms
chapter Four|20 pages
The poetics of regret in repetition, mourning, and reparation
ByIngrid M. Geerken
View abstract
chapter Five|19 pages
Of regret and Plato's ghost
ByNilofer Kaul
View abstract
chapter Six|25 pages
Regret on the screen and regret as a screen
ByApurva Shah
View abstract
part III|82 pages
Clinical Realms
chapter Seven|16 pages
Regret, nostalgia, and masochism*
BySalman Akhtar
View abstract
chapter Eight|13 pages
Development perspectives in the treatment of regret
ByTheodore Fallon
View abstract
chapter Nine|25 pages
Clinical transformation of intolerable regret into tolerable regret*
BySusan Kavaler-Adler
View abstract
chapter Ten|24 pages
Longing for a second chance
ByRichard Tuch
View abstract

Missed opportunities, unfulfilled dreams, and broken promises are the stuff of everyday life and so is regret, the emotion that accompanies them. Unlike remorse which is consequent upon the realization that one has hurt a loved one, regret revolves around a wistful sense of having let oneself down. Middle aged and elderly individuals are specially prone to regret ; the wish to reverse what one did wrong gets intensified as time left to live becomes shorter. Regret also carries with it the potential of masochistic self-flagellation which conceals the omnipotent belief that things could have been otherwise; the fact that life is what it is thus gets denied and eclipsed. The author's edited volume on regret addresses this inoptimally studied emotion from developmental, cultural, and clinical vantage points. It deepens our understanding of regret, enhances our empathy with 'spilled-milk' hand-wringing, and sharpens our technical skills to help persons burdened by chronic regret.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|66 pages
Developmental Realms
chapter One|22 pages
The capacity for regret in children and adolescents
BySusan L. Donner
View abstract
chapter Two|20 pages
Regret, resolution, and reparation in marital relationships
ByJoan Lachkar
View abstract
chapter Three|22 pages
The trajectory of remorse to regret in old age
ByShahrzad Siassi
View abstract
part II|67 pages
Cultural Realms
chapter Four|20 pages
The poetics of regret in repetition, mourning, and reparation
ByIngrid M. Geerken
View abstract
chapter Five|19 pages
Of regret and Plato's ghost
ByNilofer Kaul
View abstract
chapter Six|25 pages
Regret on the screen and regret as a screen
ByApurva Shah
View abstract
part III|82 pages
Clinical Realms
chapter Seven|16 pages
Regret, nostalgia, and masochism*
BySalman Akhtar
View abstract
chapter Eight|13 pages
Development perspectives in the treatment of regret
ByTheodore Fallon
View abstract
chapter Nine|25 pages
Clinical transformation of intolerable regret into tolerable regret*
BySusan Kavaler-Adler
View abstract
chapter Ten|24 pages
Longing for a second chance
ByRichard Tuch
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Missed opportunities, unfulfilled dreams, and broken promises are the stuff of everyday life and so is regret, the emotion that accompanies them. Unlike remorse which is consequent upon the realization that one has hurt a loved one, regret revolves around a wistful sense of having let oneself down. Middle aged and elderly individuals are specially prone to regret ; the wish to reverse what one did wrong gets intensified as time left to live becomes shorter. Regret also carries with it the potential of masochistic self-flagellation which conceals the omnipotent belief that things could have been otherwise; the fact that life is what it is thus gets denied and eclipsed. The author's edited volume on regret addresses this inoptimally studied emotion from developmental, cultural, and clinical vantage points. It deepens our understanding of regret, enhances our empathy with 'spilled-milk' hand-wringing, and sharpens our technical skills to help persons burdened by chronic regret.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|66 pages
Developmental Realms
chapter One|22 pages
The capacity for regret in children and adolescents
BySusan L. Donner
View abstract
chapter Two|20 pages
Regret, resolution, and reparation in marital relationships
ByJoan Lachkar
View abstract
chapter Three|22 pages
The trajectory of remorse to regret in old age
ByShahrzad Siassi
View abstract
part II|67 pages
Cultural Realms
chapter Four|20 pages
The poetics of regret in repetition, mourning, and reparation
ByIngrid M. Geerken
View abstract
chapter Five|19 pages
Of regret and Plato's ghost
ByNilofer Kaul
View abstract
chapter Six|25 pages
Regret on the screen and regret as a screen
ByApurva Shah
View abstract
part III|82 pages
Clinical Realms
chapter Seven|16 pages
Regret, nostalgia, and masochism*
BySalman Akhtar
View abstract
chapter Eight|13 pages
Development perspectives in the treatment of regret
ByTheodore Fallon
View abstract
chapter Nine|25 pages
Clinical transformation of intolerable regret into tolerable regret*
BySusan Kavaler-Adler
View abstract
chapter Ten|24 pages
Longing for a second chance
ByRichard Tuch
View abstract

