The Teen Trauma Journal


Book Description

This therapeutic journal provides you with the tools and coping strategies you need to better look after yourself. Covering topics such as attachment, thinking styles, self-esteem and new relationships, it looks at how early relationships and trauma may have impacted you, and supports you in planning for your future. Authored by experienced Consultant Clinical Psychologist Laura Stokes, this journal will be a source of support and guidance you as you navigate life's ups and downs.




Trauma Recovery Journal


Book Description

Recover from trauma and live a happier life The symptoms of trauma look different from person to person, but there’s one method that’s been proven to help: journaling. The Trauma Recovery Journal is a safe place to explore, reflect, and find support on your healing journey. The insightful writing prompts, expert advice, and inspiring affirmations will help you overcome trauma and rebuild your life. Start where you are—Everyone’s path to healing is unique, and this journal will help you take the first step. You’ll begin by naming your trauma, talking about your symptoms, and defining your goals. Explore your emotions—Once you acknowledge your trauma, you’ll examine your reactions to the experience. By going deeper you’ll learn how to avoid triggers and develop positive methods of coping. Learn healthy self-care—Immerse yourself in prompts and evidence-based exercises like breathing and mindfulness that will help you be your best self. Better manage your trauma symptoms and feel hopeful about life again with help from the Trauma Recovery Journal.




The PTSD Survival Guide for Teens


Book Description

Your trauma doesn’t need to define you. In The PTSD Survival Guide for Teens, trauma specialist Sheela Raja—along with her teen daughter Jaya Ashrafi—offers evidence-based skills to help you find strength, confidence, and resilience in the aftermath of trauma. If you’ve experienced trauma or suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), the world can seem like a very frightening place. You may even question your own deeply held beliefs, as well as the motives of others. It’s important for you to know that you aren’t alone, and there isn’t anything wrong with you. Many teens have suffered traumatic events, and there are solid skills you can learn that will help you recover. So, how can you begin healing and start building the life you were always meant to lead? In this compassionate guide, you’ll find skills based in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), and acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) to help you tackle anxiety and harmful avoidance behaviors; manage negative emotions; cope with flashbacks and nightmares; and develop trusting, healthy relationships—even if your trust in others has been shaken to the core. You’ll also learn more about the diagnosis and symptoms of PTSD and understand what kind of help is available to you. Whether you’ve been diagnosed with PTSD or are simply living with the aftereffects of a traumatic event, you shouldn’t have to suffer alone. This book will help you to find strength within so you can move forward. This book has been selected as an Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies Self-Help Book Recommendation—an honor bestowed on outstanding self-help books that are consistent with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) principles and that incorporate scientifically tested strategies for overcoming mental health difficulties. Used alone or in conjunction with therapy, our books offer powerful tools readers can use to jump-start changes in their lives.




The Road to Healing


Book Description

This is a journal formatted workbook for teen survivors of sexual abuse. Using simple, easy to read headers such as "This is how my life was before the abuse" and "I'm afraid if people knew they would think differently of me" teens are guided through the process of healing from the trauma of sex abuse. This journal can be used by clients of varying skills and abilities and may be used for writing as well as drawing. This journal is perfect as an extra tool for therapists and providers who work with teen survivors of sexual abuse. It has an easy to use and understand format enabling it to be used with younger teens and with teens of varying abilities and skill levels. It is filled with reproducible pages allowing therapists to copy chosen pages for use in therapy. It is ideal for youth who process emotions best through writing and can be used as a tool for art therapists as well.




