Passing along the Info

Just passing along an email I got, in case any of you are interested in checking out the site. 🙂

You are invited to check out what’s new at www.catharsisfoundation.org – a site for survivors of all forms of child abuse and we hope you will help us to reach other survivors.
Do you have a book to promote?
Do you have a message to share with other survivors?
Do you have a special service to offer survivors exclusively?
Do you need GOOD inexpensive editing of your manuscripts?
Would you like to help survivors in some way?
Is your name entered to win free books?
Please share this message with survivors or supporters and encourage people to JOIN THE SURVIVOR COMMUNITY at Catharsis Foundation for survivors of all forms of child abuse.
Thank you!
Catharsis Foundation
www.catharsisfoundation.org

Similar Posts

  • |

    Note About Comments

    Someone left a couple of comments on the site last night, anonymously, and then sent me an email using the email form anonymously as well, requesting that I remove the comments they had made, as they were embarrassed by having made them public. I agreed to honor that request, feeling that any comments made here…

  • How Shame Keeps Us Disconnected

    The context for this quote is a handful of stories where someone felt ashamed of an event or something that they’d allowed people to believe about them that wasn’t true. Marisa goes on to talk about how when we have something we won’t discuss, it creates a separation from other people, and that separation can take away from humanness. Our interactions with other people are blocked off. We know we aren’t sharing our whole selves with the people we should be. That block can protect us from potential pain, but it also prevents us from having all the benefits of having close relationships with other humans.

    Doesn’t that sound exactly like growing up keeping our abuse secret?

    We grow up with shame around something that was never our fault. That shame prevents us from fully connecting with other human beings. That lack of connection harms our mental health as adults. We struggle to heal without one of the most powerful tools in our arsenal as human beings, other people. We keep our secrets and hide our shame, meaning we will never know the healing power of being accepted and loved by those who know our whole selves.

  • Trying to Make Sense

    My wife recently returned from a trip to Israel. This weekend, over breakfast, she was telling me about meeting Eliezer Ayalon and getting to hear his story of surviving the Holocaust. The one point of the story that really struck me was that, upon his arrival in Israel, no one wanted to hear about his…

One Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)