Come What May
An uplifting guide to navigating hard times from the UK's leading expert on recovery
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3 Months Free
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Offer ends on 15 July 2026 at 11:59 BST.
Buy Now for £17.94
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Narrated by:
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Lucy Easthope
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By:
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Lucy Easthope
'A shining beacon of sense and wisdom. We can all benefit from reading this brilliant book about how to respond with resilience.' RACHEL CLARKE
'An unlikely superhero' SUNDAY TIMES
'An amazing woman' JAMES O'BRIEN
We all experience uncertainty, change and loss. How can we weather the storms, and cope with whatever comes next?
No one can answer this better than Lucy Easthope, an emergency planner whose job is to support survivors of major disasters. Time and again she has watched how people rebuild: the work, the pitfalls and the fragile joy. In Come What May, she distils for us what she has learned about how to carry on and come back stronger.
Through poignant stories and hard-won wisdom, she offers a roadmap for resilience in the face of adversity. She explains what shape the recovery journey might take, how to triage your life, how to plan for 'the slump' (also known as the lasagne phase), and what good (and bad) help looks like.
This is a book for all of us who want not just to survive, but to live and unleash strengths we never knew we had.©2025 Lucy Easthope
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Critic reviews
We all NEED this book! An essential guide to navigating the disasters each of us will have to face, written with the brilliant wisdom of a leading expert with the insightful compassion of a survivor. (Gaia Vince)
Lucy Easthope is a shining beacon of sense and wisdom. None of us can avoid life-changing upheavals - but we can all benefit from reading this brilliant book about how to respond with resilience. Fascinating and empowering. (RACHEL CLARKE)
Human’s behind disaster
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Being currently signed off of work following several life events; the death of my dog, sizeable changes at work, a house (and town) move, the eventual breakdown over Christmas of a difficult three year relationship.
Following, I felt I needed to step back from community roles due to my overwhelming sense of sadness, only to find long-standing, deeply intertwined friends, those who’d helped me move home to be closer to them and counselled me on leaving my relationship suddenly stepping back from me (big marks on the Homes-Rahe Life Stress Reajustment Rating Scale!)
I write about my own losses mainly as context. With such world events as now and a steady stream of tragedy flowing via rolling news, one can often feel a compounded stress, of feeling like a fraud or that a good kick up the ass maybe all that’s required….as a mental health professional, I’m aware I often hold my resilience to different standards than others and am a little too prone to uncompassionate self-talk.
Lucy’s reassures that disaster takes many forms, it can be both very loud but also quiet and creeping. The book felt like a warm and sturdy lifeboat, giving me an opportunity to breathe and look around at what had felt (and feels) like my own private disaster.
The book offers practical, evidence-based pointers for troubled hearts based on her career as a disaster response planner. She avoids the dramatic in favour of a cool, human and nurturing approach. Vital are that these tools are not esoteric or difficult to understand or use. They are just real, helpful and trustworthy.
Each chapter offers a “Lesson.” Beginning by taking a look at what’s happened and what to expect of the different phases we go through in tragedy’s wake. She advises on avoiding “bad help” and discerning hope from “hopium.” The lessons contain powerful and easy to adopt tools such as reframing the victim yoke which can disempower or weigh you down and examining your own motivations.
A personal “impact assessment” may seem like the last thing one would want to consider however, this is obviously rattling freely around the skull already and there is great benefit from auditing our losses first before we can assess how best to heal or even contemplate rebuilding.
This is a book which promises no flashy, quick fixes or self-improvement “jazz” but rather permeates your soul and sits with you like a good friend who knows when to offer solutions and when to just let you cry, bitch, swear or not speak at all. Most importantly for me; there was none of the relentless optimism you can find yourself resenting.
It was a good decision to narrate her own book. I was really comforted by her simple authenticity & the sincerity demonstrated through her bravely sharing her own personal disasters.
Come What May stays with you. It’s so well considered and constructed. For me it’s acted as a grounding and calm springboard to the other works she kindly suggests.
I’m truly grateful for this book and to Lucy Easthope for putting her “lessons” out there. I’ll share this with people going forward.
Sensible, compassionate. Simply human
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Excellent- Reassuring & practical
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Hot chocolate and sage advice beautifully crafted
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practical and moving
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