Kiersten Marek

Kiersten Marek

About

I am a clinical social worker and writer living in Cranston, RI. I have a private practice where I work with people of all ages providing individual and family therapy.

Commitment

Commitment

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Description

<p>It’s hard to be committed to anyone when you don’t know whom to trust.</p><p>Alexis Toles, a former FBI agent turned undercover CIA agent, is quickly finding that out in Nancy Ann Healy’s newest political thriller, <i>Commitment</i>.</p><p>Alex embeds in a secret organization of intelligence operatives known as The Collaborative. Its partners include operatives from the CIA, National Security Agency, FBI, US Department of Defense, and an entanglement of foreign intelligence agencies.</p><p>It’s about half a year after the death of President John Merrow, a friend and someone she respected. But she remains committed to overthrowing The Collaborative as she works with a onetime adversary who believes the organization’s involved in the president’s death.</p><p>Meanwhile Alex; her wife, Cassidy O’Brien; and Cassidy’s son try hard to live as a family but must first overcome personal struggles, including a nasty custody battle with Cassidy’s ex-husband, Congressman Christopher O’Brien. The family has their own share of secrets that, if unleashed, could affect their hopes for the future.</p><p>There’s no place to turn without discovering people who are not who they claim to be. That can’t stop Alex. She must remain committed to the cause, both at home and as she works against The Collaborative.</p>

Story Behind The Book

When my daughter Katrina was in the 6th grade, I asked her if she would draw a picture of "the Innocent" for me. She drew the picture that is on the cover of the book. The picture made me smile, and gave me a distinct feeling for both my own innocence and my daughter's. From there, I asked my daughter if she would help me depict a series of archetypes through drawings that I could show to children who came for counseling, similar to the feelings cards I used, in order to elicit more information about their emotional life and their relationships with others. I found that these images opened up worlds to me in terms of getting to know the children and families who came to me for help. I could see how even small children could quickly relate to the Wounded Child or the Warrior, and could tell me about the emotional struggles they were having. I had always been deeply curious about archetypes. I had belonged to a Friends of Carl Jung group in Providence before entering graduate school, and enjoyed reading about archetypes in books by James Hillman, Christine Downing, and Carol Pearson. I began to read and research more about Carl Jung, and to learn about how images of archetypes were expressed for him through his artwork and writings in The Red Book. I also have an interest in Internal Family Systems, which is a school of therapy that helps an individual define their different emotional "parts" and then integrate them using their curious and compassionate leader part. It occurred to me that a valuable tool might be a book that introduces children to a spectrum of the archetypes and helps them to work with their parts to develop internal harmony. Putting these different ideas together, and thinking about my practice of psychotherapy with children and families, I decided to create an identity development workbook for children and young adults about the archetypes. The book is meant to stimulate reflection and self-awareness and build in coping skills early on in life. I see it as a work-in-progress and welcome your feedback and suggestions.

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