When my daughter Tasha lost her job last year, I opened my home to her and her four children. I covered food, school supplies, doctor visits — everything — while she tried to rebuild her life. It was exhausting at times, but we made it work. Then, on her 26th birthday, she sat at the table with a hesitant smile and said the one sentence that sank my heart: “I’m going to get back together with Howard.” The same man who once seemed charming, then turned violent. The man who shoved her over spilled juice, who left bruises she tried to hide, who once pushed JJ’s high chair so hard it nearly tipped.
The night that happened, she showed up shaking, whispering that she couldn’t stay with him anymore. So hearing she wanted to return felt like being hit all over again. She swore he had changed — sober, employed, apologetic. But when the time came for him to prove it, he didn’t even show up to the meeting they planned.
Soon the old pattern returned — excuses, silence, her blaming herself, hoping for better. Then one night, he appeared at my fence screaming. I told him to leave, and his anger flashed with the same intensity I remembered. That terrified her more than anything I could have said.
Weeks later, a letter came from a lawyer. He wanted partial custody. We fought with everything: shelter records, medical notes, testimonies. The judge allowed only supervised visits. Even then, Howard snapped at JJ, and the visits were stopped immediately.
Little by little, Tasha healed. She found work, saved money, and rediscovered herself. Eventually, Howard moved out of state and vanished from her life. The day she signed the lease on her own apartment, she cried — not from fear, but freedom. She finally understood what I had prayed she’d learn: