22/01/2026
The day I realized my children would be happier without me was the day I stopped pretending I was a good mother.
I fed them.
I clothed them.
I prayed for them until my knees ached.
And yet none of them looked at me with love.
They say motherhood is sacrifice, but no one tells you what it costs to be invisible in your own house. To give everything and still be treated like a monster for demanding order.
Their father calls it peace.
I call it abandonment.
He smiles softly, avoids conflict, lets the children speak anyhow they like and when I correct them their father makes me the bad person, he looks at me like I’m the storm for insisting on rules. For believing children should fear consequences.
I raised my voice because no one listened when I whispered.
They say I was harsh.
But they never say how tired I was.
They never say how I worked late, came home to noise, disrespect, mess and still cooked, still cleaned.
I was sick and no one even noticed, no one cared. I still did the chores and faked being happy.
I heard them laughing with their father behind closed doors. He was the cool parent while I was the wicked one.
I heard my name spoken softly, carefully like something dangerous.
Do you know what it feels like to realize you’re the villain in a story you gave your life to?
I didn’t hit them.
I didn’t abandon them.
I didn’t stop loving them.
But love, I learned too late, is not given back no matter how much you give.
My condition got worse, the house grew quieter.
When I grew weaker, they grew closer to him.
No one cared for me, I watched my family slip out of my hands while everyone pretended it was my fault.
The day I died, my husband cried.
My children did not.
They stood there polite, composed, relieved.
And in that moment, buried beneath prayers and praise, was the truth no one would say aloud:
A woman can give her whole life to her family
and still be remembered as the thing they survived.