Treating Trauma in Adolescents


Book Description

This book presents an innovative and empathic approach to working with traumatized teens. It offers strategies for getting through to high-risk adolescents and for building a strong attachment relationship that can help get development back on track. Martha B. Straus draws on extensive clinical experience as well as cutting-edge research on attachment, developmental trauma, and interpersonal neurobiology. Vivid case material shows how to engage challenging or reluctant clients, implement interventions that foster self-regulation and an integrated sense of identity, and tap into both the teen's and the therapist's moment-to-moment emotional experience. Essential topics include ways to involve parents and other caregivers in treatment. ÿ




Writing to Heal


Book Description

This book takes readers through a series of guided writing exercises that help them explore their feelings about difficult experiences. Each chapter begins with an introduction that explains how to proceed with journal exercises and what they are structured to help accomplish. The exercises leave readers with a strong sense of their value in the world.




These Three Words


Book Description

A practical workbook combining a series of exercises and tools designed to assist teenagers who are struggling with anxiety. Suitable for use by the teenage reader on their own, with a parent, or in a group.




The Sexual Trauma Workbook for Teen Girls


Book Description

The Sexual Trauma Workbook for Teen Girls offers healing, real-life stories from survivors and powerful, evidence-based tools to help you reclaim your life after sexual abuse or trauma. If you’ve been sexually abused or experienced sexual trauma, you may feel confused, angry, ashamed, and unable to move forward emotionally. You're not alone. Like many teens who’ve been abused, you may be tempted to keep the secret locked deep inside and feel uncomfortable discussing your struggles with others. If so, this book can help you find your voice. This empowering workbook will help you move past your trauma and serve as a comforting reminder that you are strong and resilient. Healing is possible—and with healing, comes victory. In this book, you’ll find true stories from other teen survivors, and in reading the stories you’ll find reassurance in knowing you aren’t alone in your experiences. You’ll also find practical and proven-effective strategies and exercises to help promote emotional healing and reclaim your sense of self. Sexual abuse or trauma may be a part of your past, but it doesn’t need to define who you are now. This book will help you as you start on the path toward healing so you can move forward with confidence.




52-Week Feelings Journal for Teens


Book Description

Help your teen explore their feelings using this guided journal Being a teenager comes with a lot of feelings, and this supportive journal is the perfect place to explore all of them. Using writing prompts and evidence-based practices, teens will reflect on their emotions and get to know themselves better every day for a whole year. What sets this guided journal for teens apart: Feelings basics--The handy Feelings Chart located at the beginning of the book will help your teen identify their feelings as they work through this journal. 52 weeks of feelings--Journaling prompts built around weekly themes like "connection with others" and "making decisions" will encourage teens to explore their emotions and learn how to express them. Feelings challenges--Simple weekly challenges like writing a letter to a friend, listening to a new kind of music, and saying hello to someone new at school will help them put everything they're learning into practice. Mindfulness exercises--They'll wrap up each week with short exercises to help them learn how to live in the moment and feel happy, calm, thankful, empathetic, and confident. Give the teen in your life a safe place to explore their inner world with the 52-Week Feelings Journal for Teens.




Not Just Bad Kids


Book Description

Not Just Bad Kids: The Adversity and Disruptive Behavior Link explores the theory that all behavior makes sense in context. If you understand a person’s frame of reference – their background, history and experience – you can imagine what might be driving their behavior. The book describes the social, cultural and environmental factors that shape the lives of many youths, including early childhood attachment which sets the foundation for how they interact with authority figures. The book also delves into an explanation of conduct disorder which is characterized by persistent, repetitive behaviors that violate the basic rights of other human beings and break rules. Studies have shown that conduct disorder affects 1-4% of adolescents in the United States and oppositional defiant disorder is estimated to develop in approximately 10.2% of children. The presence of DBD is also known to be more prevalent in boys than it is in girls. As there is a growing need to understand why children and adolescent exhibit signs of hostility, defiance and isolation, this book is an ideal resource for this timely topic. Encompasses both ODD and conduct disorder Introduces readers to the social, cultural and environmental factors that play a crucial part in disruptive behavior Demonstrates the interrelationship of attachment problems, chronic trauma and disruptive behavior Discusses current best practices for intervention and treatment in youth with disruptive behaviors Provides casework examples of patients with disruptive behavior disorder