Missed opportunities, unfulfilled dreams, and broken promises are the stuff of everyday life and so is regret, the emotion that accompanies them. Unlike remorse which is consequent upon the realization that one has hurt a loved one, regret revolves around a wistful sense of having let oneself down. Middle aged and elderly individuals are specially prone to regret ; the wish to reverse what one did wrong gets intensified as time left to live becomes shorter. Regret also carries with it the potential of masochistic self-flagellation which conceals the omnipotent belief that things could have been otherwise; the fact that life is what it is thus gets denied and eclipsed. The author's edited volume on regret addresses this inoptimally studied emotion from developmental, cultural, and clinical vantage points. It deepens our understanding of regret, enhances our empathy with 'spilled-milk' hand-wringing, and sharpens our technical skills to help persons burdened by chronic regret.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|66 pages
Developmental Realms
chapter One|22 pages
The capacity for regret in children and adolescents
BySusan L. Donner
View abstract
chapter Two|20 pages
Regret, resolution, and reparation in marital relationships
ByJoan Lachkar
View abstract
chapter Three|22 pages
The trajectory of remorse to regret in old age
ByShahrzad Siassi
View abstract
part II|67 pages
Cultural Realms
chapter Four|20 pages
The poetics of regret in repetition, mourning, and reparation
ByIngrid M. Geerken
View abstract
chapter Five|19 pages
Of regret and Plato's ghost
ByNilofer Kaul
View abstract
chapter Six|25 pages
Regret on the screen and regret as a screen
ByApurva Shah
View abstract
part III|82 pages
Clinical Realms
chapter Seven|16 pages
Regret, nostalgia, and masochism*
BySalman Akhtar
View abstract
chapter Eight|13 pages
Development perspectives in the treatment of regret
ByTheodore Fallon
View abstract
chapter Nine|25 pages
Clinical transformation of intolerable regret into tolerable regret*
BySusan Kavaler-Adler
View abstract
chapter Ten|24 pages
Longing for a second chance
ByRichard Tuch
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Missed opportunities, unfulfilled dreams, and broken promises are the stuff of everyday life and so is regret, the emotion that accompanies them. Unlike remorse which is consequent upon the realization that one has hurt a loved one, regret revolves around a wistful sense of having let oneself down. Middle aged and elderly individuals are specially prone to regret ; the wish to reverse what one did wrong gets intensified as time left to live becomes shorter. Regret also carries with it the potential of masochistic self-flagellation which conceals the omnipotent belief that things could have been otherwise; the fact that life is what it is thus gets denied and eclipsed. The author's edited volume on regret addresses this inoptimally studied emotion from developmental, cultural, and clinical vantage points. It deepens our understanding of regret, enhances our empathy with 'spilled-milk' hand-wringing, and sharpens our technical skills to help persons burdened by chronic regret.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|66 pages
Developmental Realms
chapter One|22 pages
The capacity for regret in children and adolescents
BySusan L. Donner
View abstract
chapter Two|20 pages
Regret, resolution, and reparation in marital relationships
ByJoan Lachkar
View abstract
chapter Three|22 pages
The trajectory of remorse to regret in old age
ByShahrzad Siassi
View abstract
part II|67 pages
Cultural Realms
chapter Four|20 pages
The poetics of regret in repetition, mourning, and reparation
ByIngrid M. Geerken
View abstract
chapter Five|19 pages
Of regret and Plato's ghost
ByNilofer Kaul
View abstract
chapter Six|25 pages
Regret on the screen and regret as a screen
ByApurva Shah
View abstract
part III|82 pages
Clinical Realms
chapter Seven|16 pages
Regret, nostalgia, and masochism*
BySalman Akhtar
View abstract
chapter Eight|13 pages
Development perspectives in the treatment of regret
ByTheodore Fallon
View abstract
chapter Nine|25 pages
Clinical transformation of intolerable regret into tolerable regret*
BySusan Kavaler-Adler
View abstract
chapter Ten|24 pages
Longing for a second chance
ByRichard Tuch
View abstract

Missed opportunities, unfulfilled dreams, and broken promises are the stuff of everyday life and so is regret, the emotion that accompanies them. Unlike remorse which is consequent upon the realization that one has hurt a loved one, regret revolves around a wistful sense of having let oneself down. Middle aged and elderly individuals are specially prone to regret ; the wish to reverse what one did wrong gets intensified as time left to live becomes shorter. Regret also carries with it the potential of masochistic self-flagellation which conceals the omnipotent belief that things could have been otherwise; the fact that life is what it is thus gets denied and eclipsed. The author's edited volume on regret addresses this inoptimally studied emotion from developmental, cultural, and clinical vantage points. It deepens our understanding of regret, enhances our empathy with 'spilled-milk' hand-wringing, and sharpens our technical skills to help persons burdened by chronic regret.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|66 pages
Developmental Realms
chapter One|22 pages
The capacity for regret in children and adolescents
BySusan L. Donner
View abstract
chapter Two|20 pages
Regret, resolution, and reparation in marital relationships
ByJoan Lachkar
View abstract
chapter Three|22 pages
The trajectory of remorse to regret in old age
ByShahrzad Siassi
View abstract
part II|67 pages
Cultural Realms
chapter Four|20 pages
The poetics of regret in repetition, mourning, and reparation
ByIngrid M. Geerken
View abstract
chapter Five|19 pages
Of regret and Plato's ghost
ByNilofer Kaul
View abstract
chapter Six|25 pages
Regret on the screen and regret as a screen
ByApurva Shah
View abstract
part III|82 pages
Clinical Realms
chapter Seven|16 pages
Regret, nostalgia, and masochism*
BySalman Akhtar
View abstract
chapter Eight|13 pages
Development perspectives in the treatment of regret
ByTheodore Fallon
View abstract
chapter Nine|25 pages
Clinical transformation of intolerable regret into tolerable regret*
BySusan Kavaler-Adler
View abstract
chapter Ten|24 pages
Longing for a second chance
ByRichard Tuch
View abstract
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