Daily Archives: November 19, 2025

“5 Questions With A.L. Childers: The Memoir That Grew Up in the Dark”


A conversation with A.L. Childers about trauma, survival, and the memoir already being called “the next Educated.”

Some stories are written to entertain.
Some stories are written to remember.
And then there are the stories that claw their way out because silence is no longer survivable.

A.L. Childers’ upcoming memoir,
THE GIRL THE DARKNESS RAISED: A Memoir of Scarcity, Survival, and Becoming,
is one of those stories.

Told in haunting, cinematic scenes, this memoir traces the life of a young Southern girl raised by poverty, shame, and a night that split her childhood in two — and the woman she becomes when the past refuses to stay quiet.

Today, we sit down with the author herself for five essential questions about the book everyone is already talking about.


1. What inspired this memoir?

A.L. Childers:
“This book wasn’t planned — it demanded to be written.
I spent years carrying a childhood that never had words.
Poverty, hunger, chaos, and one night that changed everything.

I didn’t grow up; I survived childhood. And survival followed me into motherhood, into anxiety, into the places I thought were love but felt like repetition.

One day I realized: if I didn’t write this, the silence would bury me.
And I was done being quiet.”


2. The title is powerful. What does it mean?

A.L. Childers:
“I didn’t grow up in the dark — the dark grew up around me.
The title reflects how trauma becomes an environment.
It shapes you before you even know what you are.

But it also hints at rebirth —
you can be raised by darkness and still rise into light.”


3. What was the hardest scene to write?

A.L. Childers:
“The night that split my childhood.
I wrote it slowly, in pieces, because the body remembers even when the mind pretends it doesn’t.

Writing it was like walking back into a fire —
but stepping out this time as the woman who survived.”


4. What do you hope readers take away from this memoir?

A.L. Childers:
“That their pain has context.
That their story matters.
And that healing isn’t becoming someone new —
it’s returning for the girl we abandoned just to survive.

She’s still waiting.”


5. Do you think this story will become a movie?

A.L. Childers:
“This book was written scene by scene, breath by breath.
Every chapter plays like a camera shot.

The film rights are officially available, and the story fits right in with
A24, Netflix, Hulu, and Apple TV+.

I would love to see this story given the kind of raw, atmospheric treatment it deserves.”


🌟 ABOUT THE BOOK

THE GIRL THE DARKNESS RAISED is a memoir about generational trauma, childhood survival, motherhood, anxiety, and the moment a woman decides to rise.

Perfect for readers of:

  • Educated
  • The Glass Castle
  • Maid
  • Tiny Beautiful Things
  • Sharp Objects

This memoir doesn’t offer a happy ending —
it offers an honest one.

The Girl the Darkness Raised: A Memoir of Scarcity, Survival, and Becoming


✍️ ABOUT THE AUTHOR

A.L. Childers is the author of over 200 works spanning memoir, women’s empowerment, metaphysics, historical commentary, and health advocacy.
Born in South Carolina and raised by shadows, she now writes stories that help women break generational cycles and reclaim the parts of themselves they once had to hide.


🎞️ FILM RIGHTS

Film, TV, and global streaming rights are officially available.
For inquiries:
📧audreychilders@hotmail.com
🌐 http://www.TheHypothyroidismChick.com

A.L. Childers (Audrey Childers) is a multi-genre author of 200+ titles blending women’s health advocacy, humor, and deep-dive research. Her mission is to help women navigating hypothyroidism, Hashimoto’s, perimenopause/menopause, and everything in between make informed choices—without fear-mongering. Explore her books and health-first writing across food, hidden histories, and everyday empowerment.

Find her books on Amazon under A.L. Childers
Visit her blog: TheHypothyroidismChick.com

 Books by A.L. Childers



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#ALChilders #TheGirlTheDarknessRaised #Memoir2025 #WomenWhoRise #TraumaMemoir #HealingJourney #BookInterview #AuthorSpotlight #SurvivalStories #ComingSoon2025

The Day the Universe Sat Beside Me: How Staying Home Helped Me Finish the Book My Soul Was Born to Write

I stayed home, trusted the universe, and wrote the memoir my soul needed. The Girl the Darkness Raised was born in one aligned, unforgettable day.

The Girl the Darkness Raised: A Memoir of Scarcity, Survival, and Becoming


The Day the Universe Sat Beside Me

There are days you plan —
and then there are days the universe plans for you.

Today was one of those days.

I didn’t know when I woke up that I was about to finish one of the most important books of my life. I didn’t know that choosing to stay home — instead of rushing out into the world — would align me with something bigger, quieter, and deeply overdue.

But I felt the nudge.
That little whisper:
“Sit still. Create.”

So I stayed home.
And in that stillness, something extraordinary happened.


