10 Best Books for Processing Childhood Trauma as an Adult

I was 36 years old, standing in the cereal aisle at Safeway, when I completely fell.
Honest book picks for real life. Curated by readers, not algorithms.

I was 36 years old, standing in the cereal aisle at Safeway, when I completely fell.

Not because anything terrible had happened. I'd had a perfectly nice birthday dinner with friends. But afterward, I sat in my car staring at a face in the.

It was just coffee. Regular, fancy, or decaf. Oat milk or regular. Small or large. Maybe a pastry? But which pastry? The croissant looked good, but the muffin.

Last year, I had to tell my manager that a project she championed was failing. Not slightly behind schedule. Failing. The client hated it, the team was.

I was 32 years old, sitting in my car in the church parking lot, unable to go.

I woke up at 3 AM drenched in sweat, heart racing, convinced something was terribly wrong. My sheets were soaked. My pillow was wet. My body felt like it had.

The morning my divorce was finalized, I sat in a coffee shop staring at a latte I hadn't ordered. The barista got confused. I was confused. Everything about my.

I was sitting on the bathroom floor at 3 AM, staring at a pregnancy test that showed one line instead of two.

The last time I spoke to my brother was at our mother's funeral. He said something cutting about how I'd "barely been around" during her illness. He wasn't.

I was standing in the kitchen at 2 AM, washing dishes that had been piling up for three days, when it hit me. Not the dishes—the realization that I hadn't.