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"Attached: The New Science of Adult Attachment and How It Can Help You Find - and Keep - Love" By Dr. Amir Levine and Rachel Heller
Discover how an understanding of adult attachment - the most advanced relationship science in existence today - can help us find and sustain love.
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"The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma" By Bessel van der Kolk
Knowledge is power. Learn about trauma and how it affects your adult body each day. This book explains how trauma lives in your body. When you understand how your body works, you will better understand how to heal, and not avoid.
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"UnF--ck Your Brain" by Dr Faith G. Harper
With humor, patience, science, and lots of good-ole swearing, Dr. Faith explains what's going on in your skull, and talks you through the process of retraining your brain to respond appropriately to the non-emergencies of everyday life, and to deal effectively with old, or newly acquired, traumas (particularly post-traumatic stress disorder).
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"Driven to Distraction: Recognizing and Coping with Attention Deficit Disorder" by Edward M. Hallowell M.D.
Through vivid stories and case histories of patients—both adults and children—Hallowell and Ratey explore the varied forms ADHD takes, from hyperactivity to daydreaming. They dispel common myths, offer helpful coping tools, and give a thorough accounting of all treatment options as well as tips for dealing with a diagnosed child, partner, or family member. But most importantly, they focus on the positives that can come with this “disorder”—including high energy, intuitiveness, creativity, and enthusiasm.
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"How to Do the Work: Recognize Your Patterns, Heal from Your Past, and Create Your Self" by Dr. Nicole LePera
In How to Do the Work, she offers both a manifesto for Self Healing as well as an essential guide to creating a more vibrant, authentic, and joyful life. Drawing on the latest research from a diversity of scientific fields and healing modalities, Dr. LePera helps us recognize how adverse experiences and trauma in childhood live with us, resulting in whole body dysfunction—activating harmful stress responses that keep us stuck engaging in patterns of codependency, emotional immaturity, and trauma bonds. Unless addressed, these self-sabotaging behaviors can quickly become cyclical, leaving people feeling unhappy, unfulfilled, and unwell.
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“It Didn't Start with You: How Inherited Family Trauma Shapes Who We Are and How to End the Cycle” by Mark Wolynn
It Didn’t Start with You builds on the work of leading experts in post-traumatic stress, including Mount Sinai School of Medicine neuroscientist Rachel Yehuda and psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk, author of The Body Keeps the Score. Even if the person who suffered the original trauma has died, or the story has been forgotten or silenced, memory and feelings can live on. These emotional legacies are often hidden, encoded in everything from gene expression to everyday language, and they play a far greater role in our emotional and physical health than has ever before been understood.