Ashley Davis Bush

Ashley Davis Bush’s Followers (54)

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Ashley Davis Bush

Goodreads Author


Born
in Dallas, The United States
Website

Twitter

Genre

Member Since
August 2009

URL


I'm so glad to be part of the Goodreads forum!

I am a licensed psychotherapist in private practice now living in Antigua, Guatemala. I am also the author of 10 self-help books.

In my clinical work I focus on helping individuals cope with loss, heal from trauma, find inner peace, navigate life's transitions and on helping couples improve their relationship.

My background: I hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology from Smith College and a Masters in Social Work degree from Columbia University. Early on, I worked in community mental health in New York City later wrote, lived and practiced in southern New Hampshire for 22 years.

I, with my husband Daniel, have 5 grown children who live around the globe.

I enjoy singing and perform with local
...more

Tune up

There are two things in particular that I do NOT enjoy: waking up early and climbing up a mountain. And yet, here I was, in India, doing both. At 6am the sacred mountain of Arunachala sat silent in the mist. With twenty other pilgrims, we plodded up to the cave of Sri Ramana Maharshi, a sacred place for meditation.

Outside the cave, just as the sun announced itself through the fog, our small group

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Published on May 14, 2025 14:55
Average rating: 4.11 · 1,039 ratings · 134 reviews · 20 distinct worksSimilar authors
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Ashley’s Recent Updates

Ashley Davis Bush wrote a new blog post

Tune up

There are two things in particular that I do NOT enjoy: waking up early and climbing up a mountain. And yet, here I was, in India, doing both. At 6am Read more of this blog post »
More of Ashley's books…
Quotes by Ashley Davis Bush  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“Synthesis is the gateway to Transcendence, because once you accept that you are forever changed and that life is forever different, you have to ask, "What are you going to do about that fact? Will the change be for the better or for worse?" It's the loss itself that becomes the catalyst for meaning. (pg 273)”
Ashley Davis (Prend) Bush, Transcending Loss: Understanding the Lifelong Impact of Grief and How to Make It Meaningful

“One griever told me that three years after her twenty-eight-year-old daughter died unexpectedly, she was having a bad day and found herself quite depressed and sad. She called a friend hoping to find a sympathetic ear but instead was assaulted by the friend’s exclamation, ‟You mean you’re still grieving over her, after three three years?” The friend’s question was not meant to be malicious. She honestly didn’t understand that to a grieving mother three years is nothing. She was sadly ignorant that major loss lasts a lifetime. This woman is not alone in her ignorance. I’ve heard educated people tell me that they thought the average length of the grieving process was two to four weeks. Maybe that was just their wishful thinking. We’re an immediate-gratification society that values quick fixes, a generation raised on microwaves and fast foods. We prefer our solutions and emotions conveniently packaged for the swiftest consumption. So we expect grief to be a quick and easy process with no bitter aftertaste. But how can we expect to love someone, lose someone—and not be changed irrevocably? How can we realistically expect this to be a speedy process? Yet time and again grievers tell me they are being asked, “When will you be your old self again?” or “It’s been three months already, shouldn’t you be over this by now?” Perhaps you’ve heard comments like this too, and chances are that as a result, you feel quite confused and isolated in your grief. Maybe you’ve been asking yourself the same questions.”
Ashley Davis Bush, Transcending Loss

“When your stress levels are up, you should spend more time taking care of yourself.”
Ashley Davis Bush, Simple Self-Care for Therapists: Restorative Practices to Weave Through Your Workday

Topics Mentioning This Author

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You'll love this ...: This topic has been closed to new comments. jaxnsmom's Searchin' for a Rainbow 168 69 Dec 31, 2012 08:39PM  
“Synthesis is the gateway to Transcendence, because once you accept that you are forever changed and that life is forever different, you have to ask, "What are you going to do about that fact? Will the change be for the better or for worse?" It's the loss itself that becomes the catalyst for meaning. (pg 273)”
Ashley Davis (Prend) Bush, Transcending Loss: Understanding the Lifelong Impact of Grief and How to Make It Meaningful

“We have to dare to be ourselves, however frightening or strange that self may prove to be.”
May Sarton

28829 Grief: Q&A with Ashley Davis (Prend) Bush — 7 members — last activity Sep 16, 2015 09:49PM
I've created this group to answer questions that readers might have of my book "Transcending Loss" or questions about coping with grief in general. ...more
62184 self-help books addicts — 83 members — last activity Apr 25, 2016 05:30PM
A group for addicts of all shapes and colors to come and share about experiences and books that have helped with the journey to recovery.
65824 Inspirational and Informative — 81 members — last activity Sep 09, 2015 11:23AM
Books that have the power to change someone's world or point of view. ...more
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