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Book News: Everyone's asking about Conversations with Teddy, my childhood memoirs! I promise it will shake you up, and make you think about some really tough issues that many people keep hidden, too painful to confront. Conversations with Teddy is a brooding, eloquent and vivid story about growing up experiencing physical, emotional, spiritual and sexual abuse. |
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Names
of other people have been changed, but Conversations with
Teddy is a true account of my childhood. |
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Throughout Conversations with Teddy the sea that laps Port Macquaire's coastline plays an important role in setting the scene for many of my memories. The continual stirring of the waters, the rising of the waves crashing on the beach aroused from with the depths of my being hidden, painful and disturbing memoirs. |
Tales to share: Conversations with Teddy, the three part publication tells the story of a dysfunctional and abusive childhood and the little girl who survived it, thanks, in part, to her teddy - 'the best psychologist anyone could have.' Port Macquarie News |
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Left - Shirley May standing petrified in front of Mister with her older sister comforting her. | Right - Shirley May rejoicing as a survivor in front of Mister, the entrance to Luna Park, St Kilda, Melbourne | ![]() |
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The story, Conversations with Teddy, is told with remarkable wit, compassion and courage. It's a work of beauty from a beast of a childhood. A. VanGaalen . Psychotherapist. |
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"This work is a credit to Shirley May's courage and determination to finally express the secrets of her childhood so long hidden. In this sharing, she both enables herself to move towards healing from the past and assists other survivors of childhood dysfunction and abuse to know that they are not alone. Maria Nolan, Psychologist. |
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| Recreational
child abuse isn't usually committed in a fit of rage, or for disciplinary
purposes. I believe it's recreational abuse when parents, or other
caretakers, abuse children for fun.
Trena Cole, author of Charred Souls |
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'A heartbreaking story, just heartbreaking for an adult to read and then to imagine how a child could live through this is double the heartbreak. Coming from an animal mad family, this story is gutting for me! And I'm sure hard for you to write. Love the poem, I have a few like this that people sent me when I had to put my old dog Bob down and I still have them framed on the wall. The comfort they give still amazes me!' Carolyn Beasley,
Tutor, Dept of Writing |
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Interview by Amanda Erskine 2008 Interview by Elizabeth Crawford 2008 Evening interview by Elizabeth Crawford 2008 To organise an appearance or interview with Shirley May please submit your request. |
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We
are who we are not despite adversity, but because of it. Julie Gregory author
of Sickened and My
Fathers Keeper |
We are caught between a trilogy of opposing forces; Aboriginal Australia, British colony, and Multicultural Australia. Until we find a way of disassociating ourselves from any one of these 'identities' we will remain deadlocked in a battle for the supremacy of one over the other. Bronwyne Jeanette Thomason - Writer |
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| Links to Professional Bodies | |||||||
| © Shirley May, August 2008 | |||||||
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