In You Can Heal Your Heart, self-help luminary Louise Hay and renowned grief and loss expert David Kessler, the protégé of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, have come together to start a conversation on healing grief. This remarkable book discusses the emotions that occur when a relationship leaves you brokenhearted, a marriage ends in divorce, or a loved one dies. It will also foster awareness and compassion, providing you with the courage to face many other types of losses and challenges, such as saying good-bye to a beloved pet, losing your job, coming to terms with a life-threatening illness or disease, and much more. With a perfect blend of Louise’s teachings and affirmations on personal growth and transformation and David’s many years of working with those in grief, this empowering book will inspire an extraordinary new way of thinking, bringing hope and fresh insights into your life and even your current and future relationships. You will not only learn how to help heal your grief, but you will also discover that, yes, you can heal your heart.
HOW TO SURVIVE A PERSONAL LOSS For those who are not familiar with the author(s), Louise Hay is the founder of Hay House Publishing, which is one of the most prolific distributors of modern inspirational and motivational publications. HHP publishes books for some of the most esteemed authors in this field like Wayne Dyer and many others. (I have read dozens myself and am on their email notification list.) A lot of people who have no experience with books like this one and are not well read or educated might refer to them as…
Grab your pen! This book came my way providentially. My heart needed a lot of healing and letting go of old wounds.So as Louise Hay and David Kessler would put it in the form of affirmation, all people and all situations are delivering me towards my higher good.An easy book to read, chapters divided into short sections, gentle in its words, respectful of the matter being discussed but firm in showing the path to self-empowerment and healing.This book deals with all that has to do with losses…
A Bit Too Formulaic For Me, Not Unlike You Can Create an Exceptional Life Although I enjoyed “You Can Create an Exceptional Life” by Louise Hay and Cheryl Richardson, I found the book to be rather informal and not creative or ingenuitive enough. Ms. Richardson would comment when she turned on her recorder and then would record what Louise had said. Here David Kessler is doing the same thing. I find it a turn off. The book does offer some comfort, but had I been in a place of deep grieving, I don’t want to know the technicalities of when the recorder was turned on…