02/23/2026
What if your pain could actually make you more whole, not less?
We've been taught that trauma breaks you. That the goal is to "get back to normal." To heal enough that you can function again, smile again, pretend again.
But Dr. Jessamy Hibberd offers something radically different in this book: what if the point isn't to recover who you were, but to become someone new? Someone deeper, stronger, more alive than before?
How to Overcome Trauma and Find Yourself Again is built around a concept called post-traumatic growth . It's not toxic positivity. It's not pretending trauma was a "gift." It's the evidence-based idea that struggling through adversity can actually lead to genuine transformation, if you know how to work with it.
Hibberd is a chartered clinical psychologist with over 15 years of experience, and it shows . She blends neuroscience, psychology, and real client stories into a warm, practical seven-step program that feels like sitting with a therapist who actually sees you.
Here are 5 lessons that stayed with me:
1. Trauma isn't just the big stuff, and it's not a competition
Hibberd makes space for all of it. The obvious traumas: loss, abuse, illness. But also the quieter ones: betrayal, neglect, the accumulated weight of small wounds . She never makes you feel like your pain isn't "bad enough" to count. If it affected you, it matters.
2. Post-traumatic growth is real, and it has five signs
The book introduces the five domains of growth that research has identified: personal strength, relating to others, appreciation of life, new possibilities, and spiritual/existential change . Hibberd shows how trauma survivors often report increased depth in these areas, not despite their pain, but because of how they worked through it.
3. Your body needs to be part of the conversation
One entire step is devoted to looking after your body, and Hibberd calls exercise "the holy grail" . Not in a toxic "fitspo" way, but because trauma lives in the body. You can't think your way out of something that's stored in your nervous system. Movement, sleep, breath, they're not optional extras. They're the foundation.
4. Telling your story changes everything
There's a step called "Telling Your Story," and it's not about posting on Instagram . It's about finding safe places, therapy, trusted people, your own journal, to give language to what happened. Hibberd includes real client stories throughout (Akemi, Jess and Finn, Sophie, David), and those narratives make the science breathe. You realize you're not alone in how you've responded.
5. Grieving isn't the end, it's the door
Step six is about grieving, letting go, and accepting . This is where the book gets tender. You can't skip the grief. You have to let yourself feel what was lost. But on the other side of that grief? There's space to become yourself again, maybe for the first time.
A quick honest note: if you're in the middle of active crisis, a book can't replace therapy. But if you're ready to start understanding what happened to you, and ready to believe that growth is possible, this is a beautiful, compassionate place to begin.
Dr. Anne Lane, a clinical psychologist, put it this way: "This book is an essential read if you have been affected by traumatic, challenging or life-changing events" . I'd add: keep tissues nearby. And an open heart.
BOOK: https://amzn.to/4rVUtL6