A Book That Wrote Itself

The Girl the Darkness Raised didn’t fight me.
It didn’t resist, twist, or demand revisions.

It poured out.

Clean. Complete. Certain.

The moment I finished, I felt it — that rare shock writers only experience a few times in their lifetime:

No corrections needed.
Not one.

That’s when I knew this wasn’t just writing.

This was alignment.

This was the universe handing me the story I was finally ready to hold —
and you, my partner in creation, placing every piece in my hands exactly when I needed it.


The Moment Everything Clicked

I had been on the fence most of the morning.
Should I go out? Should I write? Should I handle something else first?

But choosing to stay home was choosing myself.

Choosing my healing.
Choosing my purpose.
Choosing the woman who survived the life that built this memoir.

Once I opened the blank page, it was as if the universe leaned in and said:

“Here. This is what your soul has been carrying.
Let’s set it down together.”

And we did.
You, me, my memories, and something far bigger than both of us.


A Book That Feels Like Destiny

This memoir isn’t just a story.
It’s a witness.
A reckoning.
A rising.

Every sentence felt like truth arriving in real time.
Every chapter felt like closure wrapped in courage.

And the fact that it needed no rewrites told me exactly what I needed to know:

It was meant to be written today.
It was meant to come through me, not from me.
It was meant to rise without resistance, because I was finally ready.


Why This Book Matters

The Girl the Darkness Raised is not just a memoir —
it’s proof.

Proof that what tries to bury you can’t see in the dark the way you can.
Proof that survival is a language only the risen understand.
Proof that there is power in telling the truth out loud.

It’s the book my soul needed —
and maybe the book someone else out there desperately needs too.


A Thank You to the Universe — and to the Process

I don’t know what made today the day.
But I know this:

The universe aligned every thread —
my stillness, my readiness, my voice, and the partnership that helped me bring it to life.

This wasn’t accidental.
This wasn’t random.

This was divine timing disguised as a Tuesday.

And I am grateful for every second of it.

The Girl the Darkness Raised: A Memoir of Scarcity, Survival, and Becoming


About the Author

A.L. Childers is a multi-genre author whose work blends trauma recovery, women’s empowerment, and the raw truth of survival. She writes with heart, humor, and the kind of honesty that frees both the writer and the reader. Her mission is to help women rise — no matter how dark the beginning.

A.L. Childers (Audrey Childers) is a multi-genre author of 200+ titles blending women’s health advocacy, humor, and deep-dive research. Her mission is to help women navigating hypothyroidism, Hashimoto’s, perimenopause/menopause, and everything in between make informed choices—without fear-mongering. Explore her books and health-first writing across food, hidden histories, and everyday empowerment.

Find her books on Amazon under A.L. Childers
Visit her blog: TheHypothyroidismChick.com

 Books by A.L. Childers


#TheGirlTheDarknessRaised #ALChilders #MemoirWriter #HealingJourney #TraumaSurvivor #WomenWhoRise #WritingWithPurpose #UniverseAlignment #MemoirAboutResilience #WritersLife #HealingThroughWords #SurvivorStories #BookLaunch2025

MESSAGE TO THE READER-For the One Holding This Book in the Quiet

For the One Holding This Book in the Quiet

“A memoir about survival, silence, and rising —
The Girl the Darkness Raised by A.L. Childers.
This story feels cinematic, atmospheric, and painfully real.
Exploring themes seen in projects by @A24, @NetflixFilm, and @HelloSunshine.”

If you’re reading this,

there is a reason.

Maybe you saw yourself in pieces of my story —

in the hunger, or the silence,

or the girl who learned to disappear,

or the woman who carried too much for too long.

Maybe you recognized the exhaustion.

The pretending.

The shrinking.

The ache of being unseen in your own life.

Maybe you felt the sting of shame

for wanting more than survival.

Whatever brought you here,

hear me clearly:

You deserve a life that doesn’t break you.

You deserve joy without apology.

You deserve freedom without fear.

You deserve to be loved without conditions.

You deserve to occupy space without earning it.

And if the world taught you otherwise,

let this book be your proof

that they were wrong.

You are not too much.

You are not hard to love.

You are not broken beyond repair.

You are not the sum of what happened to you.

You are not the version of yourself that pain created.

You are becoming —

and becoming is holy work.

If something in this book cracked open a door in you,

even a small one,

even a sliver of light —

follow it.

There is a life waiting for you that does not hurt to live.

The Girl the Darkness Raised: A Memoir of Scarcity, Survival, and Becoming

Surviving Menopause in a World That Worships Youth

When Your Body Changes and the World Looks Away

Menopause doesn’t arrive like a visitor.

It intrudes.

One day you wake up and realize the body you’ve lived in your whole life

has begun to turn into something unfamiliar—

a creature molting in slow, messy spirals.

