Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A must read for anyone whose goal it is to heal Review: A beautifully written book. Annie Rogers writes about her client's and her own story with depth and wisdom. This book is a testimony that relationships are the most healing vehicle we have, no matter what kind of harm has been done.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A poetic story... Review: A Shining Affliction is heart-breakingly beautiful. Rogers is Poetic in her writing, making this story easily read and quotable. I have bookmaked page 190- It is truely an outstanding example of how life and love always triumphs.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Therapy is a two way healing process between two humans Review: Annie not only shows a gift for helping to understand children who have been abused and abandoned, but she also gives us an unflinchingly-honest insider's look at her own therapeutic process of coming to terms with recently resurfaced and repressed memories and pain. By reading her story, the reader witnesses first hand the fact that psychological healing does not come about by one person (i.e. the Therapist) having superior knowledge over the other (the client). Instead, Annie and her wonderful analyst chart previously unmapped territories together in an effort to reconnect those "shattered pieces" that made up her own life's experiences. All the DSM categories and pschylabels in the world cannot teach anyone, either therapist or client, about how the act of psychological healing is manifested. Annie shows us instead of telling us, and by witnessing her and her client's process, we get to glimpse something truly profound and not taught in any pscyhology class.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: a strong memoir, about which I have a few criticisms Review: At its best it reminded me strongly of I Never Promised You A Rose Garden, in that it shows the healing relationship between an excellent therapist and a disturbed female patient. This book had the added benefit of having the patient/author also be a therapist, and while being healed herself doing a marvelous job of participating in the healing of a young boy whose problems are remarkably similar to her own. The book was beautifully written, very open and revealing, and gentle in its nature. I also was grateful to hear the author write of her experiences with a TERRIBLE therapist, who, for self-protection, violated therapeutic boundaries left and right and essentially drove the author mad. A few criticisms: 1) I found annoying the author�s rambling free associations when she was psychotic. It�s like, she seemed to be trying to be literary and give the reader an idea of what was going through her mind, but I think she could have come up with a more coherent, descriptive and readable way of doing it than spouting out word-noise. It reminded me of the Kesey�s dull ramblings about the �fog� and the �machine� in Cuckoo�s Nest. I tended to skim/skip over these parts. 2) I can�t help but wonder what really motivates a person like Annie Rogers to bare her soul to an audience. Granted, she wrote a wonderful and interesting book that contributes to the writing on psychotherapy, but I still think it�s suspect, like to some degree she sold herself out. I find a real beauty and self-respect in anonymity, especially for a psychotherapist, so when someone voluntarily gives it up, I can�t help but question why. (Grandiosity? Career enhancement? Shaming her bad therapist? Getting her good therapist to love her more � and to live up to his prophesy?�or perhaps just �look, mommy, see how great I am!�) 3) I also find it suspect that her �great� final therapist pushed her so hard�yet so subtly�to become a writer. What was in it for him to mold her as such?
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: a strong memoir, about which I have a few criticisms Review: At its best it reminded me strongly of I Never Promised You A Rose Garden, in that it shows the healing relationship between an excellent therapist and a disturbed female patient. This book had the added benefit of having the patient/author also be a therapist, and while being healed herself doing a marvelous job of participating in the healing of a young boy whose problems are remarkably similar to her own. The book was beautifully written, very open and revealing, and gentle in its nature. I also was grateful to hear the author write of her experiences with a TERRIBLE therapist, who, for self-protection, violated therapeutic boundaries left and right and essentially drove the author mad. A few criticisms: 1) I found annoying the author's rambling free associations when she was psychotic. It's like, she seemed to be trying to be literary and give the reader an idea of what was going through her mind, but I think she could have come up with a more coherent, descriptive and readable way of doing it than spouting out word-noise. It reminded me of the Kesey's dull ramblings about the 'fog' and the 'machine' in Cuckoo's Nest. I tended to skim/skip over these parts. 2) I can't help but wonder what really motivates a person like Annie Rogers to bare her soul to an audience. Granted, she wrote a wonderful and interesting book that contributes to the writing on psychotherapy, but I still think it's suspect, like to some degree she sold herself out. I find a real beauty and self-respect in anonymity, especially for a psychotherapist, so when someone voluntarily gives it up, I can't help but question why. (Grandiosity? Career enhancement? Shaming her bad therapist? Getting her good therapist to love her more ' and to live up to his prophesy?'or perhaps just 'look, mommy, see how great I am!') 3) I also find it suspect that her 'great' final therapist pushed her so hard'yet so subtly'to become a writer. What was in it for him to mold her as such?
