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The experience was not that of most girls of that era. A single father
with three girls was an oddity, and carrying a large share of family
responsibility was something I took for granted. It made me a stronger
person, and also pushed me to escape into my fantasy world of creating
characters and living a different life.
After college, I got married, worked as a newspaper reporter for
awhile, had a family, and ended up divorced myself. It was then I got
interested in law school for the first time, as one of the local
attorneys, Joe Tomassi, took me under his wing and mentored me. I found
being a reporter allowed me to shine the light on things, but not to
really fix them; that was something that would require the power of a
legal degree. I tentatively took the entrance exams and did well, applied
and was accepted at my school of choice, with financial aid, school for my
kindergartener and a preschool on campus for my three-year-old. It seemed
to be fate.
After law school, I went back to the newspaper as an editor for awhile,
but in 1987, opened my own practice, working exclusively in family law.
I’d seen the issues from all sides - as a child, a mother, a wife - and I
felt a certain empathy with people going through what must be one of the
worst times in their life. It became one of the greatest missions of my
life to help people through what could be a very technical, dry procession
of legal paperwork if only their heads and hearts were not involved. In
furthering that goal, I have also worked as the Solicitor for the Crawford
County Domestic Relations office, which is the child support collection
and enforcement agency. There I did a lot of work which directly impacts
on custodial parents and kids who need help.
Since then I’ve worked with Northwestern Legal Services as an attorney
and coordinator of The Blossom Project, a program funded by the U.S.
Department of Justice to provide civil legal assistance to victims of
domestic violence, and also returned to private practice.
Now I’ve been able to take my first love of writing and combine it with
my career’s passion and produce books which I hope will reach out to many
people and give them courage to persist and stand up for their rights.
I'm currently celebrating seven years of marriage to an absent-minded
computer geek; together we have six computers, seven children and a full
house in Northwestern Pennsylvania.
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