590. Healing the Shame That Binds YouTo: <dave@rinkworks.com>, <sam@rinkworks.com>
Subject: book report Date: Thu, 7 May 2009 13:53:09 -0500 I need one on a book by John Bradshaw called "Healing the Shame that Binds You" If you know any other place to look or suggestions pleases advice. Thanks From: The Rink <sam@rinkworks.com> Subject: Re: book report Date: Thu, 7 May 2009 18:02:26 -0400 Sure, I can take a stab at summarizing this for you. "Healing the Shame That Binds You" is a Dickensian-style tragedy set in the modern day. The main character of the story, Joe E. Everyman, has the name he does because he is representative of us all. In the opening chapter of the book, Joe is mourning the death of someone close and special to him, but we aren't yet sure who. Gradually, through flashbacks (an expressionistic device of style to allow our reading experience to closely mimic the experience of the flood of memories Joe endures through his grief) we realize that it was his first wife that died when she found out that he had a secret second wife. We see him initially happy to be getting away with his double life but gradually overcome with shame: a nagging sense of wrongness that starts small but grows and fills his every thought. He becomes obsessed about trying to make his life right, but he is helpless to do so. He can't figure out how to extricate himself from his shame without hurting one or both of the women. A surprise revelation cues the third act, wherein he discovers that his second wife is actually his first wife's great grand niece. They were close, once, but lost touch when the second wife accidentally killed the first wife's dog. The incident lead to feelings of bitterness and then, ultimately, SHAME. But while they each independently put the matter behind him, they had lost touch until one day they met each other online. Six months later, they realized that -- gasp! -- they were each other's long-lost great grand aunt-niece! So they agree to meet, and they discover that they're married to the same man, and plot to kill the guy for revenge, but when they go to do it, they find out he's already dead. Because SHAME killed him! The moral of the story is that shame binds us all, and no matter how much we try to heal ourselves, we can't, because eventually our "wives" -- the metaphorical wives that represent those parts of our life we try to keep secret lest SHAME overwhelm us -- will find out about each other. That should be enough information for you to write a pretty convincing book report. Let me know how it goes. -- Sam. |
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