Therapy after Mom Died
Unpacking an Extraordinary Mother-Daughter Relationship
by
Book Details
About the Book
Lacey’s mother gave her away to a one-armed, white gay man. It was an unusual adoption with beautiful lessons of sacrifice, forgiveness, and grief. When Lacey and her mother reunited, there were obvious clashes filled with guilt and resentment. Mother-daughter relationships can be rough. When her mother died, Lacey didn’t realize that she was depressed and grieved in unhealthy ways. In 2020, Lacey decided to try therapy for the first time. She takes us through her journey of attending ten sessions to process the death and the relationship with her mom. Lacey finds relief as she grieves her mother out loud through storytelling. There are millions of women who struggle to find a peaceful balance in their own mother-daughter relationship. Millions more have lost their mothers, and desire comfort in the lingering pain. This book is for those women—may you find refuge within these pages.
About the Author
Lacey Tezino is the founder and CEO of an exciting new startup, Passport Journeys, the world’s first teletherapy app focused on mother-daughter relationships. The app works by assigning each mother-daughter pair to a licensed clinician to facilitate healing, bonding, and growth. The monthly subscription includes biweekly online therapy, a prescribed bonding activity, a thoughtful journal prompt, and an assigned worksheet to help with communication. Lacey plans to bring the app across the fifty states and then to targeted international markets. Before jumping into entrepreneurship, Lacey created a successful career as a healthcare IT leader with Cerner/Oracle. She worked in Doha, Qatar, for three years to digitize clinical documentation for the entire nation by transforming eight hospitals and twenty-three clinics from paper to electronic health records. Lacey most recently served as the director of IT for the Menninger Clinic, one of the top ten best psychiatric hospitals in the US. This is Lacey’s first book, but it won’t be her last.