~ by Ryan I saw a quote that stopped me: “Emotionally immature parents see their adult children expressing hurt as a personal attack instead of recognizing it as a chance to take responsibility and repair the relationship.” At first, I just stared at it. Then something hit me… It wasn’t just a quote. It was my life. There was a letter written to my parents. Not by me…but for me. By someone who has seen the parts of my life I used to hide. Someone who has sat through the withdrawals, the panic, the memories, the nights I couldn’t outrun what was in my head. Someone who saw the damage clearly enough to finally put it into words. That letter wasn’t written out of hate. It was written out of truth. Out of everything I didn’t know how to say. Out of everything I had spent years trying to make sense of. It was an attempt - maybe the last real one - to open a door and say: “Look at what happened. Not to blame… but to understand.” My dad read three lines. Then threw it away. That ...
There’s a picture of me smiling. Of course there is. Big smile. Bright eyes. Confident. Almost… untouchable. The kind of woman who looks like she has it handled. The kind of woman who looks like she’s winning. And maybe that’s what they see when they look at me. But what they don’t see…is everything underneath that smile. They don’t see what it feels like to be told-just like that-that your communication with your husband is gone. Not limited. Not restricted. Gone. Four years. No phone calls. No visits. No video visits. Just… silence. Let that sink in. Because this isn’t just about “rules” or “policy.” This is about human beings. This is about a man who is fighting every single day to stay clean in an environment that is designed to break him. This is about someone trying to hold onto his sanity… while the one person who grounds him, who reminds him who he is outside of those walls… gets ripped away. Do you understand what that does to someone? ...