The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma
#1 New York Times bestseller
“Essential reading for anyone interested in understanding and treating traumatic stress and the scope of its impact on society.” —Alexander McFarlane, Director of the Centre for Traumatic Stress Studies
A pioneering researcher transforms our understanding of trauma and offers a bold new paradigm for healing in this New York Times bestseller
Trauma is a fact of life. Veterans and their families deal with the painful aftermath of combat; one in five Americans has been molested; one in four grew up with alcoholics; one in three couples have engaged in physical violence. Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, one of the world’s foremost experts on trauma, has spent over three decades working with survivors. In The Body Keeps the Score, he uses recent scientific advances to show how trauma literally reshapes both body and brain, compromising sufferers’ capacities for pleasure, engagement, self-control, and trust. He explores innovative treatments—from neurofeedback and meditation to sports, drama, and yoga—that offer new paths to recovery by activating the brain’s natural neuroplasticity. Based on Dr. van der Kolk’s own research and that of other leading specialists, The Body Keeps the Score exposes the tremendous power of our relationships both to hurt and to heal—and offers new hope for reclaiming lives.
From the Publisher
Publisher : Penguin Books; Reprint edition (September 8, 2015)
Language : English
Paperback : 464 pages
ISBN-10 : 0143127748
ISBN-13 : 978-0143127741
Reading age : 18 years and up
Item Weight : 14.4 ounces
Dimensions : 1.1 x 5.4 x 8.4 inches
$10.86 $19.00
Price: $19.00 - $10.86
(as of Jul 25, 2024 09:23:28 UTC – Details)
Customers say
Customers find the book’s content validating, enlightening, and transformative on trauma and healing. They also say it’s an engaging, gripping read that’s less likely to trigger. However, opinions are mixed on the plot, with some finding it engaging and gripping, while others say it can be triggering.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
S. Rose –
My Life-Saving Trauma Bible
âI think this man is suffering from memories.âSo, this book changed my life. No, really. In fact, itâs *saved* it.I have severe PTSD. And despite years of therapy, it seemed to be getting worse instead of better. My flashbacks were occurring more and more often. I was becoming more and more lethargic and frozen in time. And suicide was constantly just *there* in my mind. Constant. Iâd even set a date.And then my insurance quit paying for my therapy.As a last, desperate grasp for help, I started to read this book.I have never read anything more validating and more hopeful. To see the brain scans and hear the science that explained *exactly* what has happened to my brain, what is going on during my flashbacks and why Iâm always physically sickâall the times Iâve gone to a doctor in pain or feeling like Iâm having a heart attack or a stroke only to be told they canât find anything wrongâbrought me to tears. It gave me all the answers Iâve been searching for. It gave everything a scientific, medical explanationâand a path to *healing*.He explained why all of my EMDR therapy wasnât workingâit was because my therapists (bless them!) were doing it wrong. And Iâve been able to take what Iâve learned from my therapists and this book and do EMDR on my own, and today… today I feel more like my old, genuine self, than I have in *years*. The shadow of suicidal thoughts no longer follows me. I feel *light*. And I have *hope*âgenuine *hope*âthat I actually *can* get better! Iâm always telling people *they* can get better and thereâs hope for *them*… but I havenât felt that way about myself. Now, I do. I havenât had that hope in a long, *long* time. And I even think, after years of struggling and finally making such great progress in such a short time, maybeâjust maybeâI can be cured. I never thought Iâd say that! The future is so exciting to me now!If you have trauma, do be warnedâDr. van der Kolk talks a lot about his clients and their traumatic experiences and it can be very triggering. Some of the details I felt he definitely couldâve left out, honestly. However, the scientific information, the validation and the information on how to heal trauma, has made this book absolutely *priceless* to me. Itâs my trauma bible. Iâll be re-reading it in the future and constantly referring to it.Edit: I keep seeing reviews on here from people who were super upset by the story of the Vietnam vet who murdered a family, raped the mother and left her to die. Honestly, I flipped out at that part, too (aka, had a flashback), in large part because I misunderstood what Dr. van der Kolk was trying