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Deja De Hacerte Daño

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Book by Beattie, M.

224 pages, Paperback

First published April 29, 1997

115 people are currently reading
495 people want to read

About the author

Melody Beattie

67 books1,026 followers
Melody Beattie was an American self-help author best known for her groundbreaking work on codependency. Born in 1948 in Minnesota, she endured a traumatic childhood marked by abuse and early substance addiction. After achieving sobriety, she became a licensed addiction counselor and began writing to help others navigate emotional recovery. Her 1986 book Codependent No More became a bestseller, selling eight million copies and helping to bring the concept of codependency into mainstream awareness. Over her career, she authored 18 books, including Beyond Codependency, The Language of Letting Go, and Make Miracles in Forty Days. Though her work is often associated with Co-Dependents Anonymous, her books were independent of the program.
Beattie’s personal life reflected many of the struggles she addressed in her work, including four marriages and the loss of a son. Her writing often drew from her own experiences with grief, addiction, and healing. In early 2025, she was forced to evacuate her Malibu home due to wildfires and died shortly after at her daughter’s home in Los Angeles from heart failure.

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5 stars
80 (23%)
4 stars
81 (23%)
3 stars
97 (28%)
2 stars
58 (17%)
1 star
23 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 48 reviews
Profile Image for Hillary.
84 reviews
January 6, 2015
I enjoyed reading about the people she met in the Middle East, but I didn't really connect with the rest of what she was writing.
Synopsis: the author is feeling lost in life. She has the desire to get up and change something (she says she felt the pull of some unnamed vortex), but she's not sure what. She decides to go to the Middle East to find answers. The insights into the people and culture are interesting, but I'm not convinced she found what she was looking for. She finally had enough and just as quickly as she was sucked in, the vortex spit her out and she landed back home.

Every time she tried to relate her experience back to the topic of her book (loving yourself), it felt disconnected and that she was trying to hard to make it work. I thought a better title would be something like, "My Travels in the Middle East" since that was really all I got out of it.
Profile Image for Mitzi Clark.
4 reviews1 follower
February 22, 2018
This was not what I expected at all. It is a rambling autobiographical story about the author’s travels in the Middle East as she searches for some kind of meaning to life. I found it difficult to follow and once finished, I still wasn’t sure of the point she was trying to make.
381 reviews
September 11, 2009
Very disappointing. More a memoir about her trip to Egypt and some of her new-Age type experiences in a pyramid than what the title suggests.
Profile Image for Joc.
76 reviews15 followers
May 3, 2018
+Extremely dissapointing. No idea how she could have come up with a less accurate name for the book. It is mostly a stream of consciousness about her exotic travels and mostly what she did not find on her journey. 

This is definitely not a self-help book. It seems like a story justifying her "business" trip to write this book. Don't bother. 
Profile Image for Hilary "Fox".
2,154 reviews68 followers
January 5, 2017
So, after having decided I liked some of what I read by Melody Beattie I wanted to work my way through the bulk of her writing. She was an interesting writer, some of her ideas resonated with me, and I felt like at the very least I could learn something from each of her books. They weren't necessarily life-changing, but they were interesting and helping me to reframe some of the ways I view the world and my relationships with others. That's always a good thing, right?

I was intrigued by the title of this one. Who isn't mean to themselves now and then? And was curious to read what she had to say about it all. Rather than it being a self-help book, though, this book was more of a travel memoir interspersed with clumsy additions of mystical experiences that ultimately didn't go anywhere. It read more like a first draft than a finished manuscript, and I was quite frankly surprised by just how shoddy the bulk of the editing job was. At no point did the book truly feel cohesive to me, and rarely do I find when reading anything other than the first book of any given author.

I wanted to get more out of this book than I did. I came away from it with the knowledge that everyone has their own difficulties, and that a bit of empathy is generally a good thing. That, however, isn't necessarily a surprising message and it's one better presented through the soap-opera of The Outsiders than this travel memoir. So, yes, I'm still rather confused by this book overall, especially the ending. It didn't really do much of anything for me.
Profile Image for Sally McRogerson.
223 reviews19 followers
August 31, 2011
I read this a few months ago, partly because I've read some of her other work, partly because it relates to my clients and partly because it relates to me. It felt like the ramblings of a self-indulgent, self-obsessed middle-aged woman, or an expense account trip in which she had discovered nothing of note but needed to claim the expenses anyway. I wasn't enchanted but I thought I may be missing something so I'm reading it again, more slowly this time and reflecting on what I've read.

I'd love to say that finishing the book for the second time made everything fall into place but the truth is that it didn't. There were a few bits that I can work into a meditation for clients and I think I've gleaned those bits to justify having spent so much time reading this twice!
Profile Image for T. Rose.
536 reviews20 followers
December 10, 2020
Me and Melody Beattie go waaay back...

I started following Ms. Beattie back in the 80's and have relied on her books ever since to help me through many a day and night for weeks and years of my life. I have worn out a couple of her books and had to replace them. I love reading them as e-books these days, especially for anonymous times I don't want to carry them around in plain sight. This book is another keeper. Big smile!
34 reviews
October 2, 2012
I enjoy Melody's writings. This book kind of left me wanting more compared with some of her other writings. But, I appreciate the struggles she's shared.
Profile Image for Julie Pixie.
40 reviews8 followers
March 2, 2016
Should be called "I Got An Advance From My Publisher To Take this Trip, So Now I Have to Write Something"

Two stars for small bursts of genuine insight
Profile Image for Jocie.
190 reviews
October 25, 2023
She makes excellent points, but the writing was not my style. Too much new age, and I don't care for symbolic narratives unless they are very short and sweet.

Her main point was- don't give up your power to love yourself, to protect yourself, and to decide what is right for you, to anyone else. EXCELLENT and true principle.

