E-Book Bundle Pack (A-Z Glossary Guide & Find A Therapist Guide)

You can get both the digital downloads currently on my site together for a small discount as well if you like, versus buying them separate. Here’s what you’d get with this bundle pack:

  1. The Narcissistic Abuse A-Z Glossary Guide
  2. The Find A Therapist E-Book Guide

Separately, these cost $12 and $6. You can get them both for $15, for a small discount. If you’re already getting the Glossary Guide, you basically get the Find a Therapist guide for half price.

Finding A Suitable Therapist After Narcissistic Abuse (Detailed Guide)

Narcissistic abuse is one of those horrible life experience that usually necessitates the help of a therapist to fully recover from. But the quality of therapists varies massively, and it’s become clear from the experiences of many (including me) that there are a lot of therapists who aren’t suitable for this sort of work.

Therefore, it’s not advisable to just pick the first therapist you find in the phone book, and go from there. You need to be a lot more selective than that when trying to recover from narcissistic abuse, since the therapist needs to have very specialized skills to be effective with this kind of work.

Put more simply, they need to be a good. Not average or mediocre.

This means there ideally needs to be a more rigorous screening process with therapists when you’re looking to recover from narcissistic abuse. That’s what I created this guide for, based on my own experiences (and mistakes I’ve made in this regard).

Here’s what this guide offers you:

  • Detailed and precise requirements (in terms of knowledge base and skills sets) that any therapist you work with MUST have to make the process successful.
  • Simple step by step process on how to find, and then contact, a suitable therapist in your area.
  • Suggestions of some therapeutic schools and modalities which can be effective for this work
  • The one school of psychotherapy to avoid for this sort of work
  • How to know when you’ve found a good therapist.
  • How to know when you’re working with an unsuitable therapist and need to move on (very detailed section on this as it’s very important)
  • Some suggested steps and scripts for if you do need to stop working with a therapist if you struggle to do this (for co-dependent/people pleaser types)
  • A detailed picture of what good therapy looks like and what must come from BOTH sides (therapist and client) to make it successful.
  • Some suggested books and resources to use to help with therapy.

It’s around 7,000 words in total, so I’ve tried to really cover the topic pretty exhaustively and give you a strong framework and plan with which you can begin your search for a suitable therapist who’s going to get you where you need to go. Good luck!

Narcissistic/Psychopathic Abuse A-Z Glossary Guide (Expand Your Vocabulary/Literacy On This Topic)

Just got out of an abusive/confusingly toxic relationship and want to know what the heck just went on? Or want to help someone who’s been through this? If enough boxes are ticked, it’s possible you were dealing with a pathological personality disordered person like a psychopath/narcissist/borderline.

The kind of damage these people can do to others is very specific, very painful and can take a long time to recover from. Reality can indeed be stranger than fiction when dealing with these people.

This eBook aims to help you more easily understand what just happened – the what, the how, the why.

Step #1 of this recovery process is to fully understand and put words to what you just went through. This eBook has been designed to send you a long way towards doing that by offering in depth analysis and conceptualization of the entire topic of toxic abuse from pathological personalities.

Learning, educating yourself and becoming a mini expert is NOT the end of this process, just the start (at some point we need to stop obsessing/ruminating, move on and let go of what happened).

But this first stage of understanding still needs to be gone through. That’s what I want to help with with this eBook.

Here are some common places people find themselves in following Cluster B abuse:

  1. Knowing that something was very, very wrong with what you just went through, but not quite being able to describe or put words to it. Being able to feel the “wrongness” but not always articulate, verbalize or conceptualize it.
  2. Feeling an entire bundle of different emotions that you can’t really differentiate or discern.
  3. Being aware on some level that there’s loads of different resources and information on the internet, but it’s all dispersed the sheer amount of it can be overwhelming (where to start and who to listen to).
  4. Having little or no motivation to even start this process, since this kind of abuse often drains victims of their motivation and concentration.

If any of these points describes you or someone you know, I made this eBook to help out.

I aim to give readers a bird’s eye view of the entire topic of toxic personality disorders (Cluster B spectrum) and abuse tactics/patterns, and also steer them towards some key recovery principles/concepts.

  • 20+ pages
  • 15,000 words
  • 100+ concepts/terms
  • 6 core recovery concepts

FAQs

Q. Who is this course designed for?
A. It’s designed to help beginners new to this topic and probably fresh out of a toxic/abusive relationship, very confused and wanting to better understand what happened and why.

Q. Who is this course NOT for?
A. It’s probably less suitable for people who’ve been consuming content on narcissism/Cluster B disorders/toxic abuse for a long time and already probably know a lot of the terminology and jargon. It may expand your vocabulary a bit more, or give you a different slant on things, but it’s more for people new to this subject.