I Didn’t Give Up—The System Did

To the people who don’t understand why I signed my parental rights away: That’s okay. You don’t have to understand. But I hope my story opens your eyes.

I didn’t walk away from my children. I wasn’t careless. I wasn’t cold. I was a mom fighting a battle most people never see—inside my own mind, and inside a system that was never built to support someone like me.

The truth? The system says it’s about family reunification. But when you’re struggling with mental illness… when you don’t have thousands of dollars for a lawyer… when you’re in and out of psych wards trying just to survive—you don’t get the same chance. You barely get a voice.

I’ll never forget sitting in the chambers of an old-school judge, stone-faced and set in his ways. He looked at me and said, “Being an addict, you would have a better chance of getting your kids back than having a mental illness.”

That moment broke something in me. Not just because of what he said, but because of how real it was. My lawyer consoled me after we left. She cried. She held space for my pain in a way the system never did. And in that moment, I knew the battle wasn’t mine to fight anymore—not if it meant dragging my kids through more heartbreak.

So I made the hardest decision of my life. I signed my rights away—not because I didn’t love them, but because I did. Because I chose their peace over my pride. Because I wanted them to have a chance at a stable life, even if it meant they couldn’t have it with me.

I haven’t seen or spoken to them in years. I’ve respected their wish for a “normal” life. And I’m truly grateful for the family who’s raising them. But I carry them with me every single day. They are and always will be my why.

Mental illness does not make someone unfit to be a parent. Lack of money does not mean lack of love. But when both exist in a system built to work against you. Sometimes love looks like letting go.

I lean hard on God now. He’s the one who has held me through this pain, this silence, this waiting. He’s the reason I can write these words with hope and not bitterness.

One day, I believe my children will have questions. And when that day comes, I’ll be here—with open arms, truth in my heart, and love that never left.

Every day, I carry a little brokenness and an emptiness inside without my kiddos.
A part of me is missing—and that’s the hardest part of all this. But I am not ashamed of my story. This pain has purpose. And I plan to keep up the good fight every single moment of every single day. Because my story isn’t over. And neither is theirs.

To the ones who had to walk away…
To the mothers the system failed…
To those who carry silent grief and invisible strength—

You are not a failure.
You are not forgotten.
And you are not alone.


Reflection:
Have you ever had to make a choice that no one clapped for—but you knew deep down it was the most loving thing you could do?

Invitation:
If this touched something in you, I’d love to hear your story. You can comment, message me, or simply share this with someone who needs to know they’re not alone. Our stories matter—and they were never meant to be carried in silence.

The Kind of Strength No One Talks About

Healing doesn’t always feel like strength. Sometimes it feels like waking up with a lump in your throat. Sometimes it feels like walking through life with a part of your heart missing.
Sometimes it’s making choices you pray no one else ever has to make.

Years ago, I made one of those choices.

I didn’t fight a system that was never on my side. I didn’t drag my kids through courtrooms, instability, or chaos just to say I tried. I let go, not because I didn’t love them, but because I did. So much that I laid down my pride, my rights, and the very title of “mom” so they could have a better chance at life.

Let me tell you something…
That’s not weakness. That’s the kind of strength no one talks about.

Every day since, they’ve been my why. Even if they don’t see it. Even if they never understand it. They are the reason I keep choosing healing. The reason I chose sobriety.
The reason I get back up when grief knocks me down again.

I never stopped loving them. Not for a second. And I still pray for them, think of them, miss them—every single day. But I’ve also learned I have to love myself now too. Because the version of me they may someday meet…She’s worth knowing.

This journey of healing is messy. It doesn’t come with neat edges or clean timelines. Some days I still break down. Some days I wonder if I made the right choice.
But I go back to this truth: I loved them enough to let them go. And now I love them enough to become whole.

If you’ve ever had to make the kind of decision that no one claps for. One that leaves you questioning everything. You’re not alone. Your story still matters. And so do you.

You can still be a good mom, even if your story looks nothing like you dreamed.
You can still be healing and worthy. You can still be grieving and growing. And you can still hold space for hope—because it’s not over yet.

So if you’re reading this with a heavy heart, if your story didn’t go the way you hoped, if you’ve loved deeply and lost quietly. I just want you to know…

You are seen. You are not alone. And your heart still has so much left to give.

Be gentle with yourself today.
You’re doing better than you think.