If you’re someone who reads memoirs that don’t sugar‑coat survival, I’d love to share my book Still Becoming: A Survivor’s Journey from Fear to Freedom.
It’s a raw, unfiltered account of surviving domestic abuse when the system is stacked against you, the kind of story many of us live through in silence. The narrator is called “Jane Doe” because that’s how so many survivors feel: invisible, unheard, and reduced to a case number instead of a human being.
Readers who’ve finished it have said it’s the kind of book that belongs on every therapist’s table. It doesn’t offer clichés or easy answers. It shows what survival actually looks like when you have no support, no safety net, and no one coming to save you, yet you keep going anyway.
If you’re a survivor, someone still surviving, a therapist, or a reader who values truth over polish, this story was written with you in mind. My hope is that it reaches the people who need to feel less alone.
If you’d like to check it out, discuss it, or leave an honest review, it would mean more than I can say. Stories like this don’t get visibility unless readers help lift them up, and every share or review helps another survivor find it.
It’s a raw, unfiltered account of surviving domestic abuse when the system is stacked against you, the kind of story many of us live through in silence. The narrator is called “Jane Doe” because that’s how so many survivors feel: invisible, unheard, and reduced to a case number instead of a human being.
Readers who’ve finished it have said it’s the kind of book that belongs on every therapist’s table. It doesn’t offer clichés or easy answers. It shows what survival actually looks like when you have no support, no safety net, and no one coming to save you, yet you keep going anyway.
If you’re a survivor, someone still surviving, a therapist, or a reader who values truth over polish, this story was written with you in mind. My hope is that it reaches the people who need to feel less alone.
If you’d like to check it out, discuss it, or leave an honest review, it would mean more than I can say. Stories like this don’t get visibility unless readers help lift them up, and every share or review helps another survivor find it.