The Sitting Swing
Finding the Wisdom to Know the Difference
-
- USD 6.99
-
- USD 6.99
Descripción editorial
Irene Watson's pretentious life could go no further until
she faced her past. Her moving and inspiring memoir
begins at the end, in a recovery center, where she has
gone to understand a childhood fraught with abuse, guilt, and uncertainty.
Two distinct parts of the book look at abusive child rearing and the process of
recovery years later. This story shows change, growth, and forgiveness are possible.
It gives hope and freedom to those accepting the past and re-writing life
scripts that have been passed down for generations. It's never too late to
change your life, never too late to heal.
Praise for The Sitting Swing
"Watson's memoir recounts her fearful, highly sheltered years as she uncovers
the childhood wounds leading to her personality crisis. This is an earnest
memoir, well structured." --PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"The Sitting Swing is the poignant story of the author's successful journey to
transcend the patterns sculpted by her parents and childhood experiences.
I loved it!" --NANCY OELKLAUS, PHD, LIFE COACH AND AUTHOR OF JOURNEY FROM HEAD TO HEART: LIVING
AND WORKING AUTHENTICALLY
"As a teacher of transformational principles for self-discovery and the treatment
of addictions, reading The Sitting Swing inspired me to a richer new voice,
infusing my lectures with a deeper level of meaning. Irene's personal story of
transformation will add to the experience, strength, and hope we share with
our clients and to anyone who is on a path of personal transformation. "
--MARY LYNN SZYMANDERA, LCAS, CEFIP, OUTPATIENT MANAGER, PAVILLON INTERNATIONAL,
AND EQUINE PROGRAM DIRECTOR, SAWHORSE HILL
Author info at www.irenewatson.com
Book #6 in the Spiritual Dimensions Series from Loving Healing Press www.LovingHealing.com
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Named for a childhood swing the author remembers as being impossible to get moving because of the rose bushes directly behind it, Watson's memoir recounts her fearful, highly sheltered years growing up an only child to Ukrainian immigrants in 1940s Alberta, Canada. Watson writes from the hindsight of her 50s, living in a Quebec addiction-recovery facility, where she has checked herself in for 28 days, unsure whether she can stay married to a husband she considers as overbearing as her mother was to her. Gradually, Watson uncovers the childhood wounds leading to her personality crisis: until age six, she lived in a log cabin in the wilderness within a few feet of her prohibitive mother, who pined for her dead firstborn son. Watson was largely ignored by her farmer father, abused by cousins and neighbors, and unable at first to speak English at her schoolhouse or make friends. Denied expression and love within the family, she acted out and married a man who helped continue to make excuses for her lack of ambition. She undergoes a rigorous 12-step program and a systematic breaking down of her ego so that she can re-create herself. This is an earnest memoir, well structured, though the writing lacks rigorous urgency.