Women Who Hurt Themselves: A Book Of Hope And Understanding
By (Author) Dusty Miller
Basic Books
Basic Books
6th July 2005
United States
General
Non Fiction
616.85820082
Paperback
294
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
For years, the harm that some women do to themselves was ignored and silenced, both in psychological literature and in homes and hospitals. Dusty Millers eye-opening book revealed the truth about a syndrome that has plagued millionsand continues to do so today, endangering ever-younger lives. Filled with moving stories, this powerful book was the first to focus on women who engage in different forms of self-mutilation. Miller is widely recognized as the first expert to identify the roots of cutting and other self-injurious behavior in women. These women suffer from what she calls Trauma Reenactment Syndrome (TRS), a pattern of behavior in which they reenact severe psychological or physical harm done to them as children. In the decade since her work was first published, new research has supported Millers perspective. In her introduction to this tenth anniversary edition, Miller discusses what self-harming women and abuse survivors have known all along: that self-injury activates endorphins that actually calm the psychic pain of old wounds. She describes the latest treatments geared to this viewand offers, once again, hope and understanding to the women themselves and to those who care for them.
Dusty Miller, Ed.D., is a psychologist in private practice. A professor in the Department of Clinical Psychology at Antioch/New England Graduate School, she also teaches at the Smith College School for Social Work. She lectures frequently on women who hurt themselves and has written on the subject for many professional publications.