Bücher versandkostenfrei*100 Tage RückgaberechtAbholung in der Wunschfiliale
NEU: Das Hugendubel Hörbuch Abo - jederzeit, überall, für nur 7,95 € monatlich!
Jetzt entdecken
mehr erfahren
Produktbild: Pretty for a Crippled Girl | Teri Siri
Produktbild: Pretty for a Crippled Girl | Teri Siri

Pretty for a Crippled Girl

(0 Bewertungen)15
290 Lesepunkte
Buch (gebunden)
28,99 €inkl. Mwst.
Zustellung: Mo, 15.12. - Do, 18.12.
Noch nicht erschienen
Versandkostenfrei
Empfehlen
Pretty for a Crippled Girl is an uncensored, honest, at times painfully raw, and yet, funny and entertaining memoir by Teri Siri who lives with Cerebral Palsy (CP). The doctors advised her parents to institutionalize Teri as a baby because she would most likely be a "vegetable." Fortunately, the family didn't listen to the experts!
Instead, Teri Siri grew up with her twin, Traci, and her older sister Tami, attended school, and went on to live a full active life as an independent woman of independent means who lives life on her own terms. She achieved financial independence through meaningful, challenging work, and has had a love life filled with good sex, heartbreak, marriage, divorce, and now, a long-term loving partnership that includes long motorcycle trips and sailing. Along the way, Teri has traveled internationally multiple times, skydived, bungy jumped, and successfully tried just about anything she was told she couldn't do because of her physical challenges.
Teri is not afraid to write about the tremendous prejudice she has faced as a person with physical challenges. She describes the constant stupid comments, jokes, questions, and downright hurtful things people have said and done because she has CP. Thus, the title of her memoir. People have actually said this directly to Teri as well as behind her back when she has been in earshot: "She's pretty for a crippled girl."
Teri doesn't tell these stories as a victim or a whiner, but rather as someone who wants the world to understand the constant barrage of demeaning and dismissive comments and behavior that people with physical or emotional differences face on a daily basis with an uniformed public.
One of Teri's favorite words is "fuck." She embraces this word in all its grammatical forms and in all the places and circumstances where Teri sees fuck as the absolutely most appropriate expression of her sentiments. Teri's memoir is an excellent read for anyone facing the challenges of physical or emotional differences in a rigid and judgmental world. This book will be of interest to family members, medical providers, and the world at large who want to understand what it might be like for a person facing physical or emotional disabilities.


Produktdetails

Erscheinungsdatum
02. Dezember 2025
Sprache
englisch
Untertitel
Sprache: Englisch.
Seitenanzahl
184
Autor/Autorin
Teri Siri
Verlag/Hersteller
Produktart
gebunden
ISBN
9780939165858

Portrait

Teri Siri

Teri Siri and her twin sister were born in Portland, Oregon in September 1964. After a few months, it became clear Teri's physical development was not on par with her twin sister, Traci. Doctors soon determined that Teri had cerebral palsy (CP), a physical condition that would become a defining factor in her life. A strong spirit and invincible determination proved to be among Teri's greatest strengths as she grew up. She has lived a full, productive life, shattering any early predictions that she would probably be "a vegetable."

Teri spent much of her early life moving frequently with her young, divorced mother, her twin, Traci, and an older sister, Tami. Teri's father decided he was not ready for marriage and family and left the family. Her maternal grandparents were key people in Teri's life, and it was her grandmother, Nana, who was determined that Teri would succeed in life and be treated "normally." Nana defied the "experts" who recommended institutionalizing Teri. Nana was Teri's biggest inspiration and number one cheerleader for years as Teri endured multiple surgeries, rehab, and daily challenges living coping with CP.

Ages and dates are sometimes a blur for Teri because she moved so many times as a child. Teri groups her childhood memories around where she was living at any given time. A part of the frequent moving was due to Teri getting the medical help she needed. It also was part of the family lifestyle. When Teri was a young child, her mom married again, her husband a musician and singer in a band. For a couple of years they moved often, living in Oregon, Northern California, and Florida. During her grammar school years, Teri never stayed at any one school for more than a year, and sometimes a couple of different schools within a year. It all became a blur to Teri.

When Teri was a pre-teen, her mom remarried Teri's birth father, and the family moved to Arizona where he lived. Teri went to two different high schools in Arizona and then returned to California to finish high school after her parents divorced for a second time. Teri was 19 when her parents split.

As a young adult, Teri chose to move back to Portland, Oregon, in part to be near her Nana and Bapa. She went to college for awhile and eventually got a job working for Bonneville Power Administration (BPA). Teri began as a clerk typist and over the years rose to a high-responsibility, high-pressure job as a Scheduler. In this position, Teri bought and sold electric power hourly in what is called "real time." This job was similar, in ways, to working on the stock market, but buying and selling power for BPA. Teri's other jobs at BPA included Revenue Analyst and Senior Revenue Analyst. She was good at every job she took on. After 24 years at BPA, Teri decided to retire, tired of the hustle. She eventually moved to the greater San Diego, Ca area.

While living in Oregon, Teri married and after 16 years she decided to divorce her husband. Along the way, she traveled internationally several times, went skydiving, bungee jumping, snow skiing, sailing, and fell in love again. Any activity that someone declares Teri could not good because of her physical limitations, Teri would do it and prove the naysayer wrong. Now, she regularly takes extended, cross-country motorcycle trips with her partner. "I like anything that gets my adrenaline pumping," Teri explains.

She loves music, especially Steven Tyler and Aerosmith, and she has attended many concerts in different venues. Teri's story defies people's perceptions and prejudices about those with physical challenges. Teri rejects those biases and the limited, stereotypical thinking about "disabled people." "What can people with disabilities do?" Teri asks in her memoir. "Read on, I'll tell you what I can do."

Bewertungen

0 Bewertungen

Es wurden noch keine Bewertungen abgegeben. Schreiben Sie die erste Bewertung zu "Pretty for a Crippled Girl" und helfen Sie damit anderen bei der Kaufentscheidung.

Teri Siri: Pretty for a Crippled Girl bei hugendubel.de. Online bestellen oder in der Filiale abholen.