To Be Loved: A Story of Truth, Trauma, and Transformation
4.9 4.9 out of 5 stars | 183 ratings
Price: 15.3
Last update: 11-02-2024
About this item
Rarely does a trauma therapist disclose their own trauma history...yet it's the untold, brutally honest, incredibly heartbreaking story of Dr. Frank Anderson that made him the world-renowned trauma expert he is today.
Known for his magnetic and radiant personality, Frank spends his time training thousands of clinicians around the world on how to help clients with complex trauma make sense of their suffering. But underneath this charismatic exterior are his dark family secrets, including the marks of child abuse from his father and the invisible scars of shame.
In To Be Loved, Frank shares his confusing experience of growing up an outsider in a typical Midwestern Italian American home that was at one turn fiercely loving, but at the same time unaccepting, abusive, and rife with secrets.
After enduring six years of therapy as a child in the 1970s, he was programmed to be something that he wasn't for decades, and became driven to create the perfect life—until it all fell apart.
It was only then that he realized resilience, forgiveness, and facing his trauma were the keys to living an authentic life—and finally knowing what it feels like to be loved.
Top reviews from the United States
Beautifully written, your words flow with ease off the page.
I feel seen, heard and understood through your candor.
Thank you!
Family dynamics are indeed complicated and Frank's recollections of family holidays thaf were alternatively grandiose and disastrous are illuminating. They were times of enormous shane and deep disappointment as well am unbesrsbjr yearning to be known.
For so many peoole being able to achieve a 360 degree view of their childhood is impossible. Their family bonds are simoly too enmeshed to go there and there is no 8ncebtve to change. The comfort of the familiar is too compelling.
Rather in the case of most memoirs few of us are left wanting more from the story. In Frank's case there is a real yearning ro know more of how he fared in treating the homeless and severely mentally ill as well ax how he will navigate the complexities of growing old
In many respects, Frank's life as a middle class child with a professional father looked good. In fact he was absurdly neglected and bullied mercilessly.
Journeying from perfectionism to being the father of two developmentally challenged children is a revelation. In so many ways Frank's insights are profound and tender explorations of the unthinkable. Being a gay man in rigidly insupoortivw catholic family. Marrying the right person for all the wrong reasons. Thereafter Frank doesn't fail to deliver relatable anecdotes in a authentic compassonate voice. The familiar is a tall task to write about whuch is way so many memoirs fall flat.
Ultimately finding compassion for the father who tyranised him on his deathbed is a tender loving elegy of deep reflection and tremendous skill So is the trumph of finding a loving stable marriage in a supportive community against all the odds
In so many ways often the overachiever is a #David Goggins# style of beating the odds and delivering ultimatum after ultimatum rooted in fear and rage
That's not Frank.
Instead Frank Andersin remakes himself into a loving compassionate present father, a son who has the courage to confront his neglectful mother, a doting spouse; but most of all a visionary teacher and presenter on trauma who has changed thousands of lives.
A triumph.