Email us for help
Loading...
Premium support
Log Out
Our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy have changed. We think you'll like them better this way.
So under the welcome sweeping influence of the #MeToo movement, you've found the courage to denounce your sexual harasser. Or maybe you've just finally told someone, or simply felt validated by the stories of so many others who experienced what you did. But is it enough?
Statistics show that 1 in 4 women will be sexually abused or assaulted in their lifetime and will on average be up to 4 times more likely to develop depression, suicidal thoughts, PTSD, drug and alcohol abuse, eating disorders, relationship problems and physical and/or mental health issues. And, if unhealed, will not be able to live free, purposeful and joyful lives.
While #MeToo may give you back your voice, is it enough to bring about the healing you desire? Will voicing what happened, in and of itself, repair a stunted life? Can years of self-blame, failed relationships, envy of perceived "normal" happy women, addictive behavior or other self-destructive thinking or habits be eradicated by merely verbalizing what happened to you?
No, says today's special guest Carolin Hauser-Carson, a renowned Humanistic Psychotherapist with a large and successful practice that helps women who have been victims of sexual abuse. Getting validation or voicing your anger is only the starting point.
The key to healing from sexual trauma is "integration." Only through integration and letting go can one truly be released from the full energetic impact of it. Through Carolin's 7-Step Blossom Journey, the integration process is completed so that wholeness is restored and normal healthy relationships become possible.
In her book,Blossom: 7 Steps to Sexual Healing, Carolin lays out a simple and very effective 7-week program that brings about the healing necessary to allow women to create the life they truly dream of living.