Tag Archives: generational trauma

Honest Review of the movie ” Anniversary” (2025) — by a Earth being – Author A.L. Childers


A.L. Childers reviews the 2025 film Anniversary — a family drama turned ideological nightmare. A reflective, insightful critique exploring parenting, memory, generational trauma, and the diabolical unraveling of a family.


My Honest Review of “Anniversary” (2025)

By A.L. Childers

Let me start with this:
I didn’t hate it.
I didn’t love it.
But I definitely felt it — and not always in ways I expected.

At first, Anniversary introduces us to a wealthy family navigating old emotions and long-buried tensions. I actually understood a bit of where the mother was coming from — the distrust, the discomfort, the memory of a situation involving her son’s girlfriend nearly a decade earlier. But even then, I thought she was overreacting. Eight years is a long time to hold your breath.

As a mother myself who tries not to make waves with grown children, I understood the moment where everyone is trying to keep the peace — the father, the siblings, the “let’s just keep the table calm” energy.
And yet something felt off.
The whole family was moving as though the girlfriend was the problem, when she wasn’t really doing anything except existing and feeling uncomfortable as a pregnant woman with twins trying to navigate a house full of tension.

Then Thanksgiving happened.
Then the book happened.
Then the movement happened.

And suddenly, we weren’t watching a family drama anymore — we were watching a political, ideological, almost dystopian unraveling.

Around 1 hour and 51 minutes, the movie takes a hard left turn.
Anna, the oldest daughter, goes into hiding.
The authorities want her for… what exactly?
The idea that she’s “acting like Joan of Arc” becomes a bizarre justification for the chaos unfolding.

This is where the movie stops being “relatable family dysfunction” and becomes:
What in the hell am I watching?
Because at this point, it’s mirroring things we’ve actually seen in the real world:

  • Families destroyed by political division
  • Parents estranged from adult children who rewrite their childhood
  • Mass movements that swallow people whole
  • Communities turning on individuals for one accusation
  • Ideologies tearing households apart

And when you look at it through that lens, the movie’s absurdity becomes its truth:
Sometimes the destruction of a family begins with something as small as a misunderstanding…
and ends with something as large as a movement.


Critical Perspectives

(And yes, critics felt the same whiplash I did.)

  • The Los Angeles Times described the film as “deeply nihilistic” and no longer functioning as a warning because “that horse has already left the barn.”
  • RogerEbert.com said the ambition is obvious and the timing is too perfect.
  • The Film Stage noted it’s “relentlessly watchable” but vague in message and full of overacting.

So no — it’s not just you.
It is a wtf movie.
Intentionally.


Real-World Parallels (America especially)

Here’s where the film hits too close to home:

1. Families torn apart by politics

People stopped speaking to their own parents in 2016, 2020, and beyond — not because of abuse, but because of belief.

2. Adult children rewriting childhood

This is practically a modern epidemic.
Children forget the struggle, forget the meals, forget the sacrifices — and adopt a narrative that makes the parent the villain.

3. Movements that turn people into collateral damage

We’ve seen it:
Cancel culture.
Ideological purges.
Digital witch hunts.

4. Simple misunderstandings that escalate into life-changing accusations

In schools, workplaces, friend groups — someone gets upset, and the ripple effect becomes a tsunami.

5. Pregnant women or mothers being the emotional center of conflict

Society likes to police women’s emotions while excusing everyone else’s.

This movie portrays exactly that:
a diabolical unraveling of a family because one girl was mad at her teacher, and the world grabbed the match and lit the house with it.


My Final Take

This film isn’t for the faint of heart.
It is messy, disjointed, jarring, and uncomfortable — but intentionally so.

It captures something many people pretend doesn’t exist:
the fragile line between family and fracture, and how fast that line breaks when ideology enters a house built on secrets.

⭐ ⭐ My Rating: 4.5 out of 5

This film shook me.
It confused me.
It challenged me.
And whether I liked it or not, it made me think — deeply.

It also absolutely pissed me off.
Not just the movie, but the movement inside it…
the blind loyalty, the hysteria, the unraveling —
and the heartbreaking destruction of a family that genuinely loved one another until ideology pulled them apart at the seams.

