|
Yoga for Emotional Trauma: Meditations and Practices for Healing Pain and Suffering
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Yoga for Emotional Trauma: Meditations and Practices for Healing Pain and Suffering
|
Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Mary NurrieStearns
|
|
By (author) Rick NurrieStearns
|
Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:200 | Dimensions(mm): Height 227,Width 153 |
|
Category/Genre | Complementary therapies, healing and health |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781608826421
|
Classifications | Dewey:615.852 |
---|
Audience | |
|
Publishing Details |
Publisher |
New Harbinger Publications
|
Imprint |
New Harbinger Publications
|
Publication Date |
1 July 2013 |
Publication Country |
United States
|
Description
A psychotherapist and a meditation teacher present a yogic approach to emotional trauma by instructing readers to apply mindful awareness, breathing, yoga postures, and mantras to their emotional and physical pain.
Author Biography
Mary NurrieStearns, LCSW, RYT, is a psychotherapist and yoga teacher with a counseling practice in Tulsa , OK. She is author of numerous articles on psychospiritual growth, coeditor of the book Soulful Living, and coauthor of the book Yoga for Anxiety. She leads transformational meditation and yoga retreats and teaches seminars across the United States.
Reviews"Yoga for Emotional Trauma fills a gap in the trauma and recovery literature. Anyone who is working to heal from past trauma will benefit from reading this book. Then, following the easy instructions for yoga poses will move their recovery in a new way. Well written and easily understood." --Charles Whitfield, MD, author of Not Crazy: You May Not be Mentally Ill and Wisdom to Know the Difference, and Barbara Harris Whitfield, RT, CMT, author of The Natural Soul, Victim to Survivor, and Thriver "Margaret Mitchell once wrote: 'Every problem has two handles. You can grab it by the handle of fear, or the handle of hope.' This book has a firm grasp on the handle of hope. This book offers a gentle, time-tested, nurturing approach to guide the reader through their recovery from trauma. It is a much-needed balm for a wounded world." --Henry Emmons, MD, integrative psychiatrist and author of The Chemistry of Joy, The Chemistry of Calm and The Chemistry of Joy Workbook "This is simply a fantastic book. It captures the full spectrum of practical knowledge of yoga and makes it accessible for all of us so we can use this ancient knowledge and proven practice for healing our body, mind, and spirit. Without overwhelming the reader, the book encourages us to try out a number of thoughtful compassionate and gentle exercises to soothe and harmonize all three aspects of ourselves: body, mind, and spirit." --Georg Eifert, PhD, Chapman University Professor Emeritus of Psychology and coauthor of the Mindfulness and Acceptance Workbook for Anxiety "To be alive in the twenty-first century is to be traumatized, but we need not stay traumatized. Our age is witnessing an efflorescence of methods to eliminate suffering and move to a place of joy, fulfillment, and serenity. The NurrieStearns are leading the way." --Larry Dossey, MD, author of Healing Words and One Mind "Yoga teachers, students, and even folks new to the idea of yoga will benefit from the stories and information in this thoughtful book. The healing power of yoga is vast and endless both physically and emotionally. The authors have done a wonderful job of explaining how it works with easy-to-understand true stories and references to science. I appreciate this work and plan to share it with all of my students and teacher trainees. We can help so many people, and we can begin with ourselves." --Desiree Rumbaugh, certified yoga instructor "You don't have to have a history of trauma to benefit from this manual of practices from the yoga tradition, but if you do, Yoga for Emotional Trauma is essential reading. The NurrieStearns write with compassion and understanding about the journey home to your true nature, the place that has never been sullied by your trauma. The NurrieStearns write clearly, humbly describing their own recovery from trauma along with the recovery stories of the many clients with whom they have worked. Thank you NurrieStearns for giving us in clear and readable prose, the brain science that explains the effects of trauma and how yoga can help us recover." --Amy Weintraub, founder of the LifeForce Yoga Healing Institute, and author of Yoga for Depression and Yoga Skills for Therapists
|