Pat Dallacroce
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Articles


Understanding Shame
--Patricia Dallacroce
shame_facts_for_clients_3_17_23.pdf
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Addiction as Attachment Trauma
--Patricia Dallacroce

addiction_as_attachment_trauma_web.pdf
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Resources

I am listing a few of the psychotherapy books that I have found to be illuminating, moving, healing, comforting and/or in some way helpful to me.   

Even though some of these are written specifically for therapists, 
I read several of these before I was a therapist and found them to be helpful.   
Fisher, J. (2017). Healing the Fragmented Selves of Trauma Survivors: Overcoming Internal Self-Alienation. New York: Taylor and Francis.
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Fosha, D., Siegel, D., & Solomon, M. (2009). The healing power of emotion. New York: Norton. 

Frederick, R. (2009).  Living like you mean it: Use the wisdom and power of your emotions to get the life you really want. San Francisco: 
               Jossey-Bass. 

Greenberg, L. S., & Goldman, R. N. (2008). Emotion-focused couples therapy: The dynamics of emotion, love, and power.  American
              Psychological Association.

Greenspan, M. (2003).  Healing through the dark emotions: The wisdom of grief, fear, and despair.  Boston: Shambhala Publications

Herman, J. L. (1997). Trauma and recovery: The aftermath of violence: From domestic abuse to political terror.  New York: Basic Books.

Ogden, P., Minton, K., & Pain, C. (2006).  Trauma and the body.  New York: Norton.

Siegel, D. (2010).  Mindsight: The new science of personal transformation. New York: Random House. 

Schwartz, R. (2008).  You are the one you've been waiting for: Bringing courageous love to intimate relationships.  Oak Park, IL.:Trailheads.
​           
Van Der Kolk, B. (2014). The body keeps the score: Brain, mind, and body in the healing of trauma. New York: Penguin.

Wallin, D. (2007).  Attachment in psychotherapy.  New York: The Guilford Press.





 “Our regard (from the French regarder, to look) is itself a worthy object of attention, to be held in awareness, and the consequences of it seen, felt, and known.  For it is not just seeing that is important.  There is also being seen.  And if that is true for us, it is true for the other… That presence holds us and reassures us and lets us know that our inclination to be who we actually are and to show ourselves in our fullness is a healthy impulse, because who we actually are has been seen, recognized, and accepted, our core sovereignty-of-being embraced.” 
Kabat-Zinn, J. (2013).  Being Seen. Mindfulness, 4, 71-72.
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