The Hello Bar is a simple notification bar that engages users and communicates a call to action.

How to Get Over Abuse in Your Life

Mary DeMuth is a great friend of mine and a brilliant freaking author. I recently read her latest book ‘The Muir House’ and was deeply challenged. I was challenged to be a better husband and better father. I asked her to write a bit about the story behind this book.

Mary, take it away:

I wrote the novel The Muir House because of a secret. Although it’s a risk for me to share it, I feel it’s important, and it will deepen your experience of the book.

Those who have read my story in Thin Places know I endured some trauma in my childhood. Sexual abuse at five, several parental divorces, the death of my father. All these things served to help me see my gaping need for Jesus. While it’s painful that I had to endure what I did, I can now see those trials as the very means God used to bring me to Himself. To put it simply, my daddy-shaped-hole made me yearn for the Daddy who would never leave me.
I’ve been on the journey of healing many, many years now. Although I’ve grown so much, there is one thing I can’t seem to get over: a hole in my memory. Even writing it scares me. What will my extended family think? Will this cause more friction? What if my empty memory is nothing?

The weird thing about my brain is that I remember everything. I have a clear memory of being about two years old, extremely vivid. And then nothing until I am four. Normally I would just chalk this up to being a child and forgetting or simply not remembering, but when I’ve asked my relatives about it, the answer never comes. Some have started crying. “Why would you want to know that? Why go back there?” Others are adamant that nothing happened to me. Others think I’m crazy for asking. But always, there is never a satisfactory answer and lots and lots of evasion. Rumors have flown around about homelessness, but nothing I can pin down.

I need to know. It’s this ache inside me, this agony to know what was missing from my life. What happened? Why won’t anyone tell me?

This search has driven me to become an investigative reporter. I’ve dug up old acquaintances from the past, written letters, sent emails, hoping to unfold the mystery. Nothing. I’ve prayed, but no insight has come. I’ve tried to settle myself, but I’m still antsy.

What has helped me with my need to know was remembering something my husband Patrick told me years ago. With words, he painted a picture. He said my distance (at the time) felt like I was pacing the high dive, deciding whether I would jump into the pool. Down below were my children and him, all beckoning me to jump. But I paced. And worried. And fretted. I didn’t jump. Instead, in the word picture, I came off the high dive, then sat on the side of the pool and dangled my feet. Our later discussion helped me see an important truth. No matter what may make you pace the high dive (for me it’s this missing memory conundrum), you can still make a choice to live, to enjoy, to engage with people. You don’t have to be trapped up there or be relegated to the side of the pool.

This is why I wrote The Muir House. I wanted to explore the idea that we may never know the exact truth of things. We may investigate until our heart is raw. But even if things are left unresolved, we always have the choice to grow and live anyway. Willa had that choice. I have that choice. Even you have that choice.

We can let the past be our excuse to live crippled lives.
Or we can leap into the halcyon air, and jump footfirst into life.

Which will you choose?

Curious? Here’s the book trailer:


We’re doing a crazy blog experiment with The Muir House and we’d love for you to be a part. In addition to several folks around the world blogging about their emotional reaction to the book, you have a chance to be involved as well. Simply click to find out how you can receive all the posts in your inbox, have a chance to help me write a novella based on the book (Yes! You get to help!), participate in a webinar where I answer your publishing questions, get several novels and ebooks, and have one page of your work critiqued.

With joy,
Mary DeMuth

*none of the links in this article are affiliate links, FYI. – Josh

  • http://bradmoorecoaching.com Brad Moore

    Mary….thanks for sharing “the secret.” I am trying to be more transparent in my own life and it helps to “be around”  folks like yourself. I love to see this in folks yet I find it difficult sometimes to show it with myself! Thanks again and thanks for the post, Josh.

    • http://www.thenonconformistfamily.com Joshua Gordon

      Brad, always a pleasure. Thanks for jumping in. Kevin Miller (@agentmiller) made a comment the other day that applies here, I think. He said that when we do ‘big things’ (read: live transparently) we give others permission to do it as well.

      Thoughts?

      • http://bradmoorecoaching.com Brad Moore

        Totally right on.

        Remember a million years ago I was asked to teach/ lead a group at my church. I was REALLY STRUGGLING at the time and just didn’t feel like putting on the “happy face.” So I opened up with some really deep stuff and a few things I had learned. From there, abouut 20 other folks did the same thing – some whom I would have never thought would open up and much less have any life struggles. It was amazing and quite unexpected!! Yeah…Kevin is right.

        • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

          I so agree. When you share, you show others they are no longer alone. Which begats more sharing.

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      I’ve found far more freedom from honesty than hiding. So I commend you for embracing authenticity.

      • http://www.thenonconformistfamily.com Joshua Gordon

        I heard this cool metaphor one time that really speaks to me… someone told me that mould only grows in the dark. If you want to kill the mould in a piece of clothing, simply hang it in the sun.

        Apt, no?

  • Pingback: The Muir House | Shalom Mama

  • Pingback: Tara Rodden Robinson :: The Productivity Maven