---
product_id: 4524843
title: "Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving: A Guide and Map for Recovering from Childhood Trauma"
price: "€ 39.43"
currency: EUR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.be/products/4524843-complex-ptsd-from-surviving-to-thriving-a-guide-and-map
store_origin: BE
region: Belgium
---

# Growth-Focused Strategies Comprehensive Guide Trauma-Informed Insights Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving: A Guide and Map for Recovering from Childhood Trauma

**Price:** € 39.43
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🌟 Unlock Your Potential: Thrive Beyond Trauma!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving: A Guide and Map for Recovering from Childhood Trauma
- **How much does it cost?** € 39.43 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.be](https://www.desertcart.be/products/4524843-complex-ptsd-from-surviving-to-thriving-a-guide-and-map)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Expert Insights:** Gain knowledge from trauma specialists and psychologists.
- • **Practical Tools:** Utilize actionable strategies for real-life application.
- • **Holistic Approach:** Address emotional, mental, and physical well-being.
- • **Supportive Community:** Join a network of individuals on similar healing journeys.
- • **Transformative Journey:** Navigate your path from survival to thriving.

## Overview

This guide offers a comprehensive roadmap for individuals recovering from childhood trauma, providing expert insights, practical tools, and a supportive community to foster healing and personal growth.

## Description

Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving: A GUIDE AND MAP FOR RECOVERING FROM CHILDHOOD TRAUMA

