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    Descripción

    That single insight sits at the heart of Soul After Trauma, and it changes everything we understand about suffering, fragmentation, and the long, honest road back to wholeness.
    For thousands of years, philosophers, theologians, and healers have wrestled with the same haunting question: What is the soul and what happens when life wounds it beyond what it can carry? Most answers have fallen short. They tell the wounded they are shattered. They offer guilt where grace is needed, and silence where understanding would save a life.
    Albert Baye Schriber takes a different path.
    Drawing on more than two millennia of thought from the ancient breath traditions of Egypt and Greece, through Plato, Aristotle, and the Biblical soul, to Augustine, Aquinas, Nietzsche, Freud, and Jung, and into modern trauma science and parts-based healing, Schriber builds a new architecture of the soul. One that is not fragile, but fiercely adaptive.
    His central argument is both simple and revolutionary: when life becomes unbearable, the soul does not shatter. It divides. It creates separate parts to carry what the whole cannot hold: pain, shame, memory, terror, and it protects the self until safety, truth, love, and meaning make reintegration possible. What looks like brokenness is, in fact, survival at its most sophisticated.
    Soul After Trauma is for anyone who has felt irreparably damaged by what they endured: abuse, grief, trauma, betrayal, or devastating loss. It is for fractured families trying to find each other again, and for a civilization that can no longer agree on who we are or what we owe one another. The wounds are personal. But the pattern, Schriber shows, is ancient and universal.
    This is not a book of easy answers. It is a book of honest ones. And at its center is a vision of hope that does not minimize pain; it redeems it. Integration is possible. Meaning is recoverable. Wholeness, however long it takes and however much it costs, remains within reach.
    Soul After Trauma does not ask you to forget what happened. It asks you to understand it and, in understanding, to begin the slow, courageous work of becoming whole again. That single insight sits at the heart of Soul After Trauma, and it changes everything we understand about suffering, fragmentation, and the long, honest road back to wholeness.
    For thousands of years, philosophers, theologians, and healers have wrestled with the same haunting question: What is the soul and what happens when life wounds it beyond what it can carry? Most answers have fallen short. They tell the wounded they are shattered. They offer guilt where grace is needed, and silence where understanding would save a life.
    Albert Baye Schriber takes a different path.
    Drawing on more than two millennia of thought from the ancient breath traditions of Egypt and Greece, through Plato, Aristotle, and the Biblical soul, to Augustine, Aquinas, Nietzsche, Freud, and Jung, and into modern trauma science and parts-based healing, Schriber builds a new architecture of the soul. One that is not fragile, but fiercely adaptive.
    His central argument is both simple and revolutionary: when life becomes unbearable, the soul does not shatter. It divides. It creates separate parts to carry what the whole cannot hold: pain, shame, memory, terror, and it protects the self until safety, truth, love, and meaning make reintegration possible. What looks like brokenness is, in fact, survival at its most sophisticated.
    Soul After Trauma is for anyone who has felt irreparably damaged by what they endured: abuse, grief, trauma, betrayal, or devastating loss. It is for fractured families trying to find each other again, and for a civilization that can no longer agree on who we are or what we owe one another. The wounds are personal. But the pattern, Schriber shows, is ancient and universal.
    This is not a book of easy answers. It is a book of honest ones. And at its center is a vision of hope that does not minimize pain; it redeems it. Integration is possible. Meaning is recoverable. Wholeness, however long it takes and however much it costs, remains within reach.
    Soul After Trauma does not ask you to forget what happened. It asks you to understand it and, in understanding, to begin the slow, courageous work of becoming whole again.

    Detalles

    Idioma

    Tipo de libro

    Formato del archivo

    EPUB

    Páginas

    132

    Fecha de publicación

    22 de junio de 2026

    Transacción

    Clasificación de contenido

    PG-13