Accidental Rebuilding a life after taking one

David W. Peters

Book - 2023

Accidental injury is the leading cause of death for Americans under forty-five. From the death of a stranger during fatal traffic accidents to a deadly virus passed to an elderly loved one, who do we rebuild after causing accidental death or injury? Peters explores the complicated reality of accidental death and injury. Here he helps readers accept responsibility, see themselves in the stories of others, be open to mystical experiences, and find absolution and community. - adapted from jacket.

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Published
Minneapolis, MN : Broadleaf Books [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
David W. Peters (author)
Physical Description
vi, 182 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781506487168
  • Part I : They are us ; City of refuge ; Moral injury ; Post-traumatic God ; Silence
  • Part II : Drunk drivers ; Cars ; Guns ; Systems
  • Part III : Seeing yourself in the stories of others ; Inviting others into your story ; Making art ; Being open to mystical experiences ; Coming home ; Finding absolution.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Vicar Peters (Post-Traumatic God) delivers a deeply felt and eminently thoughtful sermon on picking up the pieces of one's life after unintentionally causing injury or death. At 19, Peters was driving on a highway in West Virginia when he rounded a bend, overcorrected his VW Beetle, and crashed into traffic, killing a 22-year-old woman on an oncoming motorcycle. While he faced no legal consequences--the lawsuit against him was dropped--"in my soul, I knew" there was "no going back to innocence." Writing that "preventable injuries" are the third most common cause of death in the United States, the author unpacks the complex ramifications of "moral injury" (the inescapable sense of having violated a fundamental human law) experienced by soldiers returning from war as well as those responsible for medical errors, accidental shootings, or car crashes. After offering consolation to those who've caused such tragedies in the book's first chapters, Peters analyzes how America's laws and culture enable avoidable deaths, including those related to cars, guns, and police shootings, and concludes by outlining his approach to absolution ("the final declaration of God's forgiveness"). Peters's message is unfailingly empathetic, and his prose is an effective mix of unassuming and devastating, as when he describes getting into a motorcycle accident years after the car crash: "I remember not being scared... it felt like it was meant to be." Sensitive and unflinching, this sheds light on the complex morality of an unpredictable world. (Nov.)

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