Review: CPTSD Healing START HERE! - Stop scrolling and listen up. Do not even purchase another CPTSD book until you have read this one. Trust me, I have spent THOUSANDS, yes, thousands, of dollars on trauma healing resources related to CPTSD and its hellish symptoms but this one is *BY FAR* the best. It's the kind of book where you highlight almost every single sentence on every single page. Here's why: 1.) Emergency Preparedness. Unfortunately, the way in which I learned about my CPTSD diagnosis was through a massive emotional flashback. In 2021 I decided to leave a marriage full of the same religious, psychological, emotional, and physical abuse that I was raised in. During this process, old trauma was triggered in a way I had never experienced before. For months I had been living in constant hyperarousal. I felt like a panicky and frantic child. The slightest sounds and movements would throw me into full blown panic attacks. I was insecure, anxious, impulsive, and afraid. I couldn't sleep or eat. I am only 5' and normally weigh 115 lbs and lost 20 lbs in 2 months. I was irritable, couldn't concentrate on my job, and felt constantly on guard. None of this was good considering I own my own six figure business and am a mom to three little kids. I kept digging and researching and everything I found was kind of similar but didn't really describe whatever it was I was experiencing. I had even bought another famous book on CPTSD looking for answers and it held none. But, 6 months later, I found this book. Pete Walker begins the book by saying something along the lines of, "if you are experiencing such-and-such symptoms, skip to page _____," so I did. My mind was blown, tears were falling down my face because I finally had a name to what it was I had been experiencing for 6 entire months now! It was an emotional flashback. Emotional flashback's are interesting because they do not have the visual element that is present in PTSD flashbacks and they can last for a long time. Mine ended up lasting 6 months and the only reason it stopped was because of this book. Sadly, until I read Pete's book, I had no idea what was happening. I just kept telling my friends who were helping me, "this isn't me. This isn't me. Something is wrong." I knew I wasn't myself, I just didn't know why. Now I'm here 8 months later trying to play catch up on all the areas of my life that suffered while I was in my emotional flashback. I wish I had found this book sooner. There is so much power in being able to name what you are experiencing and this book helped me do that. 2.) Path to healing. When you first find out you have CPTSD its overwhelming to know where to begin your healing journey. The first book about CPTSD that I bought was a workbook, it was okay, but it was NOTHING compared to this book. Had I found this book sooner, I wouldn't have even bought the other one. Other famous CPTSD authors lay out the the different options for CPTSD healing (CBT, DBT, EMDR, Somatic, Internal Family Systems, Inner Child work, etc.), but Pete takes it a step further and tells you exactly where to start. Which is a massive relief because the last thing you want to do when your CPTSD has been activated is spend hours attempting to research opinions from people who don't even know what it is you're going through. The best part is, if you're distrustful or curious like me, Pete even explains why he puts certain steps before others. . 3.) Lists. No one has time to read an entire chapter when their (or someone they love's) nervous system has been thrown into hypo- or hyper-arousal and they need to figure out what triggered them and why. Which is why Pete's easy to remember and easy to find checklists are literal lifesavers. 4.) Pete Walker knows his stuff because he is a survivor himself. As a child I was told that I was a punishment from God on my mother. This statement was only the beginning of a deep seeded core belief I had that I was innately, permanently broken. Pete's book and the memories and experiences he describes didn't feel triggering to me but healing. It felt like for the first time in my life I could acknowledge that I was normal. I wasn't broken. Nothing was wrong with me. This book is validating and enlightening. A true salve for the traumatized soul. There are a million other reasons as to why this book is the best of the best, but, I digress. Just trust me and the other 6,000 people leaving reviews here and BUY THIS BOOK NOW!
Review: I recommend this book - very helpful! - What I liked: 1) This is the best book I've read in a very long time. Despite some inaccuracies, it unmasks and reveals the horrifying truth of severe and widespread childhood abuse in so-called modern Western culture. Too bad evolution doesn't require humans prove that they will be good enough parents before they're able to have children. 2) Pete Walker shows that finally, someone understands. Somebody gets it, and can write about it in a way which makes it possible for other people to get it. It is a tremendous relief to read this book. It provides validation for the suffering of the silent children inside those of us who were abandoned, abused, and neglected our entire childhoods by all the adults around us. No, we are not "too this, too that, and too much the other thing." We are exactly the right quantities of various traits that we needed to be, in order to survive. I've lived a very long time with the trauma inflicted on my undeveloped, defenseless nervous system. I'm still wired as though I'm trapped in the horrifying war zone of my childhood. How do I rewire my nervous system? How do I go from surviving to thriving? This book promises to provide a map and guide to help me recover. I hope by the time I finish reading it, I will understand what the map says and know how to use it as a guide to where I'm trying to go. 3) Pete Walker not only understands cptsd, but he also has deep compassion for those who suffer with cptsd. 4) Walker has a lot of good recommendations and suggestions. My complaint with some of them is the missing details of *how* to follow through with them. Part of this may be that I've had few or no models to demonstrate exactly how to go through healthy grieving and healthy anger. Part of this may be because I haven't read the whole book yet. I've used many cognitive tools over many years to perform the thought deconstruction and replacement healing process. I need concrete, step-by-step instructions for the emotional part of the healing process. What I didn't like: 1) The book has too many links to itself within the book. (See chapter XXX for YYY) This became distracting after a while. 2) Repetitive and wordy 3) Author sometimes gets things wrong, but the wrong parts are buried in a lot of really right parts. This makes it harder to recognize when the author has gone overboard, gotten too enthusiastic with his own theories and conclusions. Not everything rings true, and when strong language is used to describe something which doesn't ring true, I find myself re-reading the section and adding notes. Each person who has cptsd has a different flavor of it, so some of his descriptions and assertions are not accurate. 4) I can't buy the audio version of the book without subscribing to a "free trial" of audible. ___ For people who weren't abandoned, abused, and neglected, this book will probably seem like a gross exaggeration, a lot of whining, and undeserving vilifying of parents. For those who read this book and came away with that impression, I have two pieces of advice: 1. Count your blessings that you were raised by parents who nurtured you, cared about your well-being, and consistently showed you they cared without ripping the rug out from under your feet to punish you on random occasions at their whim. Your parents let you know you mattered, and they actually played an active role in your growing up to become a healthy, mature adult. 2. Try to have understanding and compassion for people who had "not good enough" parenting. We really do exist. Believe that it happened, happens, and will continue to happen. Just because you can't see it doesn't mean it isn't real. Be aware that it may have happened to the person sitting next to you.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,531 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #4 in Post-Traumatic Stress #103 in Self-Help (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 11,604 Reviews |

## Images

![Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving: A Guide and Map for Recovering from Childhood Trauma - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71OIBNcKebL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ CPTSD Healing START HERE!
*by A***3 on January 6, 2022*

