Deepening and extending the lessons of a book that has helped countless women and gender-expansive people, this workbook makes A Women's Way Through the Twelve Steps that much more measured, meaningful, and clear. Unlike many 'rewritten' Twelve Step interpretations for women, this workbook begins with the original Step language, preserving its spirit and focusing attention on its healing message. In sections devoted to each of the Twelve Steps, Covington blends narrative, self-assessment questions focused on women's definitions of terms such as 'powerlessness' and 'letting go,' guided imagery exercises, and physical grounding activities. Designed to be used in conjunction with A Women's Way Through the Twelve Steps, this workbook helps deepen and extend the lessons taught there and further empowers each woman to take ownership of her recovery process as well as her growth as a person. It is also designed to be used in conjunction with A Woman's Way through the Twelve Steps Facilitator Guide in facilitated groups in residential or outpatient treatment programs for substance use disorder or other addictive disorders.
"Women and gender-diverse people in recovery can use this workbook that Dr. Covington has developed to explore their inner world on an as-ready basis, deepening their experience of the Twelve Steps and working through trauma residue, if present. The workbook is not a substitute for professional help if it is needed, but with the help of an astute sponsor, recovering women can use it to develop an understanding of what makes them tick and what experiences contributed to their addictive behaviors. The workbook provides an important experience for women in recovery who are ready to dig deeper into their history, allowing them to identify potential triggers for relapse and unresolved grief for losses prior to and resulting from their addiction. It is a comprehensive template for exploring the many causes and aspects of addiction, providing recovering women and their sponsors an outline that can be returned to many times."--Lorie Dwinell, LCSW "Retired Clinical Social Worker, Coauthor of After the Tears: Helping Adult Children of Alcoholics Heal Their Childhood Trauma"
"Written in 1939, the original Twelve Steps of AA have helped millions of people around the world. But as they were developed by men for men and reflected the knowledge of addiction at that time, the voices of women and gender-expansive people were not included or even conceived of.
Stephanie Covington changed that with her seminal publication of A Woman's Way through the Twelve Steps, published in 1994. For the first time, the voices of women in recovery were illuminated.
In the updated version of that work, Dr. Covington includes new information on the impact of trauma as well as the voices of many more women and gender-expansive people sharing their challenges, triumphs, experience, strength, and hope.
With a trauma-informed and gender-expansive lens, Dr. Covington allows so many more people to be "seen" and "heard" while sharing the powerful healing experience of inclusivity.
The facilitator guide and the participant workbook complete the package. Women can personalize their recovery journey and have something to refer to for years to come. The facilitator guide allows professionals and nonprofessionals alike to run groups with confidence.
As a trainer, consultant, and colleague of Dr. Covington's and a retired director of treatment centers for co-occurring disorders, I have witnessed over and over the transformational power of her work.
Thank you, Dr. Covington, for listening and including our voices."--Carol Ackley, LADC, CEO, retired "RiverRidge Treatment Centers"
Stephanie S. Covington, PhD, LCSW, is an internationally recognized clinician, organizational consultant, lecturer, author, and pioneer in the fields of addiction and trauma. For more than thirty-five years, she has created gender-responsive and trauma-informed programs and curricula for use in public, private, and criminal-legal settings, across the US and globally.
Dr. Covington's experience with addiction began with her own life: she became a social drinker who woke up numerous times over the years to no recollection of the night before. On one of those mornings, she woke up afraid, confused, and finally able to acknowledge to herself that she needed help. Thus began day one of a transformative recovery journey, 45 years and counting, that fixed her on a goal of helping other women reclaim their lives as she had.
Her extensive experience includes consulting for and developing programs for numerous US and international agencies and designing women's services at the Betty Ford Center. She has published extensively, including ten gender-responsive, trauma-informed treatment curricula and the first manualized treatment program for substance use disorder treatment. Educated at Columbia University and the Union Institute, Dr. Covington is based in La Jolla, California, where she is co-director of the Institute for Relational Development and the Center for Gender & Justice.
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