Post-Traumatic Thriving: The Art, Science, & Stories of Resilience

3233
An interview with Joyce Buford

Unresolved Trauma at the Root of Many Personal and Societal Problems

Schools don’t teach students how to deal with trauma, but it’s a skill everyone needs, explains Dr. Randall Bell, adding that the underlying common denominator of systemic problems like homelessness, drug abuse and incarceration rates is unresolved trauma. Los Angeles, CA, March 9, 2023.

“These are all symptoms,” Dr. Bell said. “If we can really go after the real issue, which is unresolved trauma, these other issues tend to go away.”

In his new book, Post-Traumatic Thriving: The Art, Science, & Stories of Resilience, Dr. Bell weaves science and academic research with true stories from survivors of the Holocaust, crime, disasters, addictions, depression, death and other tragedies to explore the rare thriver’s mindset.

Which path will you choose when you reach the Turning Point“No matter how bad it is — and it can get really bad — you can always make a U-turn,” he said.

breaking the trauma cycle

Filled with strategies backed by science, including his “dynamic duo” of healing, Dr. Bell takes it one step further by showing readers how these strategies have been applied to help real people (some will sound familiar) not only recover but also thrive after a traumatic event, including:

  • A deaf man with a glass eye invented the electric guitar and became a household name, remarkably wealthy and most importantly, happy.
  • A convicted murderer took responsibility for the damage he caused, graduated with honours from college, became a minister and turned around the hearts of the most hardened criminals.
  • A girl born with cerebral palsy landed the world’s first starring role on national television and spoke at the White House three times.
  • A woman hid in a basement for years and lost her entire family in the Holocaust. She eventually found true love and paints stunning artwork.
  • The sister of a murder victim helped millions of women in toxic domestic relationships.
  • A woman’s car crash resulted in an addiction to prescription drugs, a divorce, a loss of her children and a cot in a homeless shelter. She has rebuilt it all back and more.
  • A man set to go to the Olympics had his hopes dashed by Jimmy Carter and went on to build a worldwide business empire.

Ultimately, Dr. Bell documents the science of happiness, as well as the individual styles and common thread that all post-traumatic thrivers have to emerge with fulfilling lives.

“This is a life skill we all need because by college age, 66 to 85 percent of us have been impacted by a trauma,” Dr. Bell added.

About the Author

As a socio-economist, Dr. Randall Bell has consulted on more disasters on Earth than anyone in history. Dr. Bell is widely considered the world’s top authority in the field of post-traumatic thriving. His clients include the Federal Government, State Governments, International Tribunals, major corporations and homeowners. Dr. Bell believes that “the problem is not the problem — the problem is how we react to the problem.”

Often called the “Master of Disaster,” he is squarely focused on authentic recovery and resilience. Dr. Bell’s research has been profiled on the Today Show, Good Morning America, every major television station, BBC Radio, Success Magazine, Forbes, Inc. Magazine and the international media.


For more information, visit https://www.coreiq.com/books, or follow the author on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/coreiqskills/); TikTok (@posttraumaticthrivingpod), Twitter (coreiq) or Instagram (coreiq).

Post-Traumatic Thriving: The Art, Science, & Stories of Resilience
Publisher: Core IQ Press
Release Date: January 10, 2023
ISBN-13: ‎979-8218022648 (hardcover)
ISBN-13: ‎978-0996793193 (paperback)
Available from Amazon.com and all bookstores


Featured Author

 

Previous articleThe Codes of Creation
Next articleIs ADD/ADHD a Disease or a Symptom? by Dr Peter Dingle