The Lie That Kills Us: We All Have Elephants
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Beschrijving
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The Lie That Kills Us: We All Have ElephantsWhat if the greatest threat to our well-being isn't addiction itself-but our refusal to see it?After nearly dying from addiction, pastor and recovery advocate Ed Treat spent decades helping people find freedom from substances, compulsive behaviors, and destructive patterns. Along the way, he discovered a surprising truth: the forces that drive addiction are not unique to addicts. They are deeply human.In The Lie That Kills Us, Treat explores the hidden power of denial-the "elephants in the room" we learn not to see. Through raw personal stories, biblical reflection, recovery wisdom, psychology, and neuroscience, he reveals how denial operates not only in addiction, but also in families, churches, organizations, and entire cultures.Drawing on nearly forty years of recovery and twenty-five years of pastoral ministry, Treat takes readers on a journey from hiding to healing. Along the way, he examines the role of trauma, family systems, attachment, shame, spirituality, and community in both human brokenness and recovery.This is not simply a book about addiction. It is a book about what it means to be human.Whether your elephant is alcohol, drugs, work, perfectionism, people-pleasing, digital distraction, family dysfunction, or wounds you've spent a lifetime avoiding, this book offers a compassionate invitation to stop hiding and start telling the truth.Honest, hopeful, and deeply personal, The Lie That Kills Us challenges readers to confront the lies that keep them stuck and discover the freedom that becomes possible when denial gives way to truth, grace, and authentic connection.Because the elephant has been in the room long enough.It's time to lead it out.
The Lie That Kills Us: We All Have ElephantsWhat if the greatest threat to our well-being isn't addiction itself-but our refusal to see it?After nearly dying from addiction, pastor and recovery advocate Ed Treat spent decades helping people find freedom from substances, compulsive behaviors, and destructive patterns. Along the way, he discovered a surprising truth: the forces that drive addiction are not unique to addicts. They are deeply human.In The Lie That Kills Us, Treat explores the hidden power of denial-the "elephants in the room" we learn not to see. Through raw personal stories, biblical reflection, recovery wisdom, psychology, and neuroscience, he reveals how denial operates not only in addiction, but also in families, churches, organizations, and entire cultures.Drawing on nearly forty years of recovery and twenty-five years of pastoral ministry, Treat takes readers on a journey from hiding to healing. Along the way, he examines the role of trauma, family systems, attachment, shame, spirituality, and community in both human brokenness and recovery.This is not simply a book about addiction. It is a book about what it means to be human.Whether your elephant is alcohol, drugs, work, perfectionism, people-pleasing, digital distraction, family dysfunction, or wounds you've spent a lifetime avoiding, this book offers a compassionate invitation to stop hiding and start telling the truth.Honest, hopeful, and deeply personal, The Lie That Kills Us challenges readers to confront the lies that keep them stuck and discover the freedom that becomes possible when denial gives way to truth, grace, and authentic connection.Because the elephant has been in the room long enough.It's time to lead it out.
AmazonPagina's: 244, Paperback, Elephant Wisdom Press
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