


Dana’s best-selling and award-winning debut memoir that tells the true story of her life with a narcissistic partner and the abuse she endured. Spanning from early red flags to the courage it took to finally escape, Gasping for Air pulls back the curtain on the very real and insidious nature of narcissistic abuse and shows victims that anyone can be lured into the complex lair of lies, deceit, and betrayal.
The prequel to Gasping for Air, which delves into Dana’s tumultuous childhood, exposes how growing up with abuse and trauma set the stage for accepting toxic relationships later in life. This #1 New Release is a courageous look at the childhood wounds behind the shame – and how understanding those early injuries is key to breaking free from the toxic cycles and generational trauma.

In the final book of her memoir trilogy, Dana attempts to rebuild her life from the devastation of divorce and abuse. Facing rejection and opposition everywhere she turns, Dana is forced to confront the devastating reality of toxic family systems, and her own crippling beliefs in her unworthiness of love and acceptance. Through a journey of self-discovery, healing, and empowering revelations, Rising from the Ashes is a heart-wrenching and triumphant testament of one woman's persistence to emerge from the darkness of the past, stronger than ever.
Get a powerful glimpse into Dana’s story of survival, awareness, and healing.


Why Dana?
Survivor & Advocate: Dana isn’t just talking about overcoming narcissistic abuse – she’s lived it. With decades of firsthand experience, she speaks with authenticity and empathy about surviving narcissists, from a painful childhood to a toxic marriage.
Bestselling / Award-Winning Author: As the author of Gasping for Air: The Stranglehold of Narcissistic Abuse, Dana shines a light on the hidden realities of emotional and psychological abuse. Her memoir – inspired by her own life – became a #1 bestseller, validating countless readers and bringing awareness to covert abuse. trauma.
Inspirational Speaker: Dana has quickly become a sought-after speaker for conferences, corporations, and community groups. She has been featured on nearly 300 podcasts and media interviews worldwide, sharing her story and insights with audiences around the globe. Event organizers praise Dana’s warm, engaging style, raw relatability, and actionable takeaways.
Empowering Identity Strategist: In addition to speaking, Dana offers self-guided and supported courses that provide practical tools and heart-centered guidance for rebuilding self-worth, setting healthy boundaries, and aligning time and energy towards the life you truly want and the version of yourself just waiting to live it.
The Real Obstacle
The issue isn’t talent, intelligence, or opportunity.
The biggest challenge faced by individuals
and teams
is internal:
self-limiting beliefs.
They crush confidence, block creativity, and keep people
playing it safe and small.
Why Dana
With certifications in Emotional and Positive Intelligence
Over two decades leading top sales teams and helping hundreds of people
Dana turns EQ into a powerful tool
for leadership, growth, and success.
The Power Shift
After hearing Tara speak, audiences don’t just leave inspired
They walk away with tools they can use right away to lead more
effectively, communicate with clarity,
and show up with confidence. Dana delivers relatable stories,
real-world strategies, and actionable
insights that stick.

Deep down, you know there’s something bigger waiting for you.
You’ve got an amazing idea one that people need but you’re not sure how to take the first step.
With the right strategy and a coach who’s been there, you know you could build something powerful. You don’t want to waste time (or money) chasing methods that don’t work you want a proven path.
You’re ready to learn what it really takes to start and grow a successful business that lasts.


How women are conditioned to disconnect from their authentic selves
How subconscious beliefs carry into every aspect of life
Narcissistic abuse and toxic relationships
Breaking patterns that sustain cycles
Childhood trauma and toxic family systems
Rebuilding self-worth and identity, especially under pressure

Group Program

Expert Contributor


After being interviewed about the narcissistic abuse I experienced in childhood and then again in the twenty-five-year-long relationship with my first husband, every question had been asked . . .or so I thought.
"Do you miss him—your ex?" a podcast host asked.
😮I pulled my head back instantaneously.
How could I miss a man who put me through psychological Hell, financially and sexually abused me in between infidelities he would brag about, smeared my name behind my back to discredit me, and then planned to kill me after our divorce?💔
But when I thought about it . . .there were times when he wasn't drunk, violent, aggressive, or angry . . .times when I felt a glimmer of hope that he wasn't the monster he acted like more of the time . . .times when I could forget everything that had happened and laugh and joke with him . . .
So, maybe I did miss him.
Or was it just the hope of what our relationship could have been if he wasn't . . .him?
In May's episodes of SHIFTING GEARS LIVE, Dr. Karen Kramer, best-selling author of Healthy Grief: Normalizing and Navigating Loss in a Culture of Toxic Positivity, shared that grief is felt in both the big, traumatic moments in life, but also in the daily losses we experiences—one of those being the grief of a life one thought one would have.
But it wasn't him I missed. It wasn't the relationship I mourned. It was the fantasy of the life I'd always hoped for—filled with unconditional love, lifelong support and companionship, strong family bonds, and attraction and adoration that extended beyond the physical.
As in any narcissistic relationship, my ex had sold me my dream with love bombing and false promises, then created a trauma bond through the waves of loving and hateful words and acts, until my entire existence hinged on his every whim and word.
So, I was grieving after the divorce, and then again after his final move out of our marital home where I remained with our son. However, I was grieving something that never existed—the hope of the man I thought he could be and the life he said he would give me.
Feeling duped made the grief harder to process, since it could have been avoided if only I hadn't been so desperate for the love and affection he'd offered in the first place.
However, as Dr. Kramer suggests, we must offer ourselves self-compassion during these times of grief, to avoid the pitfalls of shame and judgment, particularly of ourselves.
In fact, part of her framework for moving through grief is to accept it all in a way that doesn't implicate some deficiency in ourselves as cause. In other words, we can hold those good memories in our heart while still acknowledging the unhealthy dynamics that ultimately ended the relationship, without placing blame or fault. We simply acknowledge what we feel, express those emotions so they don't manifest into physical illness, and then we move forward.
So, if you ever find yourself smiling at a memory or laughing as you tell some story from back then . . .it's okay.
You can choose to find the joy in the better moments that did exist, instead of standing firm in the hatred for the injustice.
For, love is always the answer—and that love starts with you.
📚For more on my first marriage to an abusive narcissist, my best-selling and multi-award-winning debut memoir GASPING FOR AIR: THE STRANGLEHOLD OF NARCISSISTIC ABUSE, is available on Amazon, Kindle, and Audible.
➡️You can download the first 2 chapters immediately by visiting danasdiaz.com.
📺Then, check out Dr. Karen Kramer's appearance on SHIFTING GEARS LIVE with Dana S. Diaz on YouTube!


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