to say. I thought for a moment that he was trying to justify what the man did, and had to email my old therapist about it. She read the scene and encouraged me to reread his conclusion, and pointed out to me that heâs actually saying how difficult it was to try to treat him objectively because what the man had done was an absolute atrocity. He never actually justifies it. He calls it an atrocity. Itâs just worded weird, and if youâre already triggered by what youâve just read, it is *easily* misunderstood. I hope he clarifies this in future editions. You have to keep in mind that, van der Kolkâs target audience is actually other therapists. For this reason, it *was* difficult for me to read. I was violently attacked and molested at 5-years-old and repeatedly raped and abused as a teenager. His going over other peopleâs abuse is overly detailed at times and I had to skip many of those scenes.However, I donât hold any of this against him at all. The information in this book has changed my life, I feel seen and validated, and I stand by that almost a year after reading it. I keep it right on my writing desk where itâs easily found for reference. Am I cured yet? No. Did my flashbacks stop? Nope. This year has been an unexpected nightmare full of triggers. But Iâve made *so* much progress. And I have hope. And thatâs what I need to make it through each day. I sincerely believe that, through a lot of work (which Iâm willing to do!), I can be cured in time. And all of that started with this book.
S. Rose –
Tom Cloyd, MS MA –
Buy this book!
Psychiatrist, professor, world-class researcher, and traumatologist Bessel van der Kolk MD requires no introduction to trauma psychotherapists. My enduring impressions of him over many years is one of relevance, cogency, frankness, and accessibility – served up with a subtle dash of impishness. He tends to be a bit disruptive – something of a provocateur – and everything of his I have ever read has taught me something, confirmed something important, or pushed my thinking in a new direction. When he has something to say, I want to hear it.However, I almost didn’t buy this book: I was put off by the title. Familiar with major reviews of PTSD psychotherapy outcomes research, I know that research support for body-oriented approaches to treating psychological trauma psychopathology is thin at best, and such treatment models simply do not have the research validation of either EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) and PE (Prolonged Exposure), neither of which are especially body-focused.J. Interlandi’s excellent article anticipating publication of this book – “A Revolutionary Approach to Treating PTSD” (New York Times Magazine, 2014.05.22 – available online) – initially supported my fears that for some inexplicable reason van der Kolk was now promoting some treatment model for which we have little confirming research. “Psychomotor therapy is neither widely practiced nor supported by clinical studies,” Interlandi informs us. Provocateur he may be, but I’m strongly biased in favor of paying attention to therapies for which we do have solid empirical validation. Our clients do not deserve to be experimental subjects – maybe not even if they agree to this, as I’m not sure they can ever know enough to make a truly informed consent. Knowledge that PTSD and related disorders are usually highly curable, when using the right treatment protocols, sadly remains the possession of a minority of people, even in the professional psychotherapy world.Yet the account of van der Kolk’s therapy work in Interlandi’s article is gripping. Becoming completely absorbed in the account, I was convinced. (I’ve been here before, reading van der Kolk’s own accounts of his work.) And so the disruption begins! Deeper into the article, he has me. Van der Kolk’s critique of CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy – a general class of therapies) and PE (E. Foa’s exposure therapy model) is withering and correct: neither really work. “Trauma has nothing whatsoever to do with cognition…It has to do with your body being reset to interpret the world as a dangerous place….It’s not something you can talk yourself out of.” Interlandi reports that “That view places him on the fringes of the psychiatric mainstream.”But he’s right, and I can’t stress this enough. Why? Because as a trauma treatment professional I’m well aware of what the trauma treatment outcomes research actually says. The best current summary of this research well may be chapter 2 of Ecker, et al.’s (2012) “Unlocking the emotional brain”. (Buy this book, too!) Ecker et al. brilliantly presents a synthetic summary that encompasses 11 existing therapy models which actually DO cure trauma psychopathology, if done