Stop scrolling and listen up. Do not even purchase another CPTSD book until you have read this one. Trust me, I have spent THOUSANDS, yes, thousands, of dollars on trauma healing resources related to CPTSD and its hellish symptoms but this one is *BY FAR* the best. It's the kind of book where you highlight almost every single sentence on every single page. Here's why: 1.) Emergency Preparedness. Unfortunately, the way in which I learned about my CPTSD diagnosis was through a massive emotional flashback. In 2021 I decided to leave a marriage full of the same religious, psychological, emotional, and physical abuse that I was raised in. During this process, old trauma was triggered in a way I had never experienced before. For months I had been living in constant hyperarousal. I felt like a panicky and frantic child. The slightest sounds and movements would throw me into full blown panic attacks. I was insecure, anxious, impulsive, and afraid. I couldn't sleep or eat. I am only 5' and normally weigh 115 lbs and lost 20 lbs in 2 months. I was irritable, couldn't concentrate on my job, and felt constantly on guard. None of this was good considering I own my own six figure business and am a mom to three little kids. I kept digging and researching and everything I found was kind of similar but didn't really describe whatever it was I was experiencing. I had even bought another famous book on CPTSD looking for answers and it held none. But, 6 months later, I found this book. Pete Walker begins the book by saying something along the lines of, "if you are experiencing such-and-such symptoms, skip to page _____," so I did. My mind was blown, tears were falling down my face because I finally had a name to what it was I had been experiencing for 6 entire months now! It was an emotional flashback. Emotional flashback's are interesting because they do not have the visual element that is present in PTSD flashbacks and they can last for a long time. Mine ended up lasting 6 months and the only reason it stopped was because of this book. Sadly, until I read Pete's book, I had no idea what was happening. I just kept telling my friends who were helping me, "this isn't me. This isn't me. Something is wrong." I knew I wasn't myself, I just didn't know why. Now I'm here 8 months later trying to play catch up on all the areas of my life that suffered while I was in my emotional flashback. I wish I had found this book sooner. There is so much power in being able to name what you are experiencing and this book helped me do that. 2.) Path to healing. When you first find out you have CPTSD its overwhelming to know where to begin your healing journey. The first book about CPTSD that I bought was a workbook, it was okay, but it was NOTHING compared to this book. Had I found this book sooner, I wouldn't have even bought the other one. Other famous CPTSD authors lay out the the different options for CPTSD healing (CBT, DBT, EMDR, Somatic, Internal Family Systems, Inner Child work, etc.), but Pete takes it a step further and tells you exactly where to start. Which is a massive relief because the last thing you want to do when your CPTSD has been activated is spend hours attempting to research opinions from people who don't even know what it is you're going through. The best part is, if you're distrustful or curious like me, Pete even explains why he puts certain steps before others. . 3.) Lists. No one has time to read an entire chapter when their (or someone they love's) nervous system has been thrown into hypo- or hyper-arousal and they need to figure out what triggered them and why. Which is why Pete's easy to remember and easy to find checklists are literal lifesavers. 4.) Pete Walker knows his stuff because he is a survivor himself. As a child I was told that I was a punishment from God on my mother. This statement was only the beginning of a deep seeded core belief I had that I was innately, permanently broken. Pete's book and the memories and experiences he describes didn't feel triggering to me but healing. It felt like for the first time in my life I could acknowledge that I was normal. I wasn't broken. Nothing was wrong with me. This book is validating and enlightening. A true salve for the traumatized soul. There are a million other reasons as to why this book is the best of the best, but, I digress. Just trust me and the other 6,000 people leaving reviews here and BUY THIS BOOK NOW!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ I recommend this book - very helpful!
*by L***Y on November 10, 2019*

