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Letâs get something out of the way:
I didnât want to write this book.
I had to.
Daddy Issues Anonymous didnât begin as a story. It started as a scream. A gut-deep, eye-rolling, sarcasm-soaked exhale of, âAre you kidding me with this?â It was grief in a drag wig. Humor on top of heartache. The kind of emotional chaos you only understand if your first father figure taught you fear before he ever taught you to drive.

This isnât a book about hating your father. Itâs about surviving himâand then trying to survive the echo.
âI called him Dad because calling him what he really was wouldâve made Thanksgiving awkward.â
Thereâs no secret club for people with father-shaped scars. But if there was, this book would be read out loud in the basement of a community center under fluorescent lightingâbetween cups of bad coffee and knowing glances.
The Hurt That Doesnât Bruise
I wrote Daddy Issues Anonymous because I wanted to tell the truth about what it means to grow up warped by men who were supposed to protect you, and then enter adulthood trying to date men who act just like them. I wanted to show how trauma doesn’t just hauntâit trains. And if youâre not careful, it can become your entire personality.
âNo one warns you that missing someone is different when they were never safe to miss.â
Thereâs queerness in this book. Thereâs religious trauma. Thereâs the absolute mindfuck of becoming your own parent while still craving someone to say, âIâm proud of you.â But most of all, thereâs truth. Brutal, sarcastic, glorious truth.
Laughing at the Fire While You Burn
Humor became the scaffolding. I didnât want to write another tragic, weepy memoir of paternal absence. I wanted to write a middle finger wrapped in glitter. A character who hurts, but who also roasts his pain. Who weaponizes jokes like armor. Who, even in the middle of a breakdown, can throw a line like:
âI didnât have abandonment issuesâI had abandonment subscriptions. They delivered monthly.â
This book is for anyone who was told to âlet it goâ before they were ever allowed to name it. Itâs for the people whoâve made peace with their past in the same way you make peace with a bear in your campsiteâquietly, without sudden movement, and fully aware it could destroy you again.
Writing Through the Ache
Every sentence in Daddy Issues Anonymous was written through clenched teeth or an open wound. But also with love. Love for the boys like me. The queer kids who never got the storybook ending, but still decided to write their own damn chapter. The ones who survived silence and shame and came out the other side hilarious, exhausted, and worth loving.
âI didnât forgive him. I just got tired of holding my breath every time someone reminded me of him.â
Why This Book Matters (Now)
Because there are too many of us carrying trauma in our back pockets like expired coupons, hoping one day someone will still honor them. Because masculinity is still performing its toxic drag routine on main stages across America. Because therapy is expensive, but fiction can be liberating. And because some of us never got closureâwe got punchlines instead.
So I gave those punchlines a home.
Youâll laugh. Youâll ache.
You might even text your therapist mid-chapter.
Read it now: Daddy Issues Anonymous on Amazon
For everyone who survived âbeing a manâ by becoming something better.