Some stories start with a loss so early that you don't even have the words for what happened. You just carry it. You carry it into every room, every relationship, every quiet moment where something feels off but you can't name why. That's where Wendy's story begins. She was seven years old when her father died, and nobody sat down to explain it. Nobody said you're allowed to be angry. Nobody said you can talk to him in the moon and the stars. The world just kept moving, and she learned to move with it.
What Wendy didn't know until she was 62 is that her instinct of not quite belonging had an answer she hadn't even thought to look for. A DNA test. A buried secret. A biological father who had come to her house while her dad was at work, and a mother who had spent a lifetime protecting everyone except the one person who most needed the truth.
This is a conversation about what it costs to grow up without language for your own grief. It's about the way a body holds on to what a family refuses to say out loud. And it's about what happens when the truth, as painful and as complicated as it is, finally lands. Wendy wrote her memoir, My Pretty Baby, as a call to action, not just a personal story. Because 64% of adults have experienced some form of adverse childhood experience, and most of them were never given permission to talk about it.
What You'll Hear:
• What it felt like to lose a parent at seven when no one gave grief a name
• The moment in an acting class in her 20s when 20 years of buried anger finally surfaced
• How growing up with an alcoholic stepfather shaped her sense of self and blame
• The DNA discovery at 62 that reframed her entire life and answered the question she didn't know she'd been asking
• What it means to feel validated by the truth, even when the truth comes too late for some conversations
• Why she wrote My Pretty Baby as a call to action and what she hopes readers carry with them
Guest Bio:
Wendy B. Correa is a writer, yogi, speaker, and advocate for honest conversations about adverse childhood experiences. Her memoir, My Pretty Baby, traces her journey through childhood loss, family dysfunction, and the identity-shifting discovery that her biological father was not who she believed him to be. She is committed to breaking the silence around ACEs and helping others find language for the things they were never allowed to say. You can find her at www.wendybcorrea.com (http://www.wendybcorrea.com) and on Instagram at @WendyBCorrea.
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Over 100 true stories. Eight sections. One listener making sense of what it all means for the rest of us.
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