Your skin feels different.

Your face looks different.

Your mood shifts like the weather in tornado season.

Your weight rearranges itself without permission,

like your body is a house being redecorated

by someone who hates you.

It starts quietly:

A hot flash here.

A forgotten word there.

A sudden tearful breakdown in the grocery store parking lot

because they were out of your favorite creamer

and it was the last small thing holding your sanity together.

Then it gets louder.

Your hormones start operating with the precision of a drunk drummer.

Your metabolism quits like it’s clocking out early.

Your waistline expands without warning,

as if fat is being delivered by Amazon Prime

to places you’ve never stored it before.

There’s a moment—

and every woman knows it—

when you catch your reflection and feel a jolt of horror

because for the first time

you don’t recognize the woman in front of you.

Her face is fuller.

Her eyes are tired.

Her jawline softer.

Her neck different.

Her entire presence altered

in a way that feels like a violation.

“Is this me now?”

you whisper at the mirror,

as if asking it permission to still exist.

Youth is currency in this world.

And menopause feels like someone emptying your bank account

without warning.

No one prepares you for the grief.

Not the grief for youth itself—

but the grief for the version of yourself

you thought you’d have a little longer.

You start mourning things that aren’t dead:

Your smaller jeans.

Your faster metabolism.

Your glowing skin.

Your confidence in being looked at without flinching.

Your ability to feel sexy without choking on insecurity.

But the cruelest part?

The world doesn’t mourn with you.

Society treats aging women like expired coupons—

once useful, now ignored.

Men get “distinguished.”

Women get “let go.”

And every time you feel invisible,

every time you feel dismissed,

every time you feel replaced by someone younger

and firmer

and smoother,

another small crack forms inside you.

Menopause is not just physical.

It is a psychological haunting.

Your brain fog becomes a fog inside your identity.

Your mood swings feel like emotional possession.

Your libido disappears like a witness in a mob movie.

Your sleep breaks into fragments—

twenty-minute intervals of sweating, freezing, thrashing, thinking,

regretting, overthinking,

and then sweating again.

Your body becomes a battlefield

against itself.

And let’s talk about weight.

No one warns you how humiliating it feels

to gain weight without “earning” it.

Not from overeating.

Not from binging.

Not from laziness.

Just from existing in a body

whose hormones have declared mutiny.

You try everything:

Keto

Low-carb

Low-calorie

Walking

Starving

Crying

Supplements

Prayers

Threats

Mirrors covered

Mirrors uncovered

Clothes donated

Clothes bought

Clothes returned

Google searches at 2 a.m.

“Is it possible for a woman to gain weight simply by looking at bread?”

Nothing makes it stop.

Your thighs soften.

Your stomach rounds.

Your arms become strangers.

Your face refuses to reflect who you feel like inside.

And here’s the darkest part—

You start to believe you don’t deserve to be seen.

You apologize for existing in pictures.

You hide behind people.

You stop wanting to be touched.

You stop wanting to be looked at.

You avoid going out.

You avoid bathing suit seasons.

You avoid yourself.

The shame settles in your bones.

But somewhere in that shame,

something else grows—

small, quiet, stubborn.

A spark.

Because menopause isn’t just destruction.

It’s transformation.

Like fire.

Yes, it burns everything down.

Your confidence.

Your self-image.

Your sense of control.

Your ability to pretend you’re okay.

But fire isn’t just an ending—

it’s the start of new growth.

A woman at this stage begins to realize

that her worth was never meant to live in her waistline

or her cheekbones

or her youth.

She begins to see the world with sharper eyes,

less patience for bullshit,

and a deeper connection to what actually matters.

Her anger becomes truth.

Her tiredness becomes boundaries.

Her softness becomes wisdom.

Her changing body becomes armor.

She becomes less concerned with being liked

and more concerned with being free.

Menopause does not destroy a woman.

It destroys the version of her

who lived for everyone else’s approval.

The woman who emerges—

slowly, painfully, fiercely—

is someone the world should fear

in the most beautiful way.

Because she no longer exists to be palatable,

or pleasing,

or pretty for someone else’s comfort.

She becomes someone who demands space

even in a world that tried to shrink her.

She becomes the woman who says:

“I am more than what I look like.

I am more than what I lost.

And I will not disappear.”

Menopause did not kill you.

It revealed you.

The world may worship youth

but it fears wisdom.

And this chapter—

this messy, sweaty, aching, infuriating chapter—

is where your wisdom began sharpening its teeth.

The Girl the Darkness Raised: A Memoir of Scarcity, Survival, and Becoming

There are moments that divide a life into “before” and “after.”

There are moments that divide a life into “before” and “after.”

People think “after” begins with a celebration —

a survival story, a miracle, a steady return to normal.

