Joseph Bailey (author)

Joseph Bailey (author)

Joseph Bailey is a psychologist, consultant and public speaker. He is noted largely for his 1990 book about addiction and treatment, The Serenity Principle and is the author of three other books on mental well-being:Slowing down to the Speed of Life (with best-selling author Richard Carlson), The Speed Trap: Avoiding the Frenzy of the Fast Lane, Slowing Down to the Speed of Love and Fearproof Your Life. Joe Bailey has been a psychotherapist for thirty-five years, and is a consultant to many corporations and healthcare, mental health and chemical dependency organizations. He is a seminar leader and trainer of professionals.

His practice of research and teaching an integration of psychological and spiritual health embraces many of his writing partner Richard Carlson's (Don't Sweat the Small Stuff) techniques in addressing a person's innate health, as well as those of Sidney Banks and refined by George Pransky and Roger C. Mills, known as "Health Realization."

Joe Bailey toured nationally to promote Slowing Down to the Speed of Life, The Speed Trap and Slowing Down to the Speed of Love. He has appeared on or been quoted in USA Today, The Chicago Tribune, The St. Paul Pioneer Press, Newsweek, Family Circle, Shape, Reader’s Digest, Entrepreneur of the Year Magazine, Bay Area Parent, and The Oregonian. His television and radio interviews include CNBC Nightly News with Brian Williams, NBC Morning Show, New York City, Fox TV Morning Show, Boston, WCCO CBS special on “Slowing Down to the Speed of Life,” KMSP TV, KARE TV, WCCC radio KBEM Minneapolis, KMHL -MPLS. KNUS-Denver, KBYR-Anchorage, WNYU-New York City, KURV-Texas, WMAQ-Chicago, KUIK0-Portland, OR. KPPT-Newport, OR. Talk America Network, WWRC-Washington D.C., Air America, and numerous other radio talk shows. Bailey is a fly-fishing advocate and runs seminars with his partner George Patterson, PhD called "Fly Fishing for the Mind."

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    It takes a lot of imagination to be a good photographer. You need less imagination to be a painter, because you can invent things. But in photography everything is so ordinary; it takes a lot of looking before you learn to see the ordinary.
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