Oh my gosh, I wept through it!
The author shared the pain of her childhood, but that is not what got me. What made me cry is her perspective, and it is the same that I have had in session after session. I felt like finally, someone has said what I had thought over and over. Since I hope you will read it, I won’t share my perspective because it would be a spoiler to the book.
This book also left me with a curiosity? Would my clients make different choices if they could gain another perspective? How do I offer that perspective and still join their journey without creating a wedge between us? Please read it and write me back! What was your take on the book? What impacted you? Did it offend you? Did it bring compassion to you? Did it change your view…how?