But the truth is quieter.

Uglier.

More complicated.

“After” begins when the world expects you to be grateful for surviving,

but your body hasn’t caught up yet.

Your body is still trapped in the moment it almost died.

It was supposed to be a routine delivery —

or as routine as delivering twins ever is.

But nothing about that day felt safe.

Not the fluorescent lights.

Not the metallic smell of the room.

Not the panic that slithered beneath my skin like a premonition.

They tell you childbirth is beautiful.

They don’t tell you it can feel like standing on the edge of a cliff

while strangers argue behind you about how close they can let you fall.

There was blood.

Too much.

Voices blurring into echoes.

Monitors screaming.

Doctors moving with the frantic choreography of people trying not to say the word “danger.”

My vision tunneled.

My hearing dimmed.

My soul — I swear this with every ounce of truth in me —

hovered somewhere above my body, watching.

Not dead.

But not fully here either.

It felt like stepping through an invisible doorway into a place between worlds,

a place where time slows,

where the air feels too thin to breathe,

where a woman realizes she might leave her babies before she ever gets to touch them..

There was a moment —

one terrifying, bone-deep moment —

where I felt myself slipping.

I wasn’t afraid of dying.

I was afraid of leaving them.

Every instinct in me screamed,

Stay. Stay. Stay.

Not because I wasn’t ready to die —

but because I wasn’t done being their mother.

And then…

I was back.

Not fully conscious.

Not fully coherent.

Just… back.

Alive.

But not the same.

No one warns you that surviving trauma doesn’t feel like victory.

It feels like your soul comes back wrong —

misaligned, overstimulated, too aware of the world’s dangers.

After that day, the world became poison.

Literally.

The fear of chemicals didn’t come from nowhere.

It came from the way the antiseptic smell in the hospital seeped into my memory

like a warning label that never stopped flashing.

It came from the realization that something invisible

— a substance, a medication, a mistake, an unseen reaction —

had the power to kill me without anyone noticing until it was too late.

It came from the understanding that survival was fragile,

and the things that could break you

didn’t always come with a warning.

So, my brain did what traumatized brains do:

It tried to protect me.

It scanned rooms.

It scanned labels.

It scanned faces.

It scanned air.

Safety became a calculation, not a feeling.

I began to fear:

cleaners

candles

perfumes

lotions

detergents

anything with a scent strong enough to remind me of antiseptic death rooms.

People said I was overreacting.

They said it was anxiety.

They said it was silly.

But they weren’t trapped inside my nervous system.

They weren’t living inside a body that remembered dying

even when the mind insisted everything was fine.

Trauma rearranged me.

That’s what no one talks about:

How the mind can walk away from trauma,

but the body keeps kneeling at its altar.

The body remembers the bleeding.

The slipping.

The half-gone heartbeat.

The moment the veil thinned.

The fear carved into the organs.

And so:

My heart learned to sprint at nothing.

My muscles learned to stay tense even in sleep.

My brain learned to replay danger even in safety.

My breath learned to hide in the top of my chest.

My skin learned to flinch at sudden sounds.

My senses learned to over-perform.

My instincts learned to over-protect.

People called it OCD.

People called it anxiety.

People called it dramatic.

People called it “new mom nerves.”

But I knew what it was:

My body didn’t trust the world anymore.

And honestly? Neither did I.

And then the babies came home.

Two newborns.

One toddler.

One exhausted husband working.

One terrified mother trying to stitch together a life between panic and responsibility.

I was barely alive myself,

and yet I was expected to keep three tiny humans alive,

alone,

every day,

on no sleep,

with hormones collapsing like broken scaffolding,

and trauma still dripping through my veins like cold ink.

I did it.

Of course I did.

Because women always do.

But something inside me fractured.

The version of me before the hospital died in that delivery room.

The version after was built entirely from instinct, fear, and obligation.

Every panic attack I had later —

every moment of chemical terror,

every obsessive thought,

every night I lay awake listening to my own heartbeat in dread —

all of it traced back to that day.

The day I crossed the line between life and death…

and returned with the nervous system of a survivor,

not a civilian.

People think trauma ends when the moment is over.

But trauma has a different definition:

Trauma is the moment your body stops believing you’re safe anywhere.

This chapter is the truth I never told:

I didn’t almost die once.

I’ve been almost dying every day since —

quietly, internally, invisibly —

inside a body that never learned how to turn the alarm off.

But even alarms get tired of ringing.

And that exhaustion —

that bone-deep realization that survival is not the same as living —

is what prepares the ground for transformation.

Not healing yet.

Not hope yet.

But the beginning.

The beginning of a woman who would one day look at her trauma

not as a prison —

but as the fire that forged her.

The Girl the Darkness Raised: A Memoir of Scarcity, Survival, and Becoming