For the questions Yalom raised
Literary Companions for the four ultimate concerns.
Death, freedom, isolation, meaninglessness. The four givens. Your clients arrive in each of them eventually, and most of what’s available to read on the way is either too breezy or too academic.
The midlife client confronting the ordinariness of their own life. The retiree facing the possibility that the second half is shorter than the first. The client whose belief system has dissolved and who has not yet found what comes next.
The booklets in this library are written in the register of Yalom and Frankl and de Botton: calm, literary, taking the reader’s existential situation seriously without dramatizing it.
Featured Companions for this work
- Realizing You’re Ordinary — When special becomes average
For midlife confrontation with the self.
- Getting What You Wanted — When achievement doesn’t satisfy
For the meaning gap after success.
- American Grief — Mourning a way of life that’s been commodified
For worldview erosion.
- Time Starts Moving Fast — When years become moments
For the second-half client.
- Accepting This Is Your Life — When possibility becomes present
For the closing of doors.
The clinical concept lookup
The Reader’s lookup includes loss of possibility, existential fatigue, meaning reconstruction, and identity reconstruction after worldview collapse.
Questions
- Are these religious?
- No. The booklets are secular. Some address spiritual transitions (Leaving Your Religion) without endorsing or rejecting belief.
- Are these appropriate for clients in late life?
- Yes, and the late-life-specific titles (Retiring Earlier Than Planned, Aging Out of Spaces) are written without condescension.
For the conversations that don’t have a five-session protocol.