Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Facing Codependence: What It Is, Where It Comes from, How It Sabotages Our Lives PDF

Facing Codependence: What It Is, Where It Comes from, How It Sabotages Our Lives PDF PDF Downlaod


All About Facing Codependence: What It Is, Where It Comes from, How It Sabotages Our Lives PDF



Pia Mellody creates a framework for identifying codependent thinking, emotions and behaviour and provides an effective approach to recovery. Mellody sets forth five primary adult symptoms of this crippling condition, then traces their origin to emotional, spiritual, intellectual, physical and sexual abuses that occur in childhood. Central to Mellody’s approach is the concept that the codependent adult’s injured inner child needs healing. Recovery from codependence, therefore, involves clearing up the toxic emotions left over from these painful childhood experiences.


Facing Codependence: What It Is, Where It Comes from, How It Sabotages Our Lives PDF Details:



  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2460 in Books

  • Published on: 1989-05-17

  • Released on: 1989-05-17

  • Original language: English

  • Number of items: 1

  • Dimensions: .73″ h x 6.08″ w x 9.10″ l, .63 pounds

  • Binding: Paperback

  • 222 pages




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Customer Review:


Most helpful customer reviews


172 of 176 people found the following review helpful.
4A simple, unflinching introduction to a challenge for many
By Michael Guttentag
Some things said simply are more powerful thanks to their simplicity. This book provides a forceful, unflinching description of how people who are raised in a dysfunctional or abusive environment often sabotage and cripple their lives. The structure of the book is straightforward. The situations Mellody discusses are often sound sadly ordinary rather than extraordinary. But the resulting emotional resonance of this book is undeniable.


Mellody methodically dissects the disorder she calls codependency. She first explains how when working with addicted individuals as a nurse in a recovery center in Arizona she saw a repeated pattern of dysfunctional behavior in individuals and their families that went beyond the addictions for which the individuals were being treated. Her work there and her own personal development led to the conclusions in this book. (One of the wonderful aspects of the book is that when Mellody talks about codependents and their behavior) she does not speak condescendingly about “those codependents”, but rather uses examples that begin with “I” or “us.” This creates a powerful intimacy.


There are four main sections to the book. The first section details what she sees as the core symptoms of codependency: difficulty experiencing appropriate levels of self-esteem, difficulty setting functional boundaries, difficulty owning and expressing one’s own reality, difficulty taking care of one’s adult needs and wants, and difficulty behaving moderately. The second section details how dysfunctional family can push a child (whom Mellody describes as inherently valuable, vulnerable, imperfect, dependent, and immature) into codependency. The third section describes the many kinds of abuse (most of which are not obviously traumatizing on first review) that can push an individual, particularly a child toward codependency. And the last section provides a very preliminary road map to healing codependency: the first step she argues is an awareness of one’s codependent state, and second step is a desire to change.


The book addresses well struggles that are an issue for many/most people. It touches on feelings that make books like “The Prince of Tides” and Alice Miller’s “The Drama of the Gifted Child” resonant for so many. Here the presentation of more clinical, but not necessarily any less moving. I have two main complaints with the book. First, I don’t think the term “codependent” does justice to the broad variety of symptoms that Mellody covers. In fact, I think the title of book alone might dissuade people who otherwise benefit from reading the book. I don’t have a wonderful alternative, but I think a title like “Facing Dysfunctional Behavior” or “Facing Self-sabotaging Behavior” would be more accurate. Second, as in many of the twelve-step programs, Mellody consider a “Higher Power” an element in addressing codependent behavior. In reading the book I saw no reason to bring in this concept, and doing so might limit the applicability of these insight to those who are so predisposed. A good, and surprisingly powerful, little powerful book.


65 of 65 people found the following review helpful.
5Extremely insightful in the area it covers
By David A. Bayliss
I am not an expert in this field but as far as I can tell there are at least two distinct strands of co-dependance. There is the type that is induced during adulthood by exposure to an adult addict. Then there is a form induced during childhood via what Pia describes as ‘abuse’.


I came into this subject as my wife has been diagnosed with codependancy. The Melodie Beatty books don’t come close to describing her symtoms. Pia’s book hits her case perfectly. So the usefulness of this book will depend upon which of the two cases concern you.


This books gives the clearest and most detailed explanation of the symptoms and progression of this illness I have come across and her metaphors for describing some of the internal driving forces behind the behaviours are excellent.


One thing that may irritate some is that Pia describes almost any form of dysfunctional parenting as abuse – whilst she is right by her definition it can appear harsh. Her sections upon dysfunctional parenting are extremely helpful – especially as codependants usually pass the disease to their children via this mechanism.


All in all, if you have a form of codependancy induced during childhood I believe this book is a MUST ahve.


62 of 63 people found the following review helpful.
4I’m finally understanding quirks about myself
By A Customer
I sought counseling for depression earlier this year, and this book was recommended to me several times by my social worker. He urged me to “take it with a grain of salt,” as Ms. Mellody is very much against codependency, while my counselor does not believe that all aspects of it in all cases are all bad. Until recently, I was hesitant to do any more self-exploration than I was already doing on an almost-daily basis, but since I have started to feel better, I decided to look into this codependency theory. I am only 50 or so pages into the book, but I’m finding it difficult to put down because it seems to describe me to a T in some ways that I never thought anyone else would understand. All my life I have found most of my self-satisfaction only after ensuring that I am pleasing others. When my husband and twin sister kept telling me last year that I never seemed happy (but I never felt truly unhappy), that’s when I decided I needed to make a significant change in the way I was living my life. Basing your self-worth on what Ms. Mellody refers to as “others-esteem” (as opposed to self-esteem) is a vicious, exhausting circle. I think I intuitively figured this out over the last few months on my own with the help of my counselor, but it really makes sense hearing Ms. Mellody explain it, because she has been there, so I can identify with her explanations MUCH better than those provided by someone who doesn’t understand what it’s like to have grown up this way. I hope to convince my husband to read portions of this book, because I think it will help him to realize that my struggles are real and not so unusual after all.


The only downside I have found so far is that nearly all of Ms. Mellody’s examples are based on childhood experiences, and so she gives a lot of advice regarding functional parenting. While I would like to give a copy of this book to my sister, mother, and father (because I think my whole family suffers to some degree from this “disease”) I am hoping that later on in the book, she addresses codependency in marriages, friendships, and even co-worker relationships, because that’s where I seem to have the most problems at this stage in my life.


Overall, a very valuable resource for those of us who “aim to please” but can’t seem to find lasting joy for ourselves.


See all 61 customer reviews…
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