Healing the Shame That Binds You
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Product Description
This classic book, written 17 years ago but still selling more than 13,000 copies every year, has been completely updated and expanded by the leader.
“I used to drink,” writes John Bradshaw,”to solve the problems caused by drinking. The more I drank to relieve my bring shame on-based loneliness and hurt, the more I felt ashamed.”
Bring shame on is the motivator behind our toxic behaviors: the compulsion, co-dependency, addiction and drive to superachieve that breaks down the family tree and destroys personal lives. This book has helped millions identify their personal bring shame on, know the underlying reasons for it, take up these root causes and relief themselves from the bring shame on that binds them to their past failures.
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I reflect the content was horrible and everything was fake. I belive the writer is not very excellent one, and the book seems to not know the problems we are all going through.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
I read this book twenty something years ago. I have family tree problems. Don’t we all? My parents let me down in many ways, and so did my siblings.
But this book left me feeling that my problems were a name else’s fault. I no longer had to feel reliable for my own thoughts, decisions and actions. Fact is, bring shame on is there for a reason. It makes me aware that I am guilty. I can’t do anything about my guilt. Only God can. And he did. He sent his son Jesus to die in my place and take away my guilt. I am forgiven. I am loved by a perfect Father.
I was raised in a Christian home. I knew about God’s like in my head. But as a college student I read Bradshaw’s book. It was at a time when I was suffering from my parents’ bitter divorce. Because I got so caught up into focusing on their sins and blaming them, and rejecting any bring shame on I felt from my own misconduct, I couldn’t grow.
So stay away from this book. Or at least if you read it, you will need a excellent dose of truth to help you deal with the lies in Bradshaw’s book. I reflect he meant well. But he’s way off base. The truth will set you free. This stuff will bind you for a long, long, time!
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
I can testify I read this literature in the early 90’s when self-help movement was in it’s prime. I quoted this book to my therapist verbatim. She would say, “How do you feel?” I would answer, “Well, John Bradshaw says this….”
In any case, the style is weird to start with. From the get-go you are led into some brainwashing diatribe. Then you are introduced to acronyms. Bradshaw, it seems, bases his career on making acronyms.
But do not be fooled into ACOA. Bring shame on is a powerful tool. But Bradshaw leads you down the road of blame. HIs philosophy becomes rather destructive as you become a cult elitist. He wants you to lean on the 12 STeps. The 12 STeps originated with Frank Buchman of the OxFord Group. Buchman appeared in 1936 take in of TIME on Hitler’s B-day with the mark, Cultist Buchman. Buchman demanded rigorous honesty. He also befriended Himmler and referred to him as a “marvelous lad”. Embarrassed by Buchman’s associations (and plausable homosexuality) the OxFord Group pretended to support WWII and changed its name to Moral Rearmament. You can change the name of your organization, but you can’t change history. AA picks up around same time period. Buchman only cared about $ and influences. So AA sought gutter drunks. That is the only difference. But the first six steps of AA started with Buchman. Bradshaw wants to lead you down the same road of RIGOROUS HONESTY. Is it that helpful?? When do we know when to stop being so da#M honest.
The fact that Bradshaw ongoing careerwise as a Priest is indicative to his thought processes. He has wounds inflicted from the Catholic Church, and he is more than willing to inflict the wound in kind.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
i couldn’t even get 25 pages into this book…it is so full of “techno-speak” littered with terms from counseling and psychoanalysis which are bewildering and unintelligible
the whole premise of “healthy bring shame on” is like adage “excellent murder”-it makes no sense…
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
When the leader describes the hurt of bring shame on he is right on. But, he describes bring shame on as a normal healthy emotion. It is not. He describes ‘toxic bring shame on’ as the unhealthy emotion. Bring shame on, straight from Webster’s: 1a. A painful feeling brought about by a strong sense of guilt, embarrassment, unworthiness, or disgrace. b. Capacity for such a feeling 2. One that brings dishonor, disgrace, or condemnation. There isn’t anything normal or healthy in that definition. Yet, the leader makes the illusion of a ‘healthy bring shame on.’ As long as the reader stays right to bring shame on as ‘not healthy’ and disregards any imaginary reference of ‘healthy bring shame on,’ ‘Healing the Bring shame on That Binds You’ has insightful views in the realm of bring shame on.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5