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  • God Bless This Mess

  • Learning to Live and Love Through Life's Best (and Worst) Moments
  • By: Hannah Brown
  • Narrated by: Hannah Brown
  • Length: 8 hrs and 38 mins
  • 4.0 out of 5 stars (3 ratings)

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God Bless This Mess

By: Hannah Brown
Narrated by: Hannah Brown
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Publisher's Summary

A New York Times Best Seller

“My life was a complete mess, and God bless all of it. Because it’s in the messes where we learn the most - as long as we slow down enough to realize what God is trying to show us.”

Suddenly in the spotlight, 24-year-old Hannah Brown realized that she wasn’t sure what she wanted. After years of competing in beauty pageants, and then starring on The Bachelorette and Dancing with the Stars, she had become incredibly visible. There she was, in her early 20s, with millions around the world examining and weighing in on her every decision. She found herself wondering what it would mean to live on her terms. What it would mean to stop seeking approval from others and decide - for the first time - what it was she wanted from her own life.

An honest and earnest examination of her own mid-20s, God Bless This Mess is a memoir that doesn’t claim to have all the answers. Hannah knows she doesn’t have all the answers. What she does have is the insight of someone who has spent critical years of her youth under public scrutiny. Thus what emerges is a quarter-life memoir that speaks to the set of difficulties young women face, and how to move through them with grace. By pushing against her engrained need to seek approval, and learning how to think critically about her own goals and desires, Hannah inspires others to do the same - and to embrace the messiness that comes hand-in-hand with self-discovery (even it that sometimes means falling flat on your face).

Using her time on The Bachelorette as a launching pad, Hannah doesn’t shy away from the most painful experiences of her life: moments when her faith was tested, when she feared it was lost, and the moments when she reclaimed it on national television. “And Jesus still loves me.” Fans will be inspired by the never-before-told stories: the ones about facing depression and anxiety during her pageant years, the ways in which therapy and journaling have proven to be a saving grace, and the previously private moments - both at home and on television - that have shaped the star’s outlook.

Honest and emotionally urgent, God Bless This Mess is a reminder that true growth doesn’t come without strife - and it’s through those dark, messy moments that self-acceptance and love can bloom.

©2021 Hannah Kelsey Brown (P)2021 HarperCollins Publishers

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Hard to read

Im editing my review because i’ve finally finished it.

I understand that many people may want to know more about Hannah and her experiences so I can’t fault her for the fact that the vast majority of this book is a memoir. That’s tough for those who just wanted the “Bachelor Tea” and nothing else.

What made the Memoir difficult to listen to is that Hannah is presented as someone who doesn’t take accountability for her life because she doesn’t make decisions based on thinking for herself. She looks for signs from God. She looks for superstitious coincidences. So, it’s not surprising that she keeps making poor decisions. The issue is she never comes to realise that she isn’t taking accountability for life because she isn’t making thought out decisions based on what she’s learned and want she wants. She transfers accountability to her conception of God. Ultimately, this behaviour also makes her sound entitled and sheltered.

This is a tiny point but the way she talked about “Alan” annoyed me further. I don’t watch DWTS but Alan is a professional dancer whose career depends on being successful in the competition. He’s not a therapist nor does he owe anyone conversations about why they are crying and sad. He does not have time for that. He has a draining all time consuming job. He doesn’t have time to additionally be his dance partner’s therapist.

There is some tea but its pretty much already all out there so I wouldn’t recommend reading this book for that reason.

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