"Keeping my bisexuality a secret hasn't been easy, but after years of hiding who I am, the thought of coming out terrifies me.
Pearson, Frank S., Douglas S. Lipton, Charles M. Cleland, and Dorline S. Yee. 2002. “The Effects of Behavioral/Cognitive-Behavioral Programs on Recidivism.” Crime & Delinquency 48(3):476–496. doi: 10.1177/001112870204800306.
In Prisoners' Children: What Are the Issues?, edited by Roger Shaw, 74–85. London: Routledge. Demers, Jennifer M., Alexa P. Roberts, Sidney Bennett, and Victoria L. Banyard. 2017. “Victim Motivations for Disclosing Unwanted Sexual ...
Pete Jackson? You, you had that f...f...fool P... P... Pete J...Jackson up here to the house near your sisters?” Oscar still didn't say anything. Sister was beginning to get nervous. Their father was stammering, and whenever that ...
2010. “Child Support, Father–Child Contact, and Preteens' Involvement with Nonresidential Fathers: Racial/Ethnic Differences.” Journal of Family and Economic Issues 31 (1):14–32. Holzer, Harry J., Steven Raphael, and Michael A. Stoll.
A young girl spends song-filled summers with her music-loving grandmother in the Philippines, but when her beloved Lola starts slipping into silence and stillness, the girl helps her grandmother hold on with music and the joyful memories ...
Monoddedto Joseph andreached upwith both arms, taking hold of theend ofthe branch. He hung on it with his full weight so thatit drooped precariously to the ground. Joseph andGrant then inched their way toward Mo.
Lady E. described her feelings about being asked to engage in this type of volunteerism: “You want me to stand up and hold a sign? And my treatment is already paid? Maybe I should have tried to hold the sign, but I felt like I'm not ...
“That's a normal memory to hold on to, Jamie. You have to remember that you are stronger than what you went through over there. What happened to you does not define you as a human being, and it does not define you as a woman.
A young girl in the Philippines uses music to connect with her grandmother as her memory fades in this warm and moving picture book perfect for fans of Pixar’s Coco.
Although these poems began as therapy, 'poetic medicine' for a wounded heart, the book is ultimately a celebration of the art of making, of the ability to find joy even in despair.