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We Can Still Live An Amazing Life

Lara Portelli Author Interview

In Scars and All, you emphasize the idea that the wounds we carry can either keep us prisoner or guide us toward helping ease similar pain in others. Why was this an important book for you to write?

The world is hurting at the moment and many people have either physical or emotional scars and I genuinely wanted people to know that because of (not despite) our scars, we can still live an amazing life. 

Were there moments you hesitated to include because they felt too personal or raw?

Yes many, but then I pictured one woman sitting alone with her emotional scars and I held her in my heart and kept writing because it’s about HER… not me.

How important was it for you to include other voices and experiences alongside your own?

Very because I didn’t want people to not be able to relate to me and discount what I was trying to share so by adding in other people, it allows the reader to relate to someone real or fictional. Behind every fictional tale, is a real person somewhere in the world. I will be donating some books to domestic violence shelters in Australia and by showing a range of people in this book, these women may believe they will be ok too.What is one thing you hope readers take away from Scars and All?

That we all have scars in one way or another and if we remain humble and vulnerable, we can become strong again and live our best life… scars and all.

Author Links: AmazonWebsite

Scars & AllPast reminders or a future roadmap? You choose…
There comes a moment in every woman’s life when she realizes she’s been surviving instead of living.
When the smile she wears no longer reaches her eyes.
When the things she thought would make her happy suddenly feel heavy.
If that moment has found you, you are exactly where you need to be.
Scars & All is for the woman who’s been through the fire, heartbreak, betrayal, loss, or the quiet ache of not being seen and is ready to stop pretending she’s fine. It’s for the woman who has built walls to protect herself, but deep down knows they’re also keeping her from feeling whole.
With honesty and compassion, Lara Portelli takes your hand and walks with you through the truth of healing, not the filtered version the world sells you, but the real, messy, beautifully human process of becoming. She shares her story, and the stories of women who have faced their pain head-on and turned it into power.
This isn’t a book about fixing yourself… because you were never broken.
It’s a guide to remembering who you are beneath the scars.
Inside, you’ll discover:
* How to make peace with your past without letting it define your future
* Why vulnerability is not weakness, it’s your greatest act of courage
* How to rebuild self-trust after it’s been shattered
* The steps to rewrite your narrative and create a roadmap for what’s next
* Daily reflections and gentle prompts to help you reconnect with your inner voice
Every chapter is an invitation to come home to yourself, the parts you silenced, the dreams you buried, the woman you were always meant to be.
Because the truth is, your scars don’t make you less.
They make you real.
They make you resilient.
They make you ready.
So take a deep breath, beautiful woman.
It’s time to stop hiding behind what hurt you and start building what’s next…
Scars and all.

Scars and All

Scars and All is a hybrid of memoir, self-help, and conversational reflection, built around one deceptively simple idea: the wounds we carry can either keep us trapped in old pain or become a way of recognizing and easing pain in others. Lara Portelli opens with a stranger dropping milk in a Sydney supermarket, then follows that moment into a chain of encounters, most memorably with Helen at the Hydro Majestic, where a spilled carton becomes the trigger for a buried schoolyard humiliation, and later with Mia, whose mirror-bound self-loathing exposes how easily beauty standards colonize a woman’s inner life. From there, the book widens into chapters on self-harm, invisibility, dress size, cutting remarks, and visible scarring, always circling back to the same invitation: look at your scars honestly, then decide whether they’ll remain reminders or become a map forward.

Portelli writes like someone leaning across the table, saying, listen, this matters. At its best, that makes the book feel intimate in a way many books in this lane never do. Helen’s story, especially the awful convergence of guilt, self-harm, and the old humiliation of chocolate milk in her hair, has genuine force. So does the quieter ache of Mia asking whether she can “compete” with the women she sees in magazines, only to be told, beautifully and bluntly, “You don’t.” I also found the chapter on clothing size unexpectedly effective. The changing-room scene with the ruby-red dress is funny, a little chaotic, and painfully recognizable, which is exactly why it lands. The book is strongest when Portelli lets scenes breathe like that, when the ideas rise out of lived moments instead of arriving as instruction.

The writing has warmth, rhythm, and an unguarded sincerity I appreciated, even when it wanders into reflective detours. There are moments when the narrative shifts from personal storytelling into broader reflections, motivational language, and ideas around NLP, past life regression, and inherited trauma. Those sections didn’t resonate with me quite as strongly as the more intimate, lived scenes, though they still felt consistent with the book’s searching and deeply personal spirit. I trusted Portelli most when she was describing a room, a look, a humiliation, a sudden kindness, the soft light of Holly Difford’s photo shoot, or the raw fact of Turia Pitt refusing to let “5 seconds of pain and agony” define the rest of her life. I never doubted the sincerity underneath everything. The book’s moral imagination is generous. It wants people to be gentler with themselves and more alert to the hurt in others, and that conviction gives it a pulse.

Scars and All is heartfelt and genuinely affecting. I think it succeeds because Portelli is willing to be raw, personal, and earnest in service of a deeply human belief: that pain can enlarge us instead of reducing us. By the time she returns to the image of walking someone “to the safety of that dry space,” the book had earned its tenderness. I’d recommend it most to readers who like personal-development books with memoir blood in them, especially women navigating reinvention, self-worth, body image, or the long afterlife of emotional injury.

Pages: 96 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0FYNQG85V

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