Restoring Venus A Journey from Chronic Pain to Possibilities |
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Author:
| Eicher, Amy |
(various roles):
| Eicher, Amy Tonic Books Publishing, |
ISBN: | 978-0-9980299-1-7 |
Publication Date: | Apr 2019 |
Publisher: | Tonic Books
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $16.95 |
Book Description:
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One moment she was gliding through water training for an NCAA swimming competition. Thenext moment she was writhing in pain on the tiled deck of the college pool.Had a simple flip turn destroyed Amy Eicher's athletic dreams? Or would her eighteen-yearquest to overcome debilitating pain be an initiation that would lead to her true calling?In her memoir, Restoring Venus, Eicher recounts the emotional setbacks, a questionable surgeryand sexual abuse by a Christian youth group leader that...
More DescriptionOne moment she was gliding through water training for an NCAA swimming competition. Thenext moment she was writhing in pain on the tiled deck of the college pool.Had a simple flip turn destroyed Amy Eicher's athletic dreams? Or would her eighteen-yearquest to overcome debilitating pain be an initiation that would lead to her true calling?In her memoir, Restoring Venus, Eicher recounts the emotional setbacks, a questionable surgeryand sexual abuse by a Christian youth group leader that ultimately shaped her understanding ofpain and enabled her unique approach to renewing her health.Her confrontations with physicians who doubted her pain ("It's all in your head") are told withraw candor. Her saving grace arrives when a gifted physical therapist promises to restore her.Although the first attempt fails, the persistence of both eventually brings Eicher back to life as amother, public speaker / pain coach, and competitive swimmer."Although my burial did not last quite as long as Venus de Milo's, my disappearance fromfamily and social life felt like an eternal curse."Eicher's compassion for the plight of people living with chronic pain is evident in the narrative,which compares the limits of the biomechanical medical approach with the success she has foundwith a biopsychosocial understanding for the experience of pain.Among her breakthroughs was mastering the art of listening to the diverse stories of patients. Bytrusting that traumatized hearts and minds may harm lives as surely as broken bones, Eichercame to understand how her own emotional history and a damaging secret contributed to hertravail and absolution.