// the following book discussion includes topics of trauma, abuse, childhood. //
// if this is a subject that triggers you, please skip this review <33
it’s really not worth it, i promise. //
personally, i was coming to this book to understand trauma better from a victim’s perspective. i think a great book that i read that i can give an example was by Marie-France Hirigoyen: “Stalking the Soul: Emotional Abuse and the Erosion of Identity”. I read this a few years ago and it really shone a light on emotional abuse and how emotionals abusers work, how victims cope.
this though... i didn’t like this book.
i’ll start with the good takeaways from the book:
(1) the general idea that there are illnesses that have a genetic component, which give you a bigger PREDISPOSITION to have a mental illness, i.e. bipolar, depression, anxiety. (the author distorts this greatly though).
(2) making peace with past trauma that happened in YOUR life and you can’t change is important. taking steps to live in a loving, empathetic way, to yourself and others. being there for yourself.
what i didn’t like:
(1) it’s not our “job” to heal a relationship with an abusive parent.
“The last thing parents would want to see is their child suffering on their behalf. It is arrogant and inflated to think that we, as children, are better equipped to handle our parents’ suffering than they are. It is also out of tune with the order of life. Our parents existed before we did. They provided for us so that we could survive. We did not, as infants, provide for them.”
sir— just because someone can become a parent doesn't mean they know how to be a parent.
“Whether they’re dead or alive, whether they’re distant from them or our relationship is amicable, our parents — and the traumas they’ve experienced or inherited — hold the key to our healing.”
“summon the courage to let go of our judging minds, open our constricted hearts, and regard our parents and other family members with the light of compassion. Only by doing so can we resolve the pain that prevents us from wholly embrancing our lives.”
“Your job is to reconnect with the love you naturally felt for her when you were small. In this way, you can let go of what you might be carrying that actually belongs to her.”
“It will be important not to expect your parents to be any different from what they are — the change will occur in you. The relationship dynamics may remain the same, but your perspective will be different.”
it’s not a victim’s “job” to heal a relationship. it can take so much time to heal a wound like family trauma. and it takes efforts from both sides to make that relationship work again.
all i could think of when he went on and on about how a stronger & closer relationship with our parents make “healthier” people, was: what if the reader was physically, sexually abused by their parents?
situations of rape, assault.
these situations are not uncommon at all.
for someone to write a book with such a title and never address this once? on the contrary, writing a book where all of the responsibility to do and be better is on the victim?? completely baffled me. and the author could not stop talking about this epiphany of his of reconnecting, rebonding, relating again... in all of the chapters. it’s all this book is about. i’ll give examples but i just want to say that for this reason alone, i wouldn’t recommend this book to any trauma survivors from parents/tutors because it can be triggering, in my opinion. i would get it if one of the chapters was about reconnecting when ready, when advised, preferably with help from a psychiatrist, in CERTAIN types of trauma, with social support.
but nope.
“In order to end the cycle of inherited trauma in my family, and ultimately for my own healing, I realized that I needed to heal my relationship with my mother. I knew I couldn’t change what had happened in the past, but I certainly could change the relationship we had now.”
“It didn’t matter how they could or couldn’t love me. What mattered was how I could receive what they had to give. They were the same parents they’d always been. The difference was in me. I was falling back in love with them, the way I must have felt as a baby before the break in the bond with my mother occurred."
it’s just baffling to me that this whole book is about how good it is for a trauma victim to HAVE to reconnect to the abuser 10/10 times, no matter the circumstances.
sometimes distance from an abuser and making peace within ourselves is the best thing we can do heal.
(2) pseudoscience
the main point the author wants to drill through his readers, in which he truly believes, despite any evidence whatsoever, is that there is a way, through “genetics”, that a relative of yours, any generation, can give you their trauma. literally, if they lived a situation, like a war, or other horrid circumstances, that they can pass you their symptoms exactly, even the age of when it started! and so that’s how you get it. that’s it. pretty simple huh?
moreover, the author believes that just by him explaining that, people can heal. because if now they know that the source of their suicidal tendencies, anxiety, depression, insomnia, you name it, was their great-great-uncle, they can “make peace with their family history” and it just goes away. 🙂
how, you may ask? by “creating personal healing sentences” and “rituals, exercises, practices and healing images”, like placing a photo on the desk, lighting a candle, writing a letter, placing a photo above the bed (that’s different than on the desk), creating a boundary.
