Bedford Public Library

Tiny traumas, when you don't know what's wrong, but nothing feels quite right, Dr. Meg Arroll

Label
Tiny traumas, when you don't know what's wrong, but nothing feels quite right, Dr. Meg Arroll
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 297-304)
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Tiny traumas
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
Dr. Meg Arroll
Sub title
when you don't know what's wrong, but nothing feels quite right
Summary
Have you ever felt at a loss for an answer when asked: 'How are you really feeling?" Maybe you can't quite put your finger on it, but you know something is definitely off. Microaggressions, challenging family relationships, toxic positivity, work and pandemic stress, gaslighting--these are just a few examples of what psychologist Dr. Meg Arroll calls "Tiny T" trauma. These tiny traumas can slowly build up inside of us, and if ignored for too long, can manifest in our lives as high-functioning anxiety, perfectionism, binge eating, insomnia, broken relationships, and a host of other problems. While advice on healing from major trauma is plentiful, there is little guidance available to help us recover from these "smaller" yet emotionally devastating traumas that are common to all of us. Now, Dr. Meg fills that gap and helps us find peace with this revolutionary guide. In Tiny Traumas, Dr. Meg introduces her three-step AAA approach that allows us to start understanding and healing from these tiny traumas: Awareness: discover your unique constellation of tiny traumas. Acceptance: see how these tiny traumas show up in your life and start processing them. Action: start taking the steps to actively create the life you desire. Tiny Traumas teaches readers how to recognize and address past experiences so we can overcome the lasting pain and detrimental effects and truly start living the happier, more peaceful lives we deserve.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Introduction -- Tiny T trauma and whyit matters -- The happily never after -- Comfortably numb -- Born to be stressed -- The perfectionism paradox -- Human seemings, not human beings -- Eat your heart out -- What's love got to do with it? -- To sleep, perchance to dream -- Transitions, transitions, transitions -- Jumping, not staring, into the abyss: your tiny T prescription for life -- Notes -- Acknowledgments
resource.variantTitle
When you do not know what is wrong, but nothing feels quite right
Classification

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