"I had given my voice to those who would benefit by my silence....I had learned to expertly aquiesce. I had forgotten how important my words are. It was time to start speaking my piece."

"I had learned to overlook way too much. I had lost my stick....It helps everyone when we tell people to stop."

"To those who hadn't wanted me- at least not in the way we want to be wanted- I had given my right to be here. Maybe they hadn't chosen me, but I could choose myself."

"We don't have to settle for one iota less than we deserve, and our birthright is to be whole, complete, and intact. What we need to know is not how wrong we've been but how wonderful our souls and lives are."
Profile Image for Krystal.
391 reviews42 followers
October 21, 2019

Melody shares the story of how she found enlightenment in the Middle East in a pyramid. She shares what it was like to be in a terrorist ruled country in the mid 90s. She is detained and held by security at two airports, as she is being interrogated and asked why she changed the course of her trip, she explains that she is writing a book on how to love yourself.
She reads her manuscript to the security person, and this is how her experience is told.

I wouldn't say the book is about self-love as it is more about the experience and culture of being in Egypt. I did however, find her experience interesting.
Profile Image for Wendy.
112 reviews6 followers
February 27, 2022
I’m a Melody Beattie fan, so I enjoyed this book. However, the title is misleading and not really touched upon until the final chapter - almost as an afterthought. The title should be, “How I Recognized My Power While Traveling the Middle East”. She specifically shared how difficult it was to write this book - and you can feel it while reading it. If I wasn’t already a Melody Beattie devotee, I likely wouldn’t have enjoyed this book, been able to see the parallels in my life, nor had a desire to read anything else by her. If this is the first book of hers that you have read, please give her a second chance.
Profile Image for Susan.
177 reviews28 followers
August 9, 2019
This book was very interesting as a travelogue of the trip the author took to the Middle East several years ago, the experiences she had and the people she met. There wasn't much in there in the way of practical advice on how to stop being mean to yourself, though. I loved Codependent No More (the first book I read by this author) and did find a lot of practical advice in that one.
Profile Image for Bruce Wadd.
53 reviews
February 25, 2020
What an interesting read. I have read three Beattie books now and she certainly expressed her learnings of life by 'doing' life. Thus she really is an accomplished story teller. She shares both the light and dark of her life, revealing more than most... and by doing that the reader learns more about life and one's self. Thank you.
Profile Image for Karen Flatley.
13 reviews
March 10, 2020
After reading "Codependent No More", I was excited to purchase this book. It was under the self-help category.

This is not a self help book at all.

It reads like fiction. I even checked under the hard cover and flipped through the chapters to make sure I had the right book. I am returning it immediately.
Profile Image for Jaelynn Jenkins.
38 reviews1 follower
December 12, 2021
Not what I expected. However, the end intrigued me enough that I just might read it again. Definitely captivatingly written - as in enjoyable to follow along on the author's journey, wherever it's going. Did suffer some mild anxiety over the author's travel choices and hope nothing more serious happened on her journey.
477 reviews1 follower
May 15, 2024
I've read a number of Melody Beattie books in the 1990's and found them helpful while going through a divorce and pulled this book from the bookcase to reread. The story of her trip to the Middle East was interesting, but some of the situations she wrote about seemed unrealistic. I'm not sure if her insights really discovered the meaning of self-love.
Profile Image for Molly Wolchansky .
22 reviews4 followers
February 3, 2019
I enjoyed the story in this book. I would probably rate it 3.5 stars. I think the problem I had with it was that although it is a self help book, it didn’t seem to help me much. She talked about herself and didn’t give much advice. I think I expected this book to help me more than it did.
Profile Image for Amanda Fleming.
17 reviews6 followers
November 7, 2019
Through lots of cliched pieces of wisdom, obviously embellished stories, and sometimes flat-out fabricated ones, there were a few enlightening bits of this book. It reads, however, as a personal journal of a self-obsessed woman forcing her trip to the Middle East to have “meaning”.
Profile Image for Kelly.
305 reviews1 follower
May 1, 2020
This book is not good. Its as though the author goes on a trip to the Middle East and finds insights as to how one would stop self-critical thought. The problem is that she only writes about the trip. I would definitely not recommend this one.
Profile Image for Dianna.
608 reviews25 followers
January 13, 2021
Can someone please summ this up for me? I mean, did you find the advice on how to stop being mean with yourself?

I feel like I've read an autobiography, some of the descriptions were quite ah... the desert night sky with the pyramids near - fantastic.

But the rest... a blur.
9 reviews3 followers
July 15, 2021
This book can be a quick read but it was hard for me to relate to the book because of some of the things she said. It was overall interesting about her travels but at times I kept asking my self ."why would she do that".
26 reviews
March 2, 2024
Anyone who's searching for themselves needs to read this book. Told like a story about the author's travels for inspiration for this book. It has life changing words in it. Thank you Melody for such an amazing book.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
142 reviews
March 14, 2017
I didn't love the lay out if this book...the story telling by way of interrogation, but the message is there. it was all worth the end when it was brought home to me.
424 reviews
November 16, 2020
It was short. It was a story about her overseas travels. It told some of the same themes in a different way, which I guess was helpful. Not one of her better works.
Profile Image for Deanna Kell.
28 reviews
September 22, 2018
There comes a point in all our lives when we simply have to find a way to like ourselves

I love the way Melody uses her travels to weave the story of her journey. I always feel as though I’m with her, and I always come away, wiser, and stronger.
Profile Image for Lindsey Merkel.
3 reviews3 followers
August 8, 2022
I feel like this book never really made a point. It was a story about her trying to write a book that could live up to this really seductive title and missing the mark by a lot.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 48 reviews

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