Author of The Orange Post-It Note

TERA LYNCH

From Betrayal to Becoming: A Memorir of Courage, Comedy, and Starting Over

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"The Orange Post-It Note is a raw, honest, and unexpectedly funny page-turner that captures the heartbreak and resilience of betrayal trauma with rare authenticity.”

  • “The moment that shattered everything - and strangely, set me free.” 

    It started with a simple orange note and ended with the unraveling of everything I thought I knew. This section of the story captures the gut-punch of betrayal - and the flickers of strength that followed. If you’ve ever been blindsided, broken, or left to pick up the pieces alone you’ll see yourself here.

  • “The Things I Didn’t Want to Know” 

    Ignorance wasn’t bliss—it was grief on a delay. 

    I didn’t want to dig. I wanted to believe. But secrets have a way of climbing through the cracks. This part of the memoir walks through the numbness, the late-night Google searches, and the aching realization that the life I was living had been altered long before I knew. 

  • “Joy, Gratitude, and the Power of Sassy Screen Savers” I didn’t just find myself. I redecorated her. This chapter celebrates the peculiar power of morning gratitude, dad pep talks, surprise son calls, and beautiful silence. I curated joy with Wordles, aromatherapy, and composted pain. This is where I turned quirky routines into sacred rituals—and began to trust myself again.

  • “Post-its, Prayer, and Picking Myself Back Up” 

    A whisper became a roar. And then—finally—I listened.  Healing started slowly: in scribbled prayers, quiet therapy rooms, and brave little acts of rebellion. This section charts my spiritual, emotional, and mental shift from surviving to choosing—to leave, to grieve, to grow.

  • “The Pleasant Street Rebirth” 

    I traded 4,000 square feet for 1,000—and gained peace of mind. 

    New walls, new soil, new soundtrack. This closing chapter honors my final move—literally and emotionally. With Julia Child, Buddy the Elf, and the Chicago skyline as my roommates, I’m growing into the woman I was always meant to be. Not lonely. Not lost. Just me—finally whole.