And here’s the part I didn’t expect to feel so strongly:
I’m disappointed in humans — but not surprised.
People today will follow anything if a TikTok, a trend, or a piece of propaganda tells them to.
Logic? Gone.
Common sense? Missing.
Independent thought? On life support.

It’s exactly why I’ve written several blogs about this very thing — and even a book.
But I’ll be honest:
If you’re already indoctrinated, you won’t dare pick it up.
You won’t read what I wrote.
You won’t question a thing.

So keep that indoctrination tucked neatly in your pocket.
Carry it around like a lucky charm.
And enjoy the ride — wherever it drags you.

For provoking all of this — the anger, the reflection, the disappointment — the film earns its 4.5.



Disclaimer

This review reflects my personal interpretation as an author, storyteller, and observer of human behavior. All opinions are my own. Any comparisons to real events or social trends are made for analysis and commentary.


About the Author: A.L. Childers

A.L. Childers is the author of over 200 books, ranging from supernatural history and dark folklore to emotional memoirs, women’s empowerment, health, and cultural commentary. Her writing blends honesty, humor, and raw insight, cutting through the noise to find the truth in the human experience.

Her works include:

  • The Hidden Empire
  • Archons: Unveiling the Parasitic Entities Shaping Human Thoughts
  • The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again
  • Hashimoto’s Crock-Pot Recipes
  • Reset Your Thyroid: 21-Day Meal Plan
  • Nightmare Legends: Monsters and Dark Tales of the Appalachian Region

…and many more.

You can explore all titles on her Amazon Author Page.

The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again: The House That Yelled and the Woman Who Finally Heard Herself

A hauntingly beautiful women’s fiction novel about trauma healing, emotional abuse recovery, and rediscovering your voice.
The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again by A.L. Childers is a poetic, empowering story of survival, resilience, and self-love that reminds readers:
you are not what broke you — you are what you survived.

“Not every haunted house has ghosts. Some have husbands.”

When the yelling stopped, Audrey thought she’d finally found peace.
But silence can be its own kind of violence.

The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again by A.L. Childers — it’s a raw, cinematic journey through generational pain, emotional abuse, and the sacred act of coming home to yourself.

Told with unflinching honesty and poetic power, A.L. Childers reveals what happens when a woman finally stops surviving and starts living.
From the church pews of her childhood to the walls of a marriage built on fear, Audrey learns the hardest truth of all:
You don’t have to burn everything down to be free — you just have to stop watering the weeds.

This book is for every woman who’s ever whispered “I’m fine” when she wasn’t.
It’s not just a story.
It’s a mirror — and it remembers you.

The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again: The House That Yelled and the Woman Who Finally Heard Herself

ABOUT THE AUTHOR — A.L. Childers

A.L. Childers is a nationally recognized author with over 200 published books, known for her raw, poetic women’s fiction and emotionally transformative storytelling. Her work blends trauma healing, memoir-style fiction, generational trauma, emotional abuse recovery, and inner child healing — giving women stories that feel seen, validated, and understood.

She writes for every woman who grew up in a house that yelled.
For every woman who survived.
And for every woman who is finally ready to reclaim her voice.

DISCLAIMER

This novel addresses emotional abuse, childhood trauma, and generational trauma. While written with compassion, empowerment, and healing in mind, some scenes may be triggering for sensitive readers. Please read with care.

Because inside all of us is a thirteen-year-old girl who learned to stay quiet.
She’s still in the mirror.
She’s still waiting to be heard.
And when you read this book…
you’ll hear her.

👉 Read The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again today.
Heal the story you never told.
Find the voice you thought you lost.

WomensFiction #TraumaHealing #GenerationalTrauma #InnerChildHealing #BooksThatHeal #EmotionalAbuseSurvivor #MemoirStyleFiction #ToxicFamilyRecovery #HealingJourney #BookTok #EmotionalNovel #PsychologicalFiction #ALChilders

A powerful women’s fiction novel exploring trauma healing, inner child healing, emotional abuse recovery, generational trauma, and rediscovering identity. The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again by A.L. Childers includes raw storytelling, memoir-style fiction, and an emotional journey women are calling unforgettable.

