There are memoirs that move us. There are spiritual guides that uplift us. Rarely do we find a book that does both with such raw honesty and radiant clarity as MIASM: Sexual Abuse: The Journey to Self-Enlightenment by Zodie Klempp.
This is not just a story about surviving childhood sexual abuse. It is a sacred map drawn from within, a lived-in guidebook for healing from the inside out. Klempp’s voice is both tender and direct. She writes with the urgency of someone who has been through the fire and now turns back to show others the way through.

The term “miasm” may be unfamiliar to some, but by the end of the first chapter, readers understand it not just intellectually but viscerally. It’s the energetic residue of trauma that clings to the soul across lifetimes. In Klempp’s telling, miasm isn’t just about disease. It’s about unhealed spiritual business, karmic debts, and ancestral wounds. This reframing alone is enough to shift the conversation around trauma from pathology to purpose.
But what makes MIASM unforgettable is Zodie herself. She doesn’t shy away from the darkest nights of her life: the sexual abuse she endured from her grandfather, the silence of her father, the psychosis that landed her in a hospital. These are shared without pity, shame, or embellishment. Instead, they are grounded in deep spiritual reflection, guided by a Higher Self she learned to trust.
It’s that trust, between author and Self, between author and reader, that elevates this book. Through her channeled messages, Zodie lets readers witness what it looks like to live in communication with the divine. She doesn’t claim sainthood or perfection. She shares her missteps, her confusion, her yearning. In doing so, she offers others a model for making sense of their own pain.
One of the most moving sections is her letter to her inner child, an act of spiritual rescue that is both heartbreaking and healing. She doesn’t just describe dissociation; she explains how she learned to re-enter her body. She teaches readers how to ground themselves, how to listen inward, how to be in their own skin after trauma has made it feel unsafe.
Readers of Caroline Myss, Gabor Maté, or Louise Hay will find familiar terrain here, but Klempp goes deeper into the soul’s journey. She goes deeper into past lives, pre-birth plans, and contracts with those we both love and struggle with. These ideas may sound esoteric, but Zodie makes them personal and accessible. She doesn’t preach. She remembers, reflects, and releases.
This is a book for trauma survivors, yes. But it is also for healers, spiritual seekers, empaths, and anyone yearning to understand the deeper patterns behind their suffering. It is a brave and luminous work, one that doesn’t just talk about healing, it enacts it. By the final page, you don’t just know Zodie Klempp better. You know yourself better, too, and will be in a better position to have the courage to overcome trauma and life setbacks.
“There cannot be more of a journey in healing than a return to Love. This is the lifetime’s greatest accomplishment and return to self-enlightenment.”
For more information and insight, please read MIASM.
The book is avaibale on Amazon for purchase: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1917553412.