When my daughter Tasha lost her job last year, I took her and her four kids into my home without hesitation. I covered food, school needs, doctor visits—everything. I thought it would be temporary, but we made it work.
Then, on her 26th birthday, she announced the words I feared most:
“I’m gonna get back together with Howard.”
Howard, the man whose charm faded fast. The man who went from calling me “Ma” to shoving her over a spilled drink. The man who hid bruises behind fake apologies—until the night he shoved JJ’s high chair across the floor. That was when she finally left him and came home with the kids.
So hearing she wanted to give him another chance felt like being punched in the chest.
She tried to explain: he apologized, he met the kids, he seemed “like the old Howard.” I knew better, but I stepped outside to calm down. Later she admitted she had already told him she’d think about it.
Days later, he showed up yelling outside my fence. The fury in his eyes was the same as before. Tasha finally saw it too. She blocked his number that night.
But trouble didn’t end there. A week later, he filed for partial custody. We fought back hard—shelter records, medical notes, everything. The judge didn’t grant him custody, but did allow supervised visits.
During the first visit, he snapped at JJ. The supervisor saw it. Visits were suspended. Slowly, Tasha rebuilt her life—therapy, a steady job, savings, confidence.
Then the final letter came: Howard had moved out of state.
A year later, Tasha signed the lease for her own place. The kids are thriving. And she finally learned what I prayed she would:
Peace doesn’t come from giving someone another chance.
Peace comes from choosing yourself.