Description
Is Pooh, the ‘Bear of Very Little Brain’, actually a talented psychologist?
The author explores psychological ideas as he determines whether Pooh is himself a skilled psychologist, who ‘works cure for his friends’ problems.’
Winnie-the-Pooh lived in a Forest all by himself under the name of Sanders and he had the name over the door in gold letters. Why Sanders? And why gold letters? Might not the gold letters stand for the brass plate of a physician or a psychotherapist? Would the bell inform Pooh that a patient was waiting for his attention?
Discover the answers to John Tyerman Williams’ hypothesis that Winnie-the-Pooh is a super-psychologist in this brilliant expose of truth about the real Winnie-the-Pooh.
Winnie-the-Pooh, in his nurturing role, solves the problems of his friends and effectively brings changes to their lives. John Tyerman Williams discovers that Pooh, with the breadth of his psychological knowledge and his skill in applying it, proves himself to be a brilliant psychotherapist.
The psychological importance of Winnie the Pooh is explored in depth, from Eeyore’s depression to Piglet’s shyness, in an entertaining look at the unique characters of the Hundred Acre Wood.
















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