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Help, I Need Help
Coles
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Help, I Need Help in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $2.99


By None
Help, I Need Help in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $2.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Welcome to "Help, I Need Help". This is not a book of polished success stories or quick-fix advice. It is a collection of raw, unflinching accounts from eleven people who each reached a moment when the world narrowed to a single, desperate truth: I cannot do this alone anymore. They came from different cities, backgrounds, ages, and struggles—addiction, depression, poverty, grief, abuse, career collapse, chronic illness, fractured relationships, homelessness, identity crises, and the quiet torment of cultural displacement—but every one of them stood (or fell) at rock bottom and made the same terrifying, life-altering choice: they asked for help. What follows are their stories, told as honestly as memory allows, because the details matter. The shame, the fear, the small miracles of kindness, the slow rebuilding—they all matter. These are not fairy tales with guaranteed happy endings; they are testimonies that rock bottom is not the grave. It is hard, unyielding ground—solid enough to build something new upon.
Welcome to "Help, I Need Help". This is not a book of polished success stories or quick-fix advice. It is a collection of raw, unflinching accounts from eleven people who each reached a moment when the world narrowed to a single, desperate truth: I cannot do this alone anymore. They came from different cities, backgrounds, ages, and struggles—addiction, depression, poverty, grief, abuse, career collapse, chronic illness, fractured relationships, homelessness, identity crises, and the quiet torment of cultural displacement—but every one of them stood (or fell) at rock bottom and made the same terrifying, life-altering choice: they asked for help. What follows are their stories, told as honestly as memory allows, because the details matter. The shame, the fear, the small miracles of kindness, the slow rebuilding—they all matter. These are not fairy tales with guaranteed happy endings; they are testimonies that rock bottom is not the grave. It is hard, unyielding ground—solid enough to build something new upon.

















