The night everything began unraveling did not feel dramatic in the moment. It was quiet in the way exhaustion often is, the kind that settles into your bones after months of pretending you are holding things together. I remember standing in the kitchen long after midnight, staring at the soft glow of the microwave clock, wondering how a life could fracture without making a sound. My husband, Caleb, had already filed for divorce by then. On paper, it looked clean and reasonable. He said we had grown apart. He said we argued too much. He said I was emotionally unstable, overwhelmed, unable to manage stress.
He said he was the calm one, the steady one, the parent who kept our family functioning. I was too tired to fight those words at first, too numb to realize how carefully they were being placed like stones along a path meant to lead away from me. Our daughter Harper was ten, old enough to sense the tension but young enough to believe adults always knew what they were doing. Or at least, that they should. I had no idea then that she had been carrying something heavy, something sharp, something she didn’t yet have language for. I had no idea that while I was losing sleep over legal paperwork and logistics, my child was learning how to survive in silence.