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📍 Noticed
Becoming Her: Letters to the Woman I Was Before I Knew Better
by India Trotter
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Synopsis
What would you tell your younger self if you could sit her down, look her in the eye, and tell her the truth — the whole, messy, healing truth?
In Becoming Her: Letters to the Woman I Was Before I Knew Better, author India Trotter speaks directly to her younger self — and every woman who has ...
In Becoming Her: Letters to the Woman I Was Before I Knew Better, author India Trotter speaks directly to her younger self — and every woman who has ...
What would you tell your younger self if you could sit her down, look her in the eye, and tell her the truth — the whole, messy, healing truth?
In Becoming Her: Letters to the Woman I Was Before I Knew Better, author India Trotter speaks directly to her younger self — and every woman who has ever said, “If I knew then what I know now…”
Blending humor, honesty, and heart, India takes readers on a conversation through growth, grace, and the kind of real-life wisdom that only comes after living a little (and laughing a lot). Written as a series of letters from her older, wiser self to the woman she used to be, Becoming Her is part memoir, part mirror — a reminder that self-awareness is not a destination, it’s a daily choice.
From single motherhood and self-sabotage to peace, boundaries, money, healing, and midlife freedom, India’s voice is both unfiltered and unpretentious — the funny, grounded girlfriend who tells it like it is but still roots for you every step of the way.
Inside these pages, she shares:
Why healing is not a spa day (and what it actually looks like).
How comparison steals more than joy — it steals presence.
What it means to walk away from people, places, and patterns that no longer serve you.
The truth about money, mindset, and breaking financial silence.
Why peace, not perfection, is the real glow-up.
With chapters like “Boys Definitely Have Cooties (and Some of Them Never Grew Out of It),” “Healing Is Not a Spa Day,” and “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul (and Still Trying to Make Change), this book is equal parts therapy and comedy — the kind of wisdom you highlight, quote, and text to your friends with “Girl, read this part.”
Becoming Her isn’t about reinventing yourself — it’s about remembering yourself. It’s about forgiving the woman you were for not knowing better, loving the woman you are for still trying, and trusting the woman you’re becoming to keep showing up anyway.
If you’ve ever found yourself caught between who you were and who you’re still trying to be, this book is your permission slip to rest, laugh, and start again — this time with more grace, better boundaries, and a little side of holy side-eye.
Because peace looks good on you.
And becoming her was never about perfection — it was always about freedom.
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