In Return, author and psychotherapist Carol D. Warner focuses on the emotional and spiritual healing journey. She writes about some of the more difficult as well as some of the more extraordinary aspects of her work, her client's stories, and her own personal journey.
Return focuses on the importance of dreams in every aspect of our lives and in therapy. With compelling examples, the author demonstrates how dreams can be used as tools for greater understanding, empowerment and contact with our higher selves. Also discussed with examples are best practices for ethical dreamwork and therapy, and how to discern what is good therapy. This book covers many subjects in detail, including recovery from trauma and abuse, which are illustrated using powerful dream and other examples.
Of particular note in Warner's background is that her father wrote the charter for the CIA, and was CIA General Counsel during the Senate Intelligence hearings of the l 970's, hearings which brought to light unethical mind control experiments and programs - programs which she encountered years later in her work as a psychotherapist.
Warner's work with dissociative disorders thrust her down the rabbit hole into the dark worlds of mind control, pedophilia, child sex trafficking and satanism at the highest levels of government. While working with a very high-level mind-controlled client, she herself became a target. Her life was forever changed by intrusive surveillance, gangstalking, intimidation, isolation, multiple break-ins as well as ongoing murder attempts. Warner was advised she would never be safe until she put her story out in public. The reason this book was published was literally to save her life. A deep faith and daily guidance from God helped her remain safe throughout, despite all the odds. The persecution against her fortunately stopped immediately with the publication of this book. This was before the arrests of Epstein and Weinstein, and the Wikileaks release of emails of DNC leadership which discussed pedophilia and satanism at those levels. It was before public awareness of the epidemic of child sex trafficking.
Section Five is a wake-up call for clinicians and the general public alike. Warner goes into some depth exploring the connection between mind control, dissociative disorders, pedophilia/sex trafficking, ritual abuse and controversies about traumatic memory.
Informative, engaging, and eye-opening, Warner ends the book on positive notes, discussing spiritually in therapy, and sharing powerful stories about healing miracles made possible through the power of faith, prayer and dreams. Return will be of interest to both laypersons and clinicians alike.