right. In this context, what van der Kolk is doing makes perfect sense. Finally, it appears, the trauma psychotherapy field is moving toward a consensus which has strong credibility.Van der Kolk’s new book has many virtues. Parts One and Two (102 pp) provide a substantial review of the neuropsychology of trauma’s impact on a person. It’s fun, interesting, informative reading, for professional and layperson alike. Part Three (64 pp) surveys childhood development, attachment experience, and “the hidden epidemic of developmental trauma”. Van der Kolk has for years been a leading champion of the idea that there is a type of PTSD which substantially differs from all the rest. It develops in response to chronic child abuse and/or neglect. I completely share his belief that the diagnosis of Developmental Trauma Disorder (sometimes called C-PTSD, with “C” meaning “Complex”) is overdue for formal recognition. I find his review of the struggle to legitimize DTD as gripping and distressing as anything else in the book. It is anguishing to know that a major problem exists, AND that the psychiatric establishment simply refuses to acknowledge it. DTD/C-PTSD is no fantasy. We see and treat these people, as children and adults. They exist, and they are nothing like “ordinary” PTSD treatment clients.Part Four (29 pp) focuses on memory. I’ve long thought that much writing on treating psychological trauma seems to miss the point: trauma memory is what causes the problem. Deal with that and the symptoms vanish. Why is this so hard to understand? Yet, it is not a common understanding at all. Explaining how trauma memory works is invariably enlightening to my clients. And experiencing what happens when we change the nature of trauma memory is revelatory to someone who’s lived with it for years, if not decades. As he does throughout the book, van der Kolk offers fine stories about clients who have experienced exactly what I’ve seen happen in my clients, making excellent use of what cognitive research tells us: people understand things best through narratives. Offer a good narrative and you convince.Psychological trauma therapy is complex, but we are now well prepared to launch into the book’s core content – Part Five (154 pp), “Paths to Recovery”. He gets right to it: we cannot undo the trauma, but we CAN undo its effect on us, and so get our “self” back. Ch. 13 reviews existing therapies. His approach is to repair “Descartes’ Error” (see Damásio’s 1994 book of that title) by viewing mind and body as a single coherent functional unit. His topical coverage is complete and his critique of current therapies acute – not to be missed.He then writes of the importance of language (Ch. 14). We construct our narrative mainly in words, and the words we choose are critical. But language is not enough (this anticipates his next two chapters). Our senses encompass a larger world, and it’s center is our body, where all our sensory receptors are located. Then he introduces the treatment model he’s long advocated: EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing). I’m trained in EMDR, and in fact van der Kolk and I had the same instructor for our advanced training: Gerald Puk PhD. Van der Kolk tells an amusing and self-deprecating story about his advanced training experience, in which Puk was able to provide a strong corrective to his approach to clients. This is typical van der Kolk – he’s a truth-teller, even when it may put him in a poor light! And,after all, at this point he has nothing to prove to anyone.Finding an EMDR therapist is not hard (see his “Resources” section). Nor is it hard to find a yoga instructor, and yoga is what he advises for helping a trauma victim get back into their body. Yoga is a wise choice, because it is available, already widely known, and adaptable to a wide range of individuals and capabilities.There is much more in Part Five, and the focus is on self-empowerment. “Victim no more!” as they say. Most trauma therapists have a keen interest in seeing their clients leave therapy charged up and ready to fully embrace their life – that certainly is my own emphasis. Van der Kolk’s thoughts on self-empowerment for those in recovery from psychological trauma will be invaluable to any trauma psychotherapy client.For psychotherapy professionals, this book will be both delightful and confirming. For everyone else, it will be a readable, gripping, highly educational tour of topics all of which are critical to a successful transition back from the impact of psychological trauma. That he gives prominent though not dominating emphasis to developmental trauma disorders is entirely appropriate. Our society has yet to grasp that child abuse and neglect is a more often chronic than not, and that its impact is largely