Friend of Mine – She stayed for safety. Let that sentence haunt you.
She said it like a confession.
“I married him because he said if I didn’t, he’d take them.”
And she believed him.
Because he’d done worse.
You don’t understand survival
until you’ve chosen the lesser hell
and decorated it with family photos.
She wore white.
Not because she wanted to.
Because she was terrified not to.
She said her vows
next to a man who’d
strangled her in front of the fridge,
told her no one would ever believe her,
and made sure she never had a dollar
without his permission.
And the system?
It rewards marriage.
It respects nuclear families.
It believes in legal custody rights.
Even when the “father” is the reason she doesn’t sleep.
She tried to report it once.
The officer said,
“But he’s your husband now.”
As if vows erased violence.
As if legal paperwork made him less dangerous.
As if signing her name next to his
meant she’d chosen him.
She hadn’t.
She’d chosen not to lose her kids.
She said staying was safer
than fighting a man
the court system would likely call stable.
He made good money.
No criminal record.
Volunteered on weekends.
She had trauma responses.
Unexplained absences.
A diagnosis or two.
Guess who they’d believe?
So she stayed.
Every day, she tucked her children into bed
and crawled in next to a man she feared—
just to make sure the little ones were safe
in the next room.
And when people called her strong?
She winced.
Because surviving isn’t strength.
It’s strategy.
And no one should have to live like that.
If you’ve never had to choose between your body and your children…
Be quiet.
You don’t know what survival looks like
in the hands of someone who’s already been disbelieved by the world
and knows she’ll never get justice—
just the chance to reduce harm.
She didn’t marry for love.
She married to stay alive
enough
to keep them alive.
Let that sentence haunt you.
