



Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself
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3.7 • 269 Ratings
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Revised and Updated, with a New Chapter on Trauma and Anxiety, a List of Resources, and More
Over 7 Million Copies Sold
A cultural phenomenon that has helped heal millions of readers, this modern classic holds the key to understanding codependency and unlocking its hold on your life.
As heard on Glennon Doyle’s We Can Do Hard Things podcast.
Melody Beattie’s compassionate and insightful look into codependency—the concept of losing oneself in the name of helping another—has guided millions of readers toward the understanding that they are powerless to change anyone but themselves and that caring for the self is where healing begins.
Is someone else's problem your problem? If, like so many others, you've lost sight of your own life in the drama of tending to a loved one’s self-destructive behavior, you may be codependent––and you may find yourself in this book. With personal reflections, exercises, and instructive stories drawn from Beattie’s own life and the lives of those she’s counseled, Codependent No More helps you break old patterns and maintain healthy boundaries and offers a clear and achievable path to healing, hope, freedom, and happiness.
This revised edition includes an all-new chapter on trauma and anxiety—subjects Beattie has long felt necessary to address within the context of codependency—making it even more relevant today than it was when it first entered the national conversation over 35 years ago.
Customer Reviews
See AllFrustrating
Good content but it is extremely frustrating as it it sounds like she is recording from multiple microphones in multiple setting. It detracts from the delivery. Sounds like she is recording from a cheap microphone from the basement of her house. So annoying.
Needs to be Retired Already
12 step programs are not the answer to everything. This is very Christian. This has so much body shaming and fatphobia. It’s repetitive. It’s exhausting. This is very dated and needs either a complete revision or needs to be replaced by something newer, more scientific, more accurate, and more inclusive. Even as a revised edition, this is very much a product of the 1980s and seriously needs to be left there already.
Codependency trigger
Nothing like spending money to feel like a second thought. The way the updated parts were not very well sliced into the previous reading was quite frankly insulting.