GY6 Field Guide


 The Vitals: 

🗒️ 7.5" x 9.25" / 222 pages total / BW

⭐️ Six lessons

🧩 Three parts to the book, with two lessons per... including 1) total wholeness, 2) PTSD / soul hurts, and 3) Moral Injury / spirit hurts

🌠 Fully illustrated, because "seeing it" often helps us understand it

📈 Bonus access to supplemental resources included

📳 Add the audio at checkout for an elevated experience

Purchase options

Purchase Options


The book

A great place to begin. Book + bonus content to identity the hurts + implement healing protocols. 

$22 | Buy here

Book + Video

Perfect for personal study. Access the book + the videos and plow through it on your own.

$50 | See details + buy here

Small Group Kit

15 books, the slides, the videos, and more. Everything you need to "stand up" a group and get going!

$300 | See details + buy here

Overview of lessons


The GY6 manual features three sections, with two lessons per section (6 total lessons).

 

🧩 Part 1 | Total Health - Body, Soul, & Spirit

We discuss the importance of total wholeness-- and how we must heal the kind of hurt we have. We affirm that each part of us matters-- body, soul, and spirit. And, we'll only be as strong as the weakest part, since each “part” impacts the others.

 

💥Part 2 | PTSD - A Soul Hurt

PTSD is a response to external threats and primarily impacts our emotions. We discuss what triggers are, why emotional disruptions occur, and how to read the present for what it is instead of always interpreting it in light of the past— and we affirm that having the past inform the present isn’t always bad (i.e., “the training kicks in and we know exactly what to do).

 

☢️ Part 3 | Moral Injury - A Spiritual Wound

Moral Injury is a response to internal threats and primarily impacts our beliefs and convictions about what we have done, what we failed to do, what’s been done to us, and more. We talk about the importance of the spirit, the difference between PTSD & Moral Injury, and how to heal this more prevalent hurt than PTSD. Of note, Moral Injury seems more prevalent than PTSD and appears to drive the suicide rate among “heroes.”

See purchase options