Hannah, my writing coach and editor, asked if writing, Not of My Making, was cathartic. No, I told her. It wasn’t like that. Although many people assume it was. Writing my book was not an exercise in releasing pent up anger or other intense emotions that I had repressed years before. After all, most of the book was written shortly after the events or as they were unfolding. I was fully aware of my feelings and was actively seeking a solution to the conflict that confronted me.
However, the writing process allowed me to sort through events and figure out what had happened and why. I was desperate to tell my story. My adversaries did everything they could to prevent me from talking to others including shunning, expulsion from church and threatening legal action against me. It felt as if they had bound and gagged me and if I didn’t find a way to fight back I would lose myself. Then it came to me. I could take my journal and emails and write about what happened. While my adversaries were successful in silencing me within our church community, the First Amendment of the United States Constitution protected my right to talk to others outside of church and write a book about it. Every time someone reads my book or talks to me about bullying in churches I and other abuse survivors win.
Not of My Making provides support and comfort to those who have been similarly mistreated. United in a common cause we can seek ways to reduce the incidence of abuse in schools, work and religious communities. If you haven’t read the book, I urge you to do so. You will learn who is targeted and why; what the long term consequences are for the target; and what the target can do to protect themselves. The book is of interest not only to survivors of abuse but to clergy and mental health professionals who want to help their clients overcome their own abuse experiences. Click here enter the pass code Thrive to get 35% off the book. Or you can order the book from Amazon or Barnes & Noble Online.