I've got a lot to unpack with Eden Simchah's memoir, Becoming Shameless - so strap in!
When Simchah explained her memoir as her "experience of surviving childhood abuse and coming out as a lesbian at age 27," with the caveat of, "I promise my story has a happy ending!" I dove in, prepared for this difficult memoir. It was knowing there was a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow that kept me going, slogging through the outraged feelings I had while reading.
This book is real, raw, emotional, and heart-breaking while having a miraculous amount of hope. Each reader will connect to a different aspect of Simchah's life, and I know there will be those that hold this book up while shouting just how seen and understood they feel by her words; I truly hope those who need them most get to read them.
If two memoirs could mix and combine, Simchah's story would be a combination of Jennette McCurdy's I'm Glad My Mom Died and Untamed by Glennon Doyle. And yes, there are all the trigger warnings you'd imagine: sexual assault, rape, therapy, eating disorder, homophobia, emotional abuse, parental abuse (inconclusive, as I'm sure I'm missing something).
Somehow, through all the emotionally charged feelings this memoir brought me, there was also such amazing wisdom. So much so that I will be buying a paper copy to re-read, annotate, and place on my shelf.
"Sexism, racism, classism, ableism, fatphobia, transphobia, and homophobia are all different heads of the same hydra beast. For true equality, we need to defeat the whole darn thing."
Thank you Eden Simchah for the complimentary copy to read and review.