You Can Heal Your Life

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You Can Heal Your Life
ISBN
0937611018
Preceded byHeal Your Body (1984) 
Followed byA Garden of Thoughts: My Affirmation Journal 

You Can Heal Your Life is a

New York Times Best Seller list, and by 2008, over 35 million copies worldwide had been sold in over 30 languages, becoming one of the best-selling non-fiction book of all time. The book was also instrumental in the success of her publishing company, Hay House Inc. Due to the book, she is "one of the best-selling authors in history", and one of largest selling women authors, after J. K. Rowling, Danielle Steel and Barbara Cartland.[1][2]

Premise

The key premise of the book is that because the mind and body are connected, illnesses of the body somehow have their root causes in emotional and spiritual aspects of the mind and its beliefs and thought processes. While modern medicine concerns itself with eliminating symptoms of disease in the body, using tools such as chemotherapy and other pharmaceutical drugs and various surgical techniques, Hay's approach is to identify and work to resolve what she perceives as the mental root causes of disease. Hay believes that the causes of "dis-ease" include stress and unhealthy thought patterns and beliefs about oneself, and postulates that the most fundamental way to effect positive change in the body is to change the way we think, using tools such as "mirror work" and affirmations. At the end of the book, a separate section lists numerous illnesses and various emotional thought patterns that Hay believes causes them; this was derived from Hay's earlier book, Heal Your Body, which had its origins in a pamphlet she published in 1979.[1][2][3]

Film adaptation

In 2007, the book was adapted into a documentary film of the same name, with a screenplay written by Gay Hendricks and directed by Michael A. Goorjian.[4][5]

Controversy

The theories described in this book have been criticized as groundless by proponents of evidence based medicine. Specific passages within Hay's book appear to be medically inaccurate. For example, the below quotation appears to falsely claim that migraine headaches are purely psychosomatic:[6]

"Headaches come from invalidating the self . . . Forgive yourself, let it go, and the headache will dissolve back into the nothingness from where it came . . . Migraine headaches are created by people who want to be perfect and who create a lot of pressure on themselves. A lot of suppressed anger is involved..."

Hay has also been criticized for 'blaming the victim' by suggesting that people with AIDS are causing their own illness due to poor mental attitude, and for claiming for decades that positive attitude can defeat AIDS, despite not being able to demonstrate any examples of this happening.

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The book also claims that birth defects are due to

better source needed
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References

  1. ^
    New York Times
    magazine, May 4, 2008. Accessed March 9, 2013.
  2. ^ a b "How positive thinking helped me beat cancer". Irish Independent. 25 April 2007.
  3. ^ 50 Self-Help Classics Tom Butler-Bowdon.
  4. ^ Official Movie website
  5. IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  6. ^ ""You Can Heal Your Life" - Review | HealthCentral". www.healthcentral.com. Archived from the original on 2018-06-22. Retrieved 2018-04-25.
  7. ^ Kyra (2010-11-02). "Kyra Speaks: Louise Hay: You Disgust Me! (a review of You Can Heal Your Life)". Kyra Speaks. Retrieved 2018-04-25.
  8. ^ "You Can Heal Your Life". Goodreads. 1 April 2011.

External links