You have one of two break the cycle or shrivel up and die. Your voice is a right bestowed upon you at birth. In an uninviting way painful events happen in your life and silence it. With torment you wear the scarlet letter around your neck in shame and distain. Visible like a branded animal for the world to see and feel. Worthlessness etched into your being and fibre oozing out your pores. Heading towards a slow torturous death! For those who suffer with no identity voice purpose or say.
Author Debbie Major suffered from her voice being silenced early in life. No longer wearing the tread marks of other people’s hurt and anger on her back like a door mat she found a framework to regain her voice and shares openly. Discover your voice today.
By reading Lost Voice you stop the pain and abuse in your life, learn how to get to a safe place, live a positive self-image, define describe and differentiate your voice and discover love for you. Standing tall one voice at a time!
DEBBIE MAJOR is an author, coach and speaker who helps people find the courage to stop the pain and love self, confidence to utilize one’s voice, and clarity to fulfill their calling. Debbie lives with her husband near Toronto, Ontario and they are blessed with two remarkable, intelligent and outstanding adult children.
Wow, where do I begin? This book was a RIDE, and not in a good way. I would’ve DNF’ed a book for the very first time had this not been recommended and lent to me.
Idk, maybe I’m too far into my trauma journey and that’s why I felt like this book was just talking in circles and filled with cliches? It was hard to get through. It’s FILLED with spelling and grammatical errors, run on sentences, and a lack of punctuation. From my understanding, English was her first language, but it reads as ESL without an editor so it was hard to read. She also references the URL for her website in almost every single chapter, which kind of made it feel like an email ad for “10 reasons why you should sign up for my course”.
One of my favourite parts of this life-after-trauma book was when she said “the GMO seed I think contains round up” and went on a spiel about roundup and GMOs and wanting to get rid of fat spots, lol.
Overall, there are a few small nuggets of good advice, but nothing you can’t get from any article on overcoming trauma. Would maybe recommend if you’re fresh out of your trauma, heavy in your grieving and need all the “light at the end of the tunnel” cliches? But tbh probably still wouldn’t.