What my bones know (WMBK) is a lot of things.
It’s a starkly honest and brave biography, a natural experiment, an exquisite piece of investigative journalism, a completely irresponsible misrepresentation of psychotherapy, and perhaps the very best representation of psychotherapy I can think of, it’s a desperate cry for help, a self aware declaration of resilience and hard earned strength, a rare phenomenological account of a profound bio-psycho-social-spiritual awakening, a deeply healing recovery narrative, a laugh out loud, howl in agonizing cathartic tears, life changing, game changing read.
WMBK is author Stephenie Foo’s autobiography of ATROCIOUS abuse in her family of origin, compounded by racism, and subsequent complex post traumatic stress disorder (CPTSD) and her decades long recovery journey.
In case you didn’t know:
CPTSD is the 2022 diagnosis dijour, de rigor, due in part to this book, and its predecessors e.g. the Body Keeps The Score by Bessel van der Kolk.
AND!
And…
Thanks to its recent inclusion as an official diagnosis in the brand spanking new International Classification of Diseases 11th Revision (ICD-11).
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) happens as a result of acute (intense/brief) exposure to traumatic shit like combat, assault, disaster, automobile accidents, train wrecks, 2016-2020, SCOTUS, etc.
PTSD symptoms include:
* Re-experiencing (intrusive flashbacks).
* Avoidance of trauma linked stimuli.
* Negative trauma linked alterations in cognition and mood.
* Hyper arousal.
So, in other words. When you are triggered in your trauma, you might have flashbacks, you feel really bad, you drink, or think or dip out to avoid feeling bad, you’re hella tense in your body, you’re jumpy and you startle easily, and you’re always or very frequently tripping that something horrible it’s gonna happen.
CPTSD is a sibling diagnosis to PTSD, wherein the trauma exposure is chronic (occurring over prolonged periods) and typically involves stuff like childhood neglect/abuse, intimate partner violence, bullying, racism, sexism, classism, homophobia.
So America basically.
CPTSD has all the symptoms of PTSD (see above), plus, an additional cluster of goodness referred to as: disturbances in self organization (DSO).
CPTSD/DSO include:
* Affective dysregulation.
* Negative self-concept.
* Disturbances in relationships.
In other words. When you get activated in you’re complex trauma, you get all the PTSD stuff, plus you can’t control your emotions, you feel pervasive feelings of worthlessness, shame and guilt, you find it hard to feel connected with other people, you have hella problems in your relationships, you have trouble keeping friends and you always have drama.
And, as an added bonus, both PTSD and CPTSD have Extremely high rates of co-occurring ADDICTION.
Just to sweeten the deal.
Anyway.
As mentioned.
WMBK is all about the authors AMAZING recovery journey, her healing relationship with her husband, and her amazing relationship with her AWESOME therapist Dr. Jakob Ham.
I’ll spare you the details.
But…
After TONS of bad therapy.
She finally meets Dr. Ham.
They do AMAZING relational psychodynamic work together.
And.
BEST PART!
They record their sessions.
And they included some of the actual sessions in the audiobook.
It’s magic.
WMBK is about:
Healing.
Facing the fear.
Feeling an healing from chronic shame.
Embracing imperfection.
Fucking up hella bad.
Staying at it.
Loving love.
And.
As such.
Becoming alive.
WMBK is an infuriating, consternating, enlightening, enlightened, crazy beautiful, heart rending, catastrophe of a masterpiece of a train wreck of a fountain head of wisdom of a shit show of a so wrong it’s not even wrong of a love letter to love of a beautiful book.
God!
Thank you Stephanie Foo for being so GOD DAMED REAL!!!
And.
Thank you Dr. Jacob Ham for being so GOD DAMED REAL!!!
Words fail.
Love doesn’t.
5/5 flaming dumpsters full of stars and hearts (🔥🗑️⭐️❤️)