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Come to terms with your past while moving powerfully into the future
The Courage to Heal is an inspiring, comprehensive guide that offers hope and a map of the healing journey to every woman who was sexually abused as a child—and to those who care about her. Although the effects of child sexual abuse are long-term and severe, healing is possible.
Weaving together personal experience with professional knowledge, the authors provide clear explanations, practical suggestions, and support throughout the healing process. Readers will feel recognized and encouraged by hundreds of moving first-person stories drawn from interviews and the authors' extensive work with survivors, both nationally and internationally.
This completely revised and updated 20th anniversary edition continues to provide the compassionate wisdom the book has been famous for, as well as many new features:
Cherished by survivors, and recommended by therapists and institutions everywhere, The Courage to Heal has often been called the bible of healing from child sexual abuse. This new edition will continue to serve as the healing beacon it has always been.
More Reviews and Recommendationspioneer in the field of healing from child sexual abuse, Ellen Bass currently teaches in the MFA program at Pacific University in Oregon. Her poetry books include Mules of Love and The Human Line.
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August 29, 2009: The book is helpful for helping to deal with difficult past events. You do have to work through some pain, but the suggestions and exercises are helping.
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June 20, 2009: Although the Courage to Heal was never a mainstay in my recovery, I own the 1994 edition which features Honoring the Truth, a response to the false memory syndrome backlash, and I cannot believe Ellen and Laura removed this in favor of more survivor narratives and more poetry, those are great, but what happened to the rest of it? Where's the advocacy that used to be there, the pull for survivors, and, yes, forgiveness is a personal choice for survivors, but what's with the sudden advocacy for forgiveness, as opposed to the authors' previous stance that abuse is unforgivable? Honoring the truth is supposed to be available online, but a) why pay for the book if you have to go online?
b) it doesn't come up at the address listed. Finally, Courage did not need an "update" from the 1994 third revised and expanded edition; it was just fine, it was already a classic, already ahead of it's time-now, it sounds like most every other book on the market. Truthfully, though no book can ever replace a good therapist and a good support system, Renee Fredrickson's Repressed Memories is the best book on this subject. It is warm and hopeful and heartbreakingly truthful; it's also much cheaper. If I could award Zero stars for the Courage to Heal, I would. In short, not recommended. C'mon Laura and Ellen/Come to your senses and come back to us..........