Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Spotlight: Break the Chains by Dr. Jay D. Roberts, MD



Title:  Break the Chains


Genre:  Memoir

Author:  Jay D Roberts, MD

Website:   jdrobertsmd.com

Publisher:   Tate Publishing and Enterprises, LLC

 

If you were abused over and over again, would you become an abuser? Or would you learn to forgive? Dr. Jay Roberts had to go to prison to learn the answer.

In 1999 Dr. Roberts was in at-home hospice care preparing for his own death from a neurological disease. At the point where he finally gave up, he experienced a spontaneous, overnight healing. It was not the first time he had “cheated” death. He had survived a fifty-foot fall from a cliff, a plane crash, and attempts on his life by rebel insurgents in remote areas in the Philippines in 1970s. This near-death escape was different though, because it was the culmination of a turbulent lifelong dialogue with God which started when he was a child being bull-whipped by his alcoholic father. Yet even after his complete recovery from disease, it would take a maximum security prison environment to reveal to him the mysterious power of forgiveness.
 
In the telling of his fascinating story—of extreme abuse, of the compulsion to become a pain and wound care specialist, of medical school in a third world country against a dangerous political backdrop, and of his return home to deal with the demons he’d left behind—Dr. Roberts tackles the big questions illuminating physical, mental, and spiritual growth. Break the Chains affirms faith in both God and the human spirit. It is as revealing and inspirational as it is truthful and poignant.
 

 

The Story Behind ‘Break the Chains,’ by Jay D. Roberts, MD

 

Key words for your book: memoir, Christian, inspirational, child abuse

As a young child, I didn’t believe God existed. I had prayed and prayed for God to stop my torment, but He didn’t.

As I grew, I kept hearing, “Jesus loves the little children…”

So I figured that if God does love kids, he surely hates me.

And, He must hate me because I am bad, so I should be beaten more. I deserved to be tortured.

And I was.

So I figured I was right after all.

As a child and adult I knew to keep my mouth shut and never speak of what went on inside our home. I would never tell. Never.

Years and years past, then I got sick. After I almost died, I became obsessed with four things—writing my story, ministering in maximum security prisons, helping the wounded, and building an orphanage.

Writing my story has been the most difficult. I had to remove a wall of stones from around my heart that had protected me for years. It became too painful and I stopped writing. I tossed many a nights fighting a passion to write against the fear that it would kill my mother for telling the secret. Two years later, the battle was over. I could no longer squelch my thirst to write.

My mother read the promotional copy for my book. She is still alive.

Any day now she will start reading the book. I pray that she has strength and an open mind as my story unfolds in her hands. A story she already knows, but one never spoken and definitely not in print.

My wife, two sons, and sister have read the book and have praised me.

My brother refuses to talk about the book and to hear anything negative about his father.

A cousin is upset that I would “bad mouth my family… and anyway, no one would ever buy my book.”

Many have hurts and pains, and are bounded by their chains.

I am willing to take the hits from my family, if by telling my story I can help others to forgive, break their chains, and set them free.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
 

Jay D Roberts MD is a board-certified physiatrist, specializing in the treatment of physical disabilities with a focus of adding quality to life. He is currently in private practice in California. He is a member and lecturer at national and international conferences related to his specialty, a contributing author to Current Trends in Physiatry, and author of various scientific papers. In addition to his career, Dr. Roberts volunteers as part of a Christian ministry in maximum security prisons. He and his wife, parents of two grown sons, live in Indian Wells, California. Break the Chains is Dr. Roberts’ first book. Following in the long tradition of doctors who combine their passion for saving lives with their passion for writing, Dr. Roberts is currently at work on a novel, concerning children forced to work in mines. Website:  http://jdrobertsmd.com/

3 comments:

  1. Wow this look like an intensely emotional book.
    Great post Vonnie :)

    Chanzie @ Mean Who You Are.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It does sound very emotional. I would have loved to review this one but I am so booked with my other reviews. I have added it to my tbr list though because this one sounds like a good read.

      Delete
  2. Thank you so much for the spotlight, Vonnie! I really appreciate it!

    I'll share it with my contacts. :-)

    Mayra

    ReplyDelete