Sensitive: My Journey through a Toxic World
By (Author) Pookie Sekmet
She Writes Press
She Writes Press
21st November 2019
United States
Paperback
304
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
In this wry memoir, a Harvard-educated CPA with debilitating chemical intolerance digs deep in her family history to uncover the childhood trigger for her illness. Tackling themes of truth, loss, acceptance, and empowerment, Pookie Sekmet interweaves her personal story with timely guidance on the importance of avoiding toxic chemicals in cars, consumer products, and indoor environments; overcomes family trauma and mysterious chronic health struggles with determination and humor; builds an unconventional new life; and, finally, becomes a whistleblower within a corrupt and patriarchal corporate cultureand achieves righteous justice. Think Titus Andronicus, but with a slight woman in her mid-fifties with defiantly bad hairwearing worn overalls and a home-sewn hemp jersey topstanding tall among the corpses.
Our society has become polarized by leaders seeking to consolidate exploitative power through the imposition of magical thinking and untruths. Through the story of her struggles and ultimate triumph, Sekmet lays bare the underlying selfishness, heedlessness, and lies of many of our political, societal, and business structures and offers a reality-based and practical path to self-protectionand even empowerment.
2020 Readers Favorite Book Awards Finalist in Non-Fiction Grief/Hardship 2019 Best Book Awards Finalist in Non-Fiction Narrative One of the "Top 100 Notables" in the 2019 Shelf Unbound Best Indie Book Competition Sensitive . . . tells a moving and layered personal narrative of loss and redemption with clarity and humor. Shelf Unbound
Pookie Sekmet grew up in the US South and went to Harvard College before becoming a computer professional and later an accountant. She has been happily married for about thirty years, and lives in a small town in Western Massachusetts. As a baby, she suffered a chemical exposure that her parents hid from her and that triggered a lifelong and undiagnosed intolerance to common chemicals. Sensitive is the story of how she solved the central mystery of why she had been ill from an early age, worked out ways of avoiding chemical reinjury, and accepted the true nature of her birth family.