THERE’S SO MUCH WRONG WITH THIS that i don’t even know where to begin or start, and frankly, i don’t care enough to. i think it’s pretty evident the numerous flaws of this reasoning but what irked me the most was how the author used “science” to back this up and how an inexperienced reader can quickly trust him. and it’s what ultimately made me give this one star. it’s just not okay.
he references a few studies but none of them refer to the treatment of the diseases the author claims to see heal in the users of this technique or evidence to his idea of generational trauma.
there is one interesting molecular mechanism referenced: measuring the level of cortisol levels in family members of holocaust survivors: cortisol levels were diminished. HOWEVER, big HOWEVER, NO conclusions were taken from this study the way the author wants to: it doesn’t LINK our mental illness to a relative's or DERIVES any sort of treatment such as making peace with past abusers. it measured cortisol levels. that's it. just because a long distant relative of yours had PTSD or was a murderer, in no way means you or generations to come will display symptoms BECAUSE of the said relative.
the way he draws these studies to suit his conclusions is painful.
(3) let’s give a moment of silence for the way the author dismisses medical treatments.
“Gretchen had been admitted several times to a psychiatric hospital, where she was diagnosed as bipolar with a severe anxiety disorder. Medication brought her slight relief, but never touched the powerful suicidal urges that lived inside her.” “I asked if anyone in her family was Jewish or had been involved in the Holocaust. Gretchen started to say no, but then stopped herself and recalled a story about her grandmother.” “As I explained the connection, Gretchen listened intently. Her eyes widened and color rose in her cheeks. I could tell what I said was resonating.” “As Gretchen absorbed this understanding, seeing the family story in a new light, her body began to soften, as if something inside her that had long been coiled up could now relax.”
the simple SUGGESTION that you can heal bipolar disease by this method, and that medication is dispensable - just for a “slight relief”, is offensive, ignorant and i really really really don’t like it. let’s remind ourselves Mark has no medical qualifications.
“Typically, they might consult a doctor, psychologist, or psychiatrist and receive medications, therapy, or some combination of both. But although these avenues might bring some relief, generally they don’t provide a complete solution.”
constantly dismissing medical care like this? we love to see it 😍
“Somewhere along the way, I had even stopped thinking about my eye and worrying about whether it would improve or worsen. I no longer expected to be able to see clearly again. Not long afterward, my vision returned. (...) Ironically, after scouring the distant corners of the planets for answers, I found that the greatest resources for healing were already inside me just waiting to be excavated. Ultimately, healing is an inside job.”
the author decides that the reason why he’s not blind is because of meditation and foreign gurus 😩
(4) extremely repetitive book !!!
i felt the author go in circles and circles, and tell a bunch of stories to reach the same conclusion, this idea that he really wants to drill in our brains, grasping at straws, and really enforcing that he's the one who knows how to cure this.
(5) sooo many personal stories. everyone who knows a tiny bit of science knows that reports of one patient’s story is NOT a good way to do science. it doesn’t provide evidence of anything. there needs to be a controlled study. the stories of the patients all went like:
a) patient X presented with Y symptoms
b) i asked them if anyone in their family had Y.
c) patient X said a distant relative of theirs actually had that exactly at their own age !!
d) i told them that’s why they had it and that their “core language” is messed up.
e) patient X has an epiphany and is cured.
finally, i would like to mention that obviously Mark Wolyyn is not!!! a doctor!!! he doesn’t give proper disclaimers for that, or explanations on how he learned or got these conclusions from. he mentions in the first lines of the book he works (or owns?) an "institute”, and later that is a "clinician" but he is not!! a doctor, psychologist or psychiatrist.
"It was through language that I entered the world of psychology. Both as a student and then as a clinician, I had little interest in tests and theories and models of behaviour. Instead, I heard language.”
holding that you don’t believe in models of behavior to your chest is NOT THE FLEX YOU THINK IT IS!!!!! these are incredibly important for the medical field and how we have continued doing better for our patients and having better standards of care.
ugh.
so disappointed.