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Looking For Some Trauma And Depression Based Books...

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J_trustno1

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I just saw one of the books advertised on this site "Trauma and recovery". Was wondering if any of you guys know any other self-help books that I can start looking into that you have found useful. I know that there are tons of books out there but if you guys have any suggestions regarding e-books, paperback books or any websites, it'll be fantastic.

Thanks for the help in advance :)
 
The Betrayal Bond by Dr. Patrick Carnes
Toxic Parents By Dr. Susan Froward.
The gift of Fear by Gavin de Becker

Good luck. This is a great thread. I have more books to reccomend but I will leave you with these books. They have become an invaluable resources to me over time.
 
I'm a big reader with this type of stuff

The Body Remembers
If The Buddha Got Stuck (it's not religious despite the name) If The Buddha Dated is great too if it applies.
The Dialectical Behavioral Therapy Skills Book
Another great dating book is if love is a game these are the rules

I learn through therapy books learning about therapy all the time too. It teaches me more about myself than the self help books

On Becoming A Therapist
Letters To A Young Therapist
The Making Of A Therapist
Where To Start and What To Ask

If you just like reading about patients in therapy (this gives insight to the process as well)
The Man With The Beautiful Voice
Bare Psychotherapy Stripped
 
Herman's "trauma and recovery" was good, I had "oh shit!" moments of understanding all the way through. It is old though, there has been a lot of work done in the 22 years since it was first published.

Bessel van der Kolk's "the body keeps the score" is up to date and a good read. he's pretty ecclectic, and embraces what works, even when it is considered "alternative" by the lamestream, for example he was an early adopter of EMDR, and yoga. I found his postscript hard going though. he strayed out of his area of expertise and he really does not have a good understanding of economics, of the debates and evidence around gun ownership, or of what state sector provision ends up looking like in practice. The same is also true of Gabor Mate and Robert Sapolsky, they are excellent in their fields (trauma and stress) but fall flat when they stray outside of them.

I'd read good things about Vaughn's "The talking cure" but paid over the odds for a quick and quite light read. It'll fill a rainy sunday afternoon, but there is better stuff out there, plus she's a freudian, and I really do not like freud.

I've just finished Sebern Fisher's "neurofeedback for developmental trauma" It was excellent, I got the recommendation from van der Kolk, who wrote a foreward to it. highly recommended.

I'll go a little off beat, and suggest you look up some of the critters who teach males how to seduce women - so that you can learn how to spot their games if anyone tries them on with you. books with titles like "bang!"

also, an ex of mine recommends a blog called "baggage reclaim" about relationships and interpersonal boundaries. My ex has met the woman who writes the blog and is very impressed with her.

getting back to therapy books, I think I've linked "the mindful way through depression" audiobook, which is usually up on youtube. It really is good. download it though as it gets taken down fairly frequently due to copyright.

I got an old book cheap on "counselling for PTSD" it is so out of date and is totally dangerous - following its instructions will lead to retraumatization.

A really inspiring book, even if it is about 12 years old, was "madness explained" by Bentall.
He's looking at psychoses; schizophrenia, paranoia, bipolar etc, and he subjects the current paradigm to the kind of scruitiny that it needs - needless to say, it doesn't stand up to scrutiny and criticism. It is quite inspiring to find out that about 10% of the population experience "hearing voices" with absolutely no ill effects. There is even a group for them in the Netherlands, with the aim of achieving liberation from medicalization in the same way that homosexuality and bisexuality have achieved liberation from false medicalization by psychiatrists. Bentall goes right into the logical arguments and the evidence - so it's not a light read, but it is one that you would be well capable of following and enjoying.

I'm currently reading up on DBT (linehan's skills manual and the manual she co authored on DBT for suicidal adolescents). I'm neither suicidal nor do I think I have BPD, but I do know sufficeint people with both suicidality and BPD that I thought I'd better read up. They are manuals rather than light reads.
 
David Burn's "The Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy" I so wish I had read it 25 years ago! It has changed my life.
"The Mindful Way Through Depression" which comes with a CD of practices that have helped change my life.
The Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook for Anxiety Chapmean et al
The Body Keeps the Score
I read Trauma and Recovery a couple of decades ago but I don't remember it. Probably time to read it again.
 
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