What If I’m Enough? is a deeply honest memoir about what it means to confront your own reflection—both the literal and the metaphorical—and discover that the person staring back is worth believing in.
Told with unflinching vulnerability, sarcastic humor, and a storyteller’s rhythm, Teron invites readers into a life shaped by love, loss, resolve, and the constant search for true self. From the complexities of being born into trauma and struggling to find balance while navigating spaces that rarely understood his personhood, to the tenderness and turbulence of family relationships, to seasons of deep grief and self-doubt, Teron doesn’t shy away from the messy middle of becoming.
Each chapter is a window into moments that molded him: the uncle who shaped his sense of manhood, the lessons learned in homelessness and hardship, the balancing act of being a young husband and father, and the quiet (and sometimes loud) conversations about identity, mental health, and masculinity. Along the way, the unsung heroes of his story—the ones who scolded, loved, lifted, and looked out for him—emerge as proof that community, even with all its flaws, is often what carries us through.
Teron’s story is an invitation to see the beauty in the imperfect, the courage in the vulnerable, and the power in owning your story, even the parts you once tried to hide.
With a voice that’s both deeply personal and widely relatable, Teron reminds us that self-worth is rarely found in the approval of others but built in the quiet moments of truth-telling, in the choice to keep showing up, and in the audacity to believe that who you are is already enough.