Our Lady of Hot Messes e-bog
142,94 DKK
(inkl. moms 178,68 DKK)
Leticia Ochoa Adams met Jesus in a dive bar when she was eighteen years old.She didn't actually meet Jesus, but it was there where she first witnessed holiness in action. The bar's regulars taught her about the importance of community, being honest about who she is, not giving up on people, and how to laugheven when awful things happen.In Our Lady of Hot Messes, Ochoa Adams tells the ongoing st...
E-bog
142,94 DKK
Forlag
Ave Maria Press
Udgivet
11 november 2022
Længde
160 sider
Genrer
HRCC7
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781646801510
Leticia Ochoa Adams met Jesus in a dive bar when she was eighteen years old.She didn't actually meet Jesus, but it was there where she first witnessed holiness in action. The bar's regulars taught her about the importance of community, being honest about who she is, not giving up on people, and how to laugheven when awful things happen.In Our Lady of Hot Messes, Ochoa Adams tells the ongoing story of her redemption. At times funny and heartbreaking, but always gritty and unflinchingly honest, her story shows that no matter what you're dealing with, God wants you to trust in his love.The Tejana daughter of a single mothera cycle she would repeat in her own lifeOchoa Adams was sexually abused as a child. She married after a two-week courtship and, eight years later, divorced her husband who struggled with drug addiction. In between she suffered a late-term miscarriage and had three more children back-to-back.She always thought a dream life meant having a big house, kids, lots of money, and new cars. Since she hadn't yet cracked the code for the American dream, ';I turned to the person that every American woman turns to when looking for a way to make a better life for herself: Oprah.'Watching the daytime talk show queen helped Ochoa Adams put a name to what happened to her as a child. But she was still searching for something more. Ochoa Adams was baptized Catholic but attended a small-town Baptist church growing up. When she reverted to Catholicism at age thirty-three in order to marry her second husband, Ochoa Adams was convinced that Catholics had all of the answers to life's toughest questions. But she quickly learned that becoming Catholic didn't mean she could just erase her bad choices and difficult past. And just when she thought she was getting her life together, her son, Anthony, died by suicide.God, therapy, and caring priests helped her face her pain and heal her brokenness. She wants you to see yourself in her mistakes, learn from them, and realize along with her that even when we've put our trust in Godeven if it's begrudginglywe still have to do the tough work to become the person God wants us to be.';I still make mistakes,' she says, ';but I'm trying not to live as a hot mess even when things around me are messy.'