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: A VOYAGE TO HEALTH & HEALING Review: Dr. Annie Rogers is a psychtherapist in a treament center identified as "Glenwood" in the Chicago area. This work focusses on Ben, a 5-year-old boy in treatment because of his violent and self abusive behaviors and history of abuse and extreme neglect in infancy. Ben uses metaphoric language to describe his torment and only alludes to the abuse he suffered in infancy. He revisits this period in his life by playacting "baby" and "baby bear" with Dr. Rogers playing "mama bear" who saves "baby from the forest fire." This no doubt is a reference to when Ben was abandoned in a burning building at age one. He is finally adopted by a loving couple who have sought all types of treatment for this boy who was only recently toilet trained prior to his admission at Glenwood. During Ben's sessions, the themes of "baby" and "fires" are re-enacted. In one memorable session, Ben arrives in an angel suit to show the doctor his innate goodness. As they progress further in treatment, Dr. Rogers unearths her own traumatic past. She retreats into silence and is ultimately hospitalized. She is also devastated by the refusal of another professional to maintain contact with her. This professional, identified as "Melanie Sherman" appears to be singularly callous in cutting all ties with Dr. Rogers. Like Ben, Dr. Rogers uses nature themed metaphors to describe her displacement. She identifies with the lone bird, circling above the city, sad-eyed and searching. It is to her great fortune that she is treated by the gentle, gifted Dr. Blumenthal. Dr. Blumenthal treats her with respect and at no time does he challenge her when she expresses a delusional concept. He takes her seriously and also tries to soften the blow she feels about Melanie's loss. (One wonders if Melanie was really worth it). Dr. Blumenthal helps Dr. Rogers piece her pysche much like a mental quilt; in reassembling her shattered image, she is able to see her abusive mother with clarity instead of in fragmented short steps. Dr. Blumenthal is truly an angel and a shining, sterling example of humane treatment in therapy. Dr. Rogers, once discharged and back at Glenwood, can use his techniques with Ben. This is a very powerful book of how parallel the lives of doctor and patient are and how similar their boundaries really were.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: The Prevalence of Dismal Psychotherapists Review: Harvard child psychologist and severe child abuse survivor Annie Rogers suffered psychiatric hospitalizations once or twice a year from puberty until her late twenties -- when, after a six year insidiously inept and crazymaking "therapy," an attempt to stab and shoot that therapist and one last hospitalization for another word salad psychosis (and no more insurance), her exceptional and no doubt desperate sister and friends found the gifted and pro bono analyst Dr. Blumenfeld. If this exceptional memoir hasn't become a classic must read in psychology with many reviews by both patients and therapists by now, there are unfortunate reasons. One is that Annie's politically correct adolescence shows in her disdain for the "medical models and diagnoses" Dr. Blumenfeld himself could afford to abandon only because he knew them and the blind therapists who live by them so well -- and thus could authentically reach and stabilize the talented and brilliant, borderline and psychotic personality and doctoral intern Annie. "You have a kind of giftedness, Annie, that probably has always been inseparable from your suffering, and we don't know very much about that yet." What we need now is a wonderful book from the exceptional and sainted Dr. Blumenfeld and more from the healed and gifted writer Dr. Rogers on the two sided magic of play therapy with children. You must meet Annie's beloved "oppositional" 5 year old patient Ben and ponder the 7 foot angel "Theosporus" who protected and accompanied Annie from age 6 to Dr. Blumenfeld's office at 27. A Shining Affliction raises more questions than it answers -- it might have been twice as long, and it's hard to tell if important details were deliberately or unconsciously left out. As it is, it's a daring memoir by a once psychotic Harvard child psychologist that should be a controversial must read classic in both child and adult psychotherapy.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: powerful, beautiful, evoking Review: I began this book because I am a student of Annie's. I could not put it down, feeling like I myself was becoming somehow involved with her relationship with Ben (the 5 year old boy with brown hair and bangs). I felt like I was getting inside both Annie and Ben while watching the beautiful way in which they interacted. I could not be in the room with this book without wanting to read on into the relationship that evolves. The personal aspect of the patient-therapist relationship becomes the center focus as does Annie's life outside of these interactions with Ben. The reflection, time, energy, and exposure that is demonstrated by the author in this book was by far the best I have ever seen. This has become my favorite book, one that I will never live without, and also one that will remind me of what I want to do with my life and how to do it.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A poetic story... Review: I believe this is one of my favorite books of all time. Rogers is an excellent writer -- my words cannot possibly evoke the vibrancy with which she brings her surroundings, her internal process, and her experience of Ben, her five-year-old patient, to life. The book gives a detailed, living-and-breathing picture of working therapeutically with children; at the same time, it shows the necessity of facing, feeling and integrating that which we most fear from our past in order to be fully alive, which is helped beyond measure by having a sensitive therapist to do the healing work with. Rogers' descriptions of Blumenthal, her second therapist, gives us all a standard to hope for, both in terms of the kind of therapist we should all be able to find, and the kind of therapist we should try to be, for those of us in the field.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Finely written, profoundly moving. Review: I believe this is one of my favorite books of all time. Rogers is an excellent writer -- my words cannot possibly evoke the vibrancy with which she brings her surroundings, her internal process, and her experience of Ben, her five-year-old patient, to life. The book gives a detailed, living-and-breathing picture of working therapeutically with children; at the same time, it shows the necessity of facing, feeling and integrating that which we most fear from our past in order to be fully alive, which is helped beyond measure by having a sensitive therapist to do the healing work with. Rogers' descriptions of Blumenthal, her second therapist, gives us all a standard to hope for, both in terms of the kind of therapist we should all be able to find, and the kind of therapist we should try to be, for those of us in the field.
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