I often (semi) joke if you want to spend less time and money in therapy, have a meditation practice. It’s not a cure-all, I’m not claiming it’s a substitute for therapy, but the skills you develop through meditation are hugely helpful to therapy, healing and mental wellbeing.
Autobiography in 5 Short Chapters
The Untethered Soul
Childhood Disrupted; How Your Biography Becomes Your Biology
Another one of my favourite books discussing how trauma and difficult experiences can, when left untreated, have life long impacts. Donna Jackson Nakazawa does a wonderful job of explaining how the things that we experience, particularly in childhood, can create physiological changes that stretch through time and continue to affect us even decades later.
The Blind Men And The Elephant
The Body Keeps the Score
Why Buddhism is True
This book was a jumping off point for me into an area of experience that has now become very close to my heart.
Robert Wright offers a fantastic overview of naturalistic, secular Buddhism. Setting aside the mystical aspects of Buddhism as a religion, Wright focuses solely on Buddhism as a philosophy and it’s implications on psychology.