The House That Was Never Safe

The author is a memoirist and storyteller whose work explores trauma, emotional neglect, identity, family systems, and the long psychological shadow of childhood. Through lyrical prose and deeply introspective storytelling, she examines the hidden emotional realities that exist beneath carefully maintained appearances.

Raised in an unstable and emotionally fractured home shaped by addiction, violence, performance, and abandonment, she learned early how children adapt in order to survive environments that cannot fully hold or protect them. Her writing is rooted in lived experience and focuses on the quiet, often invisible consequences of growing up without consistent safety, comfort, or unconditional love.

Drawing from a childhood that moved between privilege and emotional isolation, her work explores the tension between outward appearances and private devastation, as well as the resilience required to rebuild a sense of self after years spent disappearing inside the needs of others.

The House That Was Never Safe is her debut memoir.