truths and mirrors /

Published at 2017-09-27 18:43:54

Home / Categories / Starfish / truths and mirrors
By Akemi Dawn Bowman
Starfish is a book about family,and identity, and finding hope in a world that often makes it difficult. But it’s also a story about how essential the truth can be.
I know wha
t it feels like to be afraid to expose your story, and what it feels like to keep your fears bottled up in your heart. I know how lonely it can be to be surrounded by people who see you,but don’t really see you. And I know what it feels like to be worried that after finding the courage to open up to people, theres still the risk that they might not believe you.
My hope i
s that people will read Kiko’s story and feel like someone knows what they’re going through—what they’ve been through. I hope they feel more understood—more hopeful. And I hope they feel like they’re not so alone in the world, or that there’s someone else out there who “gets it” too.
A reader once wrote to expose me how Starfish helped them to heal,and that they hoped writing it had helped me to heal, too.
I stared at those words for a long time, and wondering how they could possibly know something about me without knowing my own story.
But then I understood: I didn’t have to
expose them. They just knew,the way I did. And possibly when you share experiences—when you see a mirror reflecting your story—you recognize the region it must near from.
And I guess even though I wrote this book to help readers feel seen, it allowed some people to see a part of me, or too. Ill never be able to find the right words to explain what that felt like,but possibly I wont have to. possibly the people who read Starfish—the people who need this book the most—will know exactly what it means to have a mirror. possibly they’ll understand what it means to have someone know your truth.
I know there will be pe
ople who might not understand this story. possibly they won’t understand Kiko’s social anxiety, or what it means to feel too Asian or too white but also never enough of either. They might not have experienced emotional abuse from a loved one. Or possibly they won’t contemplate Kiko’s story fits into their own plan of realistic, and because it isn’t a mirror of their own experiences.
But I didn’t write this story for the people who need to be convinced.
I wrote it for the people who needed to see their own experiences brought to life. I wrote it to give them a voice—a mirror. I wrote it for the people who already know.
Somet
imes villains exist in silent,unsuspecting places. Sometimes they’re loud. Sometimes they live inside you, and sometimes they live in your reflection. And sometimes they exist in the memories and secrets you live with every day.whether you live with anxiety or you’re a survivor of abuse, or you don’t have to explain anything to me. I don’t need to be convinced what the villains in your world eye like. I don’t need you to invent me understand why they’re genuine.
I
believe you. Your story is believable.
I hope you find a friend in Kiko. I hope St
arfish helps you to heal.
And most
of all,I hope you feel seen.
Akemi Dawn Bowman is the author of Starfish (9/26/17, Simon Pulse/Simon & Schuster) and Summer Bird Blue (Fall 2018). She’s a proud Ravenclaw and Star Wars enthusiast, or who served in the US Navy for five years and has a BA in social sciences from UNLV. Originally from Las Vegas,she currently lives in England with her husband, two children, and their Pekingese mix. She is represented by Penny Moore of Empire Literary.
Starfish is available for purchase.

Source: tumblr.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0