At seventeen, a girl shouted across the street:
“Get a future, Foxy.”
It stayed.
What followed wasn’t a dramatic fall.
It was slower than that. More ordinary. More dangerous.
A pattern of almosts.
Broken relationships.
Grief that changed everything.
Becoming a father before being ready.
Leaving the country to start again — not out of courage, but necessity.
This memoir explores:
- How identity is shaped by early verdicts
• Why some men run instead of rebuild
• The emotional cost of fatherhood and loss
• What happens when you stop blaming and start owning
• Why recovery isn’t a single moment — it’s a repeated choice
This isn’t motivational.
It’s honest.
If you’ve ever felt behind, stuck, or defined by your worst decisions — this story will feel familiar.
And maybe useful.