The trauma world was split. Many colleagues and former patients defended him passionately, arguing that his intensity was part of his genius and that the accusations were a pretext for a long-simmering institutional rebellion against his dominance. Others saw the dismissal as a necessary reckoning, arguing that a man who preached the importance of safety and relational attunement was failing to provide it to his own staff.
His impact has spilled far beyond the clinic. Survivors of childhood abuse, sexual assault, and racial violence have found validation in his pages. The book has become a foundational text for understanding the link between trauma and addiction, chronic pain, and autoimmune disorders. It has even influenced social justice movements, providing a framework for understanding "collective trauma" and intergenerational transmission of pain. bessel van der kolk
Van der Kolk’s name is now synonymous with a paradigm shift. His 2014 magnum opus, The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma , spent over 150 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, a nearly unprecedented feat for a dense, academic work on psychiatry. It became a touchstone for therapists, social workers, veterans, survivors of abuse, and anyone who has ever felt that their past was holding their present hostage. But to understand the phenomenon of van der Kolk, one must understand the journey that led him to write that book—a journey marked by brilliant insight, bitter institutional battles, and a willingness to embrace the unorthodox. Born in 1948 in postwar Amsterdam, van der Kolk grew up in a country still scarred by Nazi occupation. While he did not experience the Holocaust directly, the pervasive atmosphere of loss and resilience in Dutch society may have seeded his early fascination with how human beings endure and are shaped by catastrophe. He studied medicine and psychiatry in Chicago and then at Harvard, where he began his long affiliation with the Boston Veterans Administration (VA) hospital. The trauma world was split
Bessel van der Kolk’s story is that of a brilliant, stubborn, and flawed revolutionary. He spent decades fighting a rearguard action against a psychiatric establishment that he felt was reducing human suffering to a chemical imbalance. In doing so, he helped catalyze a broader cultural shift—one that acknowledges that we are not brains in vats, but embodied beings whose histories are written not just in memory, but in muscle, breath, and bone. The body, he taught us, does indeed keep the score. And only by learning to listen to that somatic score can we begin to compose a new future. His impact has spilled far beyond the clinic
بازار کتاب اولین و بزرگترین سامانه دانلود کتاب الکترونیکی رایگان بر خط با هدف در دسترس قرار دادن متون و کتب شیعه راهاندازی شده است. به کمک کتابخانه دیجیتالی بازار کتاب به هزاران عنوان کتاب به زبان های مختلف : فارسی ، عربی ، انگلیسی و آذری و غیره .... دسترسی خواهید داشت.