Finding Sunshine After the Storm
By (Author) Mcgee S
New Harbinger Publications
New Harbinger Publications
1st November 2008
Workbook ed.
United States
General
Non Fiction
Paperback
136
When a child has experienced sexual abuse, he or she may struggle with low self-esteem and find it difficult to trust others. Though the mental damage from such abuse is significant, it can be substantially reversed if a caring adult is willing to dedicate a few minutes each day to helping the child heal. This book contains forty compassionate activities kids who have suffered abuse can do to raise their self-esteem, establish boundaries, and identify people they can trust.
These simple activities drawn from a variety of therapeutic modalities are best used in combination with counseling to help kids recover from trauma and build confidence. As children work through Finding Sunshine After the Storm, they will learn to deal with painful feelings in positive ways, reach out for support, and feel proud of themselves by taking a bow after important accomplishments. This workbook can help them reclaim the pride, joy, and security they may feel as though they have lost-the sunshine after the storm.
This book is an incredible resource to help kids heal.
-Deanne Ginns-Gruenberg, owner of The Self Esteem Shop in Royal Oak, MI
Sharon A. McGee, LMFT, is a therapist who works with children, adolescents, and adults. McGee has specialized in the field of trauma recovery for more than twenty years and currently maintains a private practice in Montgomery, AL. She is also a freelance author. Curtis Holmes, PhD, is a psychologist who has been in practice for over thirty years. After studying school psychology and clinical psychology at the University of Georgia, he practiced as a school psychologist for three years in rural South Carolina, and then went on to practice as a clinical psychologist at a large mental health facility in Louisville, KY. Since 1977, he has been in private practice in Georgia, where he specializes in the assessment and treatment of child sexual abuse survivors, family members, and offenders.