What I liked: 1) This is the best book I've read in a very long time. Despite some inaccuracies, it unmasks and reveals the horrifying truth of severe and widespread childhood abuse in so-called modern Western culture. Too bad evolution doesn't require humans prove that they will be good enough parents before they're able to have children. 2) Pete Walker shows that finally, someone understands. Somebody gets it, and can write about it in a way which makes it possible for other people to get it. It is a tremendous relief to read this book. It provides validation for the suffering of the silent children inside those of us who were abandoned, abused, and neglected our entire childhoods by all the adults around us. No, we are not "too this, too that, and too much the other thing." We are exactly the right quantities of various traits that we needed to be, in order to survive. I've lived a very long time with the trauma inflicted on my undeveloped, defenseless nervous system. I'm still wired as though I'm trapped in the horrifying war zone of my childhood. How do I rewire my nervous system? How do I go from surviving to thriving? This book promises to provide a map and guide to help me recover. I hope by the time I finish reading it, I will understand what the map says and know how to use it as a guide to where I'm trying to go. 3) Pete Walker not only understands cptsd, but he also has deep compassion for those who suffer with cptsd. 4) Walker has a lot of good recommendations and suggestions. My complaint with some of them is the missing details of *how* to follow through with them. Part of this may be that I've had few or no models to demonstrate exactly how to go through healthy grieving and healthy anger. Part of this may be because I haven't read the whole book yet. I've used many cognitive tools over many years to perform the thought deconstruction and replacement healing process. I need concrete, step-by-step instructions for the emotional part of the healing process. What I didn't like: 1) The book has too many links to itself within the book. (See chapter XXX for YYY) This became distracting after a while. 2) Repetitive and wordy 3) Author sometimes gets things wrong, but the wrong parts are buried in a lot of really right parts. This makes it harder to recognize when the author has gone overboard, gotten too enthusiastic with his own theories and conclusions. Not everything rings true, and when strong language is used to describe something which doesn't ring true, I find myself re-reading the section and adding notes. Each person who has cptsd has a different flavor of it, so some of his descriptions and assertions are not accurate. 4) I can't buy the audio version of the book without subscribing to a "free trial" of audible. ___ For people who weren't abandoned, abused, and neglected, this book will probably seem like a gross exaggeration, a lot of whining, and undeserving vilifying of parents. For those who read this book and came away with that impression, I have two pieces of advice: 1. Count your blessings that you were raised by parents who nurtured you, cared about your well-being, and consistently showed you they cared without ripping the rug out from under your feet to punish you on random occasions at their whim. Your parents let you know you mattered, and they actually played an active role in your growing up to become a healthy, mature adult. 2. Try to have understanding and compassion for people who had "not good enough" parenting. We really do exist. Believe that it happened, happens, and will continue to happen. Just because you can't see it doesn't mean it isn't real. Be aware that it may have happened to the person sitting next to you.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A detailed guidebook on CPTSD that survivors can surely relate to
*by L***I on April 21, 2024*

I am a reader that has been diagnosed with C-PTSD. What attracted me to this book is not only the authors professional knowledge on the subject but also the fact that they themselves are a survivor. They describe the situations, triggers and torment that those with C-PTSD have had to endure throughout their lives using a carefully worded yet accurate description of difficult challenges that are most common for those suffering, what those challenges could look like during childhood and how it transforms and shapes the survivors in adulthood. The author maintains a sincerity throughout the book and does not try to promise that one will heal tomorrow or next week using their techniques. They use an honest and open tone and let the reader know what they can expect moving forward, and set a realistic expectation for the reader letting them know this is a long term journey where patience and self compassion is highly encouraged. This is my personal experience: this book definitely made me break down crying several times. I felt for the first time in my life that I was heard and understood. There’s a a lot of areas where they explain different healing practices and stops and it’s a ton of information that I feel is covered. While battling my own CPTSD and trying to continue down my journey to recovery, this was the one book out of many that actually stuck and helped me to make the first step after months of being stagnant and alienating myself. It was recommended to me by someone who also suffers from C-PTSD who urged me into reading it and now that I have, I absolutely recommend it to anyone facing this challenge in their life as well, who may not know where to start or where they can find more information and resources regarding their diagnosis. This was an amazingly helpful source on the subject overall.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving: A Guide and Map for Recovering from Childhood Trauma
- Workbook for Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving by Pete Walker: A Guide And Map For Recovering From Childhood Trauma
- The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma

---

## Why Shop on Desertcart?

- 🛒 **Trusted by 1.3+ Million Shoppers** — Serving international shoppers since 2016
- 🌍 **Shop Globally** — Access 737+ million products across 21 categories
- 💰 **No Hidden Fees** — All customs, duties, and taxes included in the price
- 🔄 **15-Day Free Returns** — Hassle-free returns (30 days for PRO members)
- 🔒 **Secure Payments** — Trusted payment options with buyer protection
- ⭐ **TrustPilot Rated 4.5/5** — Based on 8,000+ happy customer reviews

**Shop now:** [https://www.desertcart.be/products/4524843-complex-ptsd-from-surviving-to-thriving-a-guide-and-map](https://www.desertcart.be/products/4524843-complex-ptsd-from-surviving-to-thriving-a-guide-and-map)

---

*Product available on Desertcart Belgium*
*Store origin: BE*
*Last updated: 2026-05-27*