Argues that a primal wounding of the human spirit
occurs in earliest human lift that disrupts fundamental
relationships and leads to anxiety, loneliness, and
alienation; and shows how this wounding can be redeemed
through therapy and through living one's life
differently.The primal wound is the result of a
violation we all suffer in various ways, beginning in
early childhood and continuing throughout life. Because
we are treated not as individual, unique human beings
but as objects, our intrinsic, authentic sense of self
is annihilated. This primal wounding breaks the
fundamental relationships that form the fabric of human
existence: the relationship to oneself, to other people,
to the natural world, and to a sense of transpersonal
meaning symbolized in concepts such as the Divine, the
Ground of Being, and Ultimate Reality. In this book,
Firman and Gila apply object relations theory,
self-psychology, transpersonal psychology, and
psychosynthesis to the issues of psychological wounding,
healing, and growth and show how this wounding can be
redeemed through therapy and through changing one's way
of living.''Firman and Gila integrate important material
from diverse schools of psychology and then expand it
with their personal touch. The Primal Wound presents a
scholarly -- yet understandable to the educated lay
person -- description of some of the important dynamics
of psychological wounding from a broad perspective,
while also going deep into the soul and even exploring
our relationship to God. There is little available on
this topic and in the area of trauma psychology''. --
Charles Whitfield, M.D., author of Memory and Abuse:
Remembering and Healing the Wounds of Trauma |
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