There is a moment in every life that breaks the world apart. A call that cannot be refused. A descent that cannot be argued with. And, for the fortunate, a road that begins to lead back.
Healing Through Awakening is an integrated framework for what happens when addiction, mental illness, and trauma collide in a human life, and for accompanying the long return that follows. Volume 1, The Descent, the Map, and the Atlas, sets the foundation. Built on the spine of Joseph Campbell's hero's journey and animated by Dr Rory Brown's Critical Circles Recovery Coaching methodology, it traces the territory most recovery literature treats as preamble: the cracking open of an ordinary world, the methodology that gives shape to transformation, and the atlas of anxiety, depression, collapse, and renewal that every recovering mind must learn to read.
Part I, The Call into Darkness, names the descent honestly. Not as pathology, but as the pattern that has always preceded transformation, from myth to medicine to the lived experience of those who have walked through addiction and mental health crisis.
Part II, The Circle and the Spiral, introduces the Critical Circles framework and the HERO cycle of Hold, Encounter, Reflect, and Orient. Readers meet the archetypes that populate every recovery story: the hero in many faces, the shapeshifter, the shadowed companions who carry what the conscious self cannot yet own, and the wellness archetypes waiting on the other side of integration.
Part III, The Atlas of Suffering and Renewal, maps the inner world condition by condition. Anxiety. Depression. The psychology of collapse. The spectrum along which every mind lives. The five domains of vulnerability. The role of medication, and the deeper role of meaning. The Return Curve in five movements, traced through embodiment, connection, meaning, boundary, and the weaving of a coherent self.
Drawing on Gabor Maté, Bessel van der Kolk, Carl Jung, Caroline Myss, David Hawkins, Brené Brown, and a wide bench of neuroscience, depth psychology, and recovery science, the work holds the clinical and the sacred in the same hand. It is rigorous enough for the practitioner, humane enough for the person in early recovery, and honest enough for the family member who has watched the light drain from someone they love.
Volume 1 speaks to:
- Recovery coaches and practitioners seeking a framework that honours skill and soul.
- Individuals in recovery searching for more than abstinence.
- Families and supporters trying to understand what lies beneath the surface.
- Students, clinicians, and researchers at the intersection of addiction science, clinical psychology, and trauma-informed care.
This is not a memoir, though it carries the author's lived experience of addiction and recovery. It is not a clinical manual, though it draws on the frontier of the science. It is an integration: the meeting place where neuroscience, depth psychology, mythology, and the daily practice of accompanying another human being through suffering converge.
Volume 2, The Road Back and the Gift Returned, completes the journey.