ignored and poorly treated, if at all. This does not have to be. Get educated (this book will do that), then commit to being an advocate for children as well as for adults impacted by trauma. They all deserve the chance to be healed, and we can now do that. Van der Kolk shows us how.The physical book: Jacket design is pleasant and interesting. Binding is less so: color of spine wrapping is semi-florescent, and of paper, not cloth. The book feels substantial and pleasant to hold and look at.Organization -* 6 pp: prefatory praise by peers and related luminaries (interesting comments from some important people in the field);* 2 pp: Table of Contents;* 356 pp: actual text;* 4 pp: Appendix: Consensus proposed criteria for developmental trauma disorder* 3 pp: Resources* 4 pp: Further reading* 51 pp: Notes* 21 pp: Index
Tom Cloyd, MS MA –
MPSS –
Itâs a life changing read
Considering how many people live their lives affected by past trauma and donât even realize it , because of so many masks that we put on our personality to look and feel normal while only fooling ourselves, I think because of that very reason this books isnât just for those who know they have trauma but also a must read for every responsible member of society who cares about people around. Writer has a great authority on the topic and decades of research behind the thoughts mentioned. He doesnât just talk about his own experience, research and qualifications but generously introduces and praises the work of so many other professionals and researchers in the field. By the end of the book you might end up with a list of other books to read that this writer introduces us to.
MPSS –
Angelina M –
Easily one of the best books Iâve ever read
Slightly slow in the beginning. But besides this being one of my favorites and recommending to everyone, I especially recommend it to- parents, teachers, partners of trauma survivors and those with PTSD, and anyone who works with kids or people who grew up disadvantaged.I canât say enough good things about this book. Incredibly informative, insightful, thought provoking, and paints the science in an understandable way that will leave you feeling a lot of empathy, and possibly asking deeper questions about your own life experiences and healing approaches. Even if youâre not interested in trauma or healing, youâll learn a ton about what makes us who we are, and how much genetics and experiences make us.I actually ordered this while being partway through listening to the audiobook. I donât reread books but I took a lot of notes on this one and wanted to have a physical version for reference and possible rereading certain chapters in the future.Good paper back format, nice size.
Angelina M –
OnCan –
Making my way through any books is difficult for me. Apart from having CPTSD, I’m also aphantasic, Although I was a researcher and student at the Centre For Applied Science at University of Toronto and did exceptionally well, I left the CACS to become a career musician. I’m writing to say that I’ve just finished The Body Keeps the Score and am astounded by Dr. Van der Kolk’s eloquence. I often stopped to reflect on how beautifully he expressed certain concepts, how he chose the perfect word. For me, it was an easy and fascinating read. There is something tremendously powerful in the construction of language to express ideas. Thank you, Dr. Van der Kolk for the inspiration and for your tireless and passionate work.
OnCan –
Carolina –
Vale a pena a leitura!
Carolina –
Schalk Viljoen –
This book shows that there is hope for the many many people who suffer from trauma.And what bigger gift can be given than hope .
Schalk Viljoen –
Pooja –
This is one of its kind of people who want to understand how humans function. It is deep, somewhere dark yet enlightening. Reading this book might make u revisit so many things in ur head so read it only when u r mentally prepared to do so. Not suggested for light readers.
Pooja –
Very useful book –
I’m writing this after reading more than half of the book. English is not my first language, so I apologize in advance for any grammatical mistakes. I got into psychology books 2 years ago. I’m not a big reader, it takes me a while to finish a book, but this one engaged me differently than the others. The book is mainly about PTSD, it explain the different existing traumas in children and adults, what were the treatments, the different attachment styles and how they determine your behavior when you grow up. All this is written from a medical point of view (in a very simple language), you can also find MRIs of the human brain with explanations on how it works in different environments. I will finish this one and I will definetely buy another books from the same author.
Very useful book –