My Book

A Divinely Guided Labor of Love

Casey Morley

by Casey Morley

Buy my book Amazon or CrawlingOut.net 

A divinely guided labor or love …. that is what this original handwritten experience has turned out to be. The process of writing and reading my story over and over again allowed the tears to finally come. It brought up and out deeply stuffed years of abuse, pain, and sorrow. This process helped me to finally lift that suffocating, heavy, dirty, old blanket of denial off of me. With time and a lot of hard work, I moved through forgiveness, began to heal, and became the empowered woman I was created to be.Crawling Out

It is my hope through reading Crawling Out and learning you don’t walk alone, you will find that you, too, have the strength and power within to begin to lift that heavy old blanket of denial. Hopefully, you will finally understand there is no need to continue living your life carrying around all that pain any longer. It is not your shame or guilt to carry.

Releasing my story has moved me to empowerment, and that is my wish for you, please join me and become ”A True Survivor!” 

Go here to read a SAMPLE CHAPTER

 

Baring Your Soul In Public ….

By Nancy Hooper, Editor Casey and nancy

Baring your soul in public requires courage and a strong sense of self-worth. Casey Morley had not much of the first and none of the latter when she began writing her story, longhand, on a yellow legal pad. What drove her to commit word to paper was determination−to break the cycle of abuse and domestic violence she had lived for 50+ years, and to try to make a better life for her young son, Michael.

I did not come to the process until several years later when the script on the pile of legal pads was transcribed to a computer file. By that time, I’d known Casey for about 20 years and considered her a casual friend. When she asked me to edit her manuscript, all I think I asked her was, “Are you sure?” I’m known to have a heavy hand with the red pen.

Sure enough, that’s how my part of this adventure began. But I quickly realized that what made Casey’s painful story so easy to read was her voice, the tone with which she wrote. It’s as if you and she are sharing a cup of coffee and she’s relating her story. The red pen had very little place here.

Casey and I worked for about three years polishing the book. During that time, we shed tears beyond imagination, shared grief, bolstered each other. I watched Casey move through the cycle of growth as she read the book to me, page by page, many times, as I edited on the computer, asked questions, brought out more stories.

Casey progressed from barely able to speak because of the tears, to anger, to acceptance, to moving on. Where she initially had no self-worth, now she holds her head up high and proud. Courage is an innate part of her as she relies on her strong spirituality and sense of right and wrong to call attention to the horrors that are abuse and domestic violence. Working to curb those horrors is her goal.

Crawling Out tells of a life no one should ever experience. Casey did. Casey survived. Casey thrives in her new life. I’m proud to call her my dear friend, my sister.