Every person has moments when they ask themselves, “Who am I really?” For some, the answer comes easily. For others, especially those who have lived through trauma, the question feels heavier. Abuse, loss, and unhealed wounds can cloud our sense of self, making it hard to see our true nature. In MIASM: Sexual Abuse: The Journey to Self-Enlightenment, Zodie Klempp shares how understanding her miasm was the key to finding the clarity and peace she had been missing for most of her life.

Self-enlightenment is not about becoming someone new. It is about remembering who you have always been beneath the layers of pain, fear, and false beliefs. Zodie’s journey began in darkness. As a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, she spent years disconnected from herself. Her story includes the breakdown of her marriage, her mental health, and even her will to keep going. Yet these difficult moments became turning points. They forced her to look deeper than she ever had before.
The concept of MIASM is central to this process. As Zodie describes it, a miasm is an energetic and emotional pattern passed down through generations. It is not just personal—it is part of a larger story carried by families and communities. By recognizing her own Miasm, Zodie could see how her pain was connected to the past and how breaking free from it could change her future.
In the book, she talks about reconnecting with her Higher Self, working through the Akashic Records, and rescuing her “wee girl”—the part of herself that had been left behind in childhood. These steps were not just spiritual practices. They were acts of self-respect. Each one brought her closer to the truth that she was not broken. She had never been broken.
What makes MIASM powerful is its honesty about the process. Zodie does not pretend that self-enlightenment comes overnight. It took her years of facing memories, setting boundaries, and learning to love herself again. But in doing so, she found a way of living that was not ruled by fear, shame, or the past.
For readers, the message is clear: you cannot reach self-enlightenment while carrying the weight of unhealed trauma. The journey requires courage to look within, willingness to face inherited wounds, and openness to the idea that you are more than your pain. MIASM provides a framework for this. It is part memoir, part guide, and entirely rooted in lived experience.
Self-enlightenment, as shown in Zodie’s story, is not about escape. It is about presence. It is about being fully in your life, connected to your body, aware of your spirit, and free to create a future that reflects who you truly are. The work is challenging, but the reward is priceless: a life where your choices come from love, not fear.
For anyone seeking a deeper understanding of themselves after trauma, MIASM offers more than insight. It offers a path. It reminds you that enlightenment is already within you, waiting for you to remember.
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.”
The book is available on Amazon for purchase: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1917553412.