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Widen the Lens of Perspective
Posted by Literary-Titan

In Falling from Disgrace, you share with readers the complexities of growing up in the Mormon faith and your experiences with forced conformity. What inspired you to share your story?
To be perfectly honest, initially I was inspired by an urge to expose, particularly the sexism, of what is otherwise glossed over as a “squeaky clean” community. Social rejection leaves a lasting sting, one that I perceived as unfair. As the project unfolded, inspiration increasingly came from readers and peers with whom the narrative unexpectedly resonated: people struggling with gender or sexual identity, people estranged from their families for a variety of reasons, people pushed out of other oppressive religious communities, and even people with deep religious faith who found the story worthy of reflection. The more I received feedback that the tale had universal appeal, the more my inspiration shifted from achieving personal satisfaction to helping others find peace or perspective.
I appreciated the candid nature with which you told your story. What was the hardest thing for you to write about?
It’s a tie between writing about youthful sex and writing about shoplifting. As a young person, I had been trained to treat youthful sex with such seriousness that it still makes me blush, even while snickering at the silliness of this prudishness. I found writing about it equal parts embarrassing and silly. Writing about shoplifting was also humiliating but not in the same silly way as sex. Sexual activity was not a character flaw, even if I believed it was. Stealing, however, was a character flaw, even if I believed it was not. I know this now, of course. Writing about one’s genuine flaws is never easy. I had to force myself to do it because I knew how much it served the story. I owed that to my readers.
Did you learn anything about yourself while writing your memoir?
Most certainly. I learned I could find forgiveness and tolerance through empathy. When writing a memoir, one absolutely must show readers scenes from a wide angle, not simply a narrow and self-centered view. When you widen the lens of perspective, you let empathy in. You simply can’t keep it out when the lens is wide enough. And as soon as empathy enters your perspective, so does tolerance and acceptance. I now believe perhaps almost everything is forgivable. Even the deepest of hurts can heal with empathy. It is a self-reparative gift from nature.
What is one thing you hope your readers take away from the experiences you shared and lessons you learned?
I hope that readers will absorb and internalize the harms and dangers of misogyny so that perhaps there will be a little less of this damaging worldview flowing through humanity. I am not so naive as to believe it can ever be wiped out. We may even be “wired” to believe sexism is fundamental for the survival of our species. But times have changed. The world has changed. We have changed it. And now, minimizing sexism has become fundamental. I also hope readers see and feel the type of feminism that is as sympathetic toward men as it is to women. The men in my story are not better off because they were treated as superior. Unfair, unequal, and lopsided expectations harm both genders. Equality benefits us all.
Author Links: GoodReads | Amazon
Tammy Dietz grew up committed to her family’s Mormon faith, a profoundly patriarchal hierarchy that declares men superior and women subordinate, that demands devotion, purity, and chastity. But when the dogma of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints clashes with the forces of a changing world, Tammy’s destiny transforms.
Patriarchy provides order but also chaos in a family with a depressed mother and a hoarding father. Set in the affluent Bay Area, Tammy’s coming-of-age story is one of poverty amid wealth and a desire for status, recognition, and inclusion, both inside the Church and out. But when Tammy breaks the most serious of rules, her once certain path falters, her once protective community turns intrusive, and she finds herself on an unexpected journey.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: author, biography, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Cultural & Regional Biographies, ebook, Falling from Disgrace, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, memoir, mormon, mormonism, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, religion, story, Tammy Dietz, writer, writing
Healing the Breach – Trailer
Posted by Literary Titan
The day is fast approaching when the compilation of the many testimonies manifest in the various branches of His church will be woven together into a beautiful tapestry revealing the effort to which the Holy Spirit has gone, that God might have a happy, and united people. Yet today, the Restored Church is fractured. In this book, author Patrick McKay uses figurative language, common testimony, and prophetic expressions to illustrate the personal conviction, great spiritual truths, and lofty ideals of our epic latter-day theme. Each branch of the Restored Church has a rich legacy of testimony that has been created, preserved, and transmitted to them from the initial days of the Restoration, reminding us all of our spiritual birthright as inheritors of the angel message. McKay has seen the destiny of the Saints of the Restoration, and has written to set them free, offering fresh insights and optimism to enliven the reader to press forward toward Zion’s borderline.
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Posted in Book Trailers
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