The Day the House Yelled Back: Why This Novel Is Healing Women Everywhere

Some houses don’t have ghosts.
They have memories.

And some memories don’t fade —
they grow louder.

If you’ve ever lived through emotional abuse, toxic family trauma, childhood emotional trauma, or grown up in a house that yelled louder than your own thoughts, then The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again may feel less like a women’s fiction novel… and more like a mirror.

This story blends trauma healing, emotional survival, psychological women’s fiction, generational trauma, inner child healing, and rediscovering who you are after years of living in silence. It’s memoir-style fiction wrapped in poetic pain, healing, and truth.

Today, I want to share a moment from one of the chapters —
a moment that readers say made them stop, breathe, and whisper:
“That was me. I lived that.”

She didn’t hear the yelling first.
She felt it.

The floor vibrated under her bare feet as she stood at the top of the stairs, one hand on the railing, the other clutching the hem of her T-shirt — the one with the tiny embroidered rose she had bought from a yard sale with quarters she saved.

Thirteen-year-old her was used to yelling.
Used to the rising and falling waves of anger, like a storm in the walls.
Used to making herself invisible.

But tonight felt different.

Tonight the yelling had weight…
and that weight belonged to her.

“Why can’t you just be normal?”
The voice echoed up the staircase.

She didn’t know if it was meant for her.
In this house, everything felt like it was meant for her — even when it wasn’t spoken aloud.

She looked toward her bedroom…
but her eyes caught the hallway mirror.

And when she saw the reflection staring back —
the girl with the trembling lip, the bruised heart, the permanent apology in her eyes—
she wanted to look away.

But she couldn’t.

Because the girl in the mirror whispered something she had never heard from her before:

“Listen to me.”

Because every woman who carries childhood emotional trauma knows the exact moment when she finally hears herself.

Readers say this chapter feels like:

✅ their own childhood
✅ their own fear
✅ their own voice breaking through years of emotional neglect
✅ the beginning of their own inner child healing
✅ the moment they realized they were not crazy — they were hurting

This book is not just trauma-inspired fiction.
It’s relatable trauma fiction that validates what so many women lived through in silence.

If you’ve ever:

✅ grown up in generational trauma
✅ experienced emotional abuse
✅ felt unseen, unheard, or unimportant
✅ lost your identity inside a toxic home
✅ become the “strong one” because you had no choice
✅ tried to heal the wounded inner child inside you

…then this novel becomes more than reading.
It becomes remembering.
And then — healing.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR — A.L. Childers

A.L. Childers is a nationally recognized author with over 200 published books, known for her raw, poetic women’s fiction and emotionally transformative storytelling. Her work blends trauma healing, memoir-style fiction, generational trauma, emotional abuse recovery, and inner child healing — giving women stories that feel seen, validated, and understood.

She writes for every woman who grew up in a house that yelled.
For every woman who survived.
And for every woman who is finally ready to reclaim her voice.


DISCLAIMER

This novel addresses emotional abuse, childhood trauma, and generational trauma. While written with compassion, empowerment, and healing in mind, some scenes may be triggering for sensitive readers. Please read with care.

Because inside all of us is a thirteen-year-old girl who learned to stay quiet.
She’s still in the mirror.
She’s still waiting to be heard.
And when you read this book…
you’ll hear her.

👉 Read The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again today.
Heal the story you never told.
Find the voice you thought you lost.

WomensFiction #TraumaHealing #GenerationalTrauma #InnerChildHealing #BooksThatHeal #EmotionalAbuseSurvivor #MemoirStyleFiction #ToxicFamilyRecovery #HealingJourney #BookTok #EmotionalNovel #PsychologicalFiction #ALChilders

A powerful women’s fiction novel exploring trauma healing, inner child healing, emotional abuse recovery, generational trauma, and rediscovering identity. The Girl in the Mirror Is Thirteen Again by A.L. Childers includes raw storytelling, memoir-style fiction, and an emotional journey women are calling unforgettable.