15,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
8 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Everyone has something to recover from. A Vision of Hope: Reflections is the bridge between story and practice. Written in jail cells, treatment centers, and the fragile quiet of early recovery, these short essays distill the lessons, questions, and insights that followed the storm told in the memoir A Vision of Hope: A Story of Redemption and Purpose. Where the memoir is raw narrative, Reflections pauses to ask what it all means. Each entry is part meditation, part provocation-on acceptance, faith, trauma, forgiveness, justice, purpose, resilience, and fragile hope. Some reflections are…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Everyone has something to recover from. A Vision of Hope: Reflections is the bridge between story and practice. Written in jail cells, treatment centers, and the fragile quiet of early recovery, these short essays distill the lessons, questions, and insights that followed the storm told in the memoir A Vision of Hope: A Story of Redemption and Purpose. Where the memoir is raw narrative, Reflections pauses to ask what it all means. Each entry is part meditation, part provocation-on acceptance, faith, trauma, forgiveness, justice, purpose, resilience, and fragile hope. Some reflections are deeply personal; others widen into culture, politics, and systems. Together, they invite the reader not to agree, but to wrestle, to sit with what stings or inspires, and to carry forward what helps. This book is not therapy or doctrine. It is one voice telling the truth as he sees it-sometimes sharp, sometimes searching, always grounded in lived experience. Readers are encouraged to take what resonates, challenge what doesn't, and use each piece as a lens for their own journey of healing and transformation. Reflections can be read cover to cover or dipped into as needed-each entry stands alone as a meditation or prompt. It forms the middle piece of a three-part ecosystem: the memoir tells the story, Reflections distills the lessons, and the companion Workbook turns those lessons into action through a structured 90-day curriculum. The three together create a pathway from story, to reflection, to practice-designed for individual readers, group facilitators, recovery programs, and institutions.Use CasesIndividuals in recovery: Offers daily or weekly meditations that reinforce addiction recovery, resilience, and personal growth. Families and supporters: Provides accessible entries to spark empathy, conversation, and mutual understanding during the reentry process. Treatment centers and reentry programs: Can be paired with the workbook to guide structured group discussions and journaling exercises. Universities and libraries: Serves as a versatile resource across criminal justice, counseling, social work, and personal development courses. Book clubs and community groups: Stands alone or alongside the memoir for discussion of themes like trauma healing, forgiveness, and purpose. Why It Matters For individuals navigating addiction, prison reentry, grief, or trauma, Reflections offers reminders that recovery is not an abstract concept but a daily choice. For institutions, it provides material that fits into curricula, group facilitation, and training. And for the general reader, it extends the memoir into a series of reflections that open a window into resilience, redemption, and the pursuit of meaning. Blending memoir, self-help, and social commentary, Andrew Drasen's work belongs alongside James Frey's A Million Little Pieces, Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy, and Jeannette Walls' The Glass Castle. It is confessional and practical, personal and political, spiritual and unsparing. At its core, A Vision of Hope: Reflections is about possibility-that even in the aftermath of addiction, incarceration, shame, and loss, reflection can spark change. That recovery is both personal and collective. And that through resilience and forgiveness, the light we seek has always been within.
Autorenporträt
Andrew Drasen is a writer, speaker, and advocate for recovery and reentry. Drawing from his own lived experience with addiction, incarceration, and loss, he founded A Vision of Hope Media to create pathways of healing, resilience, and purpose. His work blends memoir, self-help, and social commentary to spark both personal transformation and systemic awareness. He lives in Franklin, Wisconsin.