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As a complement to my book Who Cares What You Think...So What You
Think?, No Longer Hidden is an account of my journey through life,
captured in metaphorical images and lyrical format. Poetry permits
a person to see through a kaleidoscopic lens as the sequence of
life events presents challenges that would be unbearable if not
written in a melodic form. Where the book serves as a cutting board
for me, a space for dissecting my innermost feelings, it is also an
entree served to the reader, since one may be able to absorb secret
truths as he or she ingests each piece of poetry.
How do you feel about Change? Is Change the lover you relate to
intimately and trust with your very life? A friend you're happy to
see now and then but from whom you sometimes need time apart? Or an
enemy you fear and keep at a distance? Such heart-wrenching and
soul-probing questions bring reader and author alike to a place of
enlightenment, deepened relationships, and . . . change. But it can
be a long journey from there to here. Hate change. Embrace chaos.
Love hate. Fulfill pleasure. And if possible, cultivate envy until
it breaks through the walls of your desperately desirous heart.
Bathsheba Smithen adopts these principles in order to survive,
until things go from bad to worse. When her father, who is also a
pastor, suddenly dies of a heart attack eight years after she saw
him last, she is left to deal with the clash of emotions between
his two rivaling families and-hardest of all-within herself. Issues
spin out of control at his funeral, and in the aftermath, so does
Sheba's life. To cope with her grief over what was and what might
(should) have been between a dad and a daughter, the simultaneous
abandonment by her mother, financial struggles, and her new role as
legal guardian to two teenage siblings, she must entrust herself to
an uncertain hope, even if it means losing some of the people she
loves and the habits she has long relied on. She must accept
Change. By sharing her own experiences transparently, Bathsheba
hopes to support others who find themselves where she once was-on a
dead-end street. What Happens to Them When You Change is an
offering of the heart, through which the author aims to help bridge
the gap between the change you seek and the resources you need in
order to make-or let-change happen. This creatively written memoir
will give the helpless teen a shoulder to cry on, the step-mother a
listening ear, and the black sheep of the family a will to come
back home. As the nightmare fades, the only thing loud is the
silence. Will the reader accept the freedom Change brings or remain
wed to the shackles of destructive habits-the "Them" of the title?
Unique in style, this book goes beyond a narrative of the author's
life to examine the process of change that touches us all. Change,
along with other unexpected characters, is memorably personified as
part of the author's experience, offering the reader a visual of
his or her emotions as well. The subject matter here is universal,
with the power to inspire people of all nationalities, ethnicities,
and walks of life.
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