
GoodPersonEffed
Brevity is my middle name, but my name was TL
- Jan 11, 2020
- 6,726
Please share any that have helped you!
Over the years, many books helped me feel "right" after years of false blame and wrong behaviors directed at me, but then what comes next? The following books helped me progress beyond victim and abuser labels, and start being in my own self-power. They provided frameworks I regularly apply to help me in assessing others' character and motives, creating and maintaining boundaries, and recognizing when I'm not honoring others' boundaries and autonomy. (It's easy to be "right"; it takes courage and strength to face when I'm the one in the wrong and change my behavior, as I wish my parents could have done.)
Boundaries - I ignored the Christian acrobatics and the my-shit-doesn't-stink tone of the authors. Helped me to know what's in my yard and what's in others' yards (who is responsible for what), how to recognize when others are trying to override my boundaries and identify their techniques, how to recognize when I'm overriding my own, how to set consequences to reinforce boundaries, becoming autonomous from parents, and more. I finally got a clue about how my dad's passivity and non-connection were boundary issues.
In Sheep's Clothing - Called covert manipulation, the tactics used by narcissists and others to manipulate, including gaslighting. Shows how some people always have to win and set up situations that are only win or lose. Goes well with Boundaries, provides even more behaviors that indicate one's boundaries are being attacked. I had to overlook the author's I'm-very-right tone and propensity for labeling. I have to remind myself to not label someone just because they use the techniques; it's their consistent behavior that reveals their character. This book is taught me to notice that behavior reveals character, and helped my ability to judge others more accurately. Teaches how to recognize when it's best to go no contact, and best practices when you can't.
Controlling People and Victory Over Verbal Abuse, two of the four books by Patricia Evans. Illustrate how other people define you and cannot recognize your autonomy, that is, your separateness from them. I had very controlling parents and a verbally abusive mother, and after years of therapy and trying to work with other books, these two finally made it clear what was going on. I experienced a lot of validation. Not the standard labels of narcissist, borderline, and other DSM faux-pathologies, which are limiting and condemning, but rather the skewed lenses through which one sees the others they try to control. It's really not about you, and these books show how. I had an aggressive mother and a distant father who supported her, I finally got a framework to see how each was trying to control the person they perceived, not the actual me. She can get a bit repetitive, sees herself as very right, and creates her own labels, but the labels serve the allegories she sets up. She has a tendency to try to sell her other books and herself. She is a self-professed expert with an education in psychology but is not a clinician, she's a public speaker, consultant, and gives seminars to audiences and clinicians.
Over the years, many books helped me feel "right" after years of false blame and wrong behaviors directed at me, but then what comes next? The following books helped me progress beyond victim and abuser labels, and start being in my own self-power. They provided frameworks I regularly apply to help me in assessing others' character and motives, creating and maintaining boundaries, and recognizing when I'm not honoring others' boundaries and autonomy. (It's easy to be "right"; it takes courage and strength to face when I'm the one in the wrong and change my behavior, as I wish my parents could have done.)
Boundaries - I ignored the Christian acrobatics and the my-shit-doesn't-stink tone of the authors. Helped me to know what's in my yard and what's in others' yards (who is responsible for what), how to recognize when others are trying to override my boundaries and identify their techniques, how to recognize when I'm overriding my own, how to set consequences to reinforce boundaries, becoming autonomous from parents, and more. I finally got a clue about how my dad's passivity and non-connection were boundary issues.
In Sheep's Clothing - Called covert manipulation, the tactics used by narcissists and others to manipulate, including gaslighting. Shows how some people always have to win and set up situations that are only win or lose. Goes well with Boundaries, provides even more behaviors that indicate one's boundaries are being attacked. I had to overlook the author's I'm-very-right tone and propensity for labeling. I have to remind myself to not label someone just because they use the techniques; it's their consistent behavior that reveals their character. This book is taught me to notice that behavior reveals character, and helped my ability to judge others more accurately. Teaches how to recognize when it's best to go no contact, and best practices when you can't.
Controlling People and Victory Over Verbal Abuse, two of the four books by Patricia Evans. Illustrate how other people define you and cannot recognize your autonomy, that is, your separateness from them. I had very controlling parents and a verbally abusive mother, and after years of therapy and trying to work with other books, these two finally made it clear what was going on. I experienced a lot of validation. Not the standard labels of narcissist, borderline, and other DSM faux-pathologies, which are limiting and condemning, but rather the skewed lenses through which one sees the others they try to control. It's really not about you, and these books show how. I had an aggressive mother and a distant father who supported her, I finally got a framework to see how each was trying to control the person they perceived, not the actual me. She can get a bit repetitive, sees herself as very right, and creates her own labels, but the labels serve the allegories she sets up. She has a tendency to try to sell her other books and herself. She is a self-professed expert with an education in psychology but is not a clinician, she's a public speaker, consultant, and gives seminars to audiences and clinicians.