02/07/2025
Today, I did something that left me shaking—I called the police.
I heard something through the walls I cannot un-hear. Sounds that shouldn’t exist in any home. Cries that cut through the noise of daily life and reached somewhere deep inside me. Violence. Real, terrifying violence. And I knew I had to act.
Domestic violence is happening in our communities—quietly, violently, tragically.
And too often, it’s ignored. Brushed aside. Justified. Minimized.
But today I was faced with its full reality, and I couldn’t walk past it. Not this time.
What I heard wasn’t just a fight—it was pain layered with fear, silence thick with dread, and a person trapped in a place that should have been safe.
I want to say something to anyone living in this reality:
You are not meant to endure this.
You are not to blame.
You deserve protection, support, and dignity.
I see you.
Even if no one else has noticed your bruises—physical or emotional.
Even if you’ve been told to stay silent, to be ashamed, to “make it work.”
I see your strength—even in survival.
I see your courage—even when you feel defeated.
Whether you are a woman or a man—this pain is not yours to carry alone.
You are not weak for wanting peace.
You are not dramatic for calling for help.
You are not alone.
If you’re living with someone who harms you—emotionally, physically, psychologically—please know this:
🌿 You can leave.
🌿 You can speak out.
🌿 You can rebuild.
Yes, it’s terrifying. Yes, it’s messy. Yes, it can feel like you’ll lose everything.
But staying will cost you even more.
Your light. Your laughter. Your health. Your future.
And to those of us who hear it, sense it, witness it from the sidelines—we cannot afford to look away.
I felt scared making that call. I questioned myself. I worried I might be overstepping.
But that moment was not about me. It was about someone who needed protection.
Someone who might not survive another night.
That call could be the turning point.
That call could be the beginning of a safer life.
That call could save them.
We must change how we respond to domestic violence.
We must talk about it—not just in hushed tones, not just after tragedy. But loudly, compassionately, and consistently.
We must create communities where people feel safe to run, safe to speak, safe to heal.
Where silence doesn’t win. Where compassion overrides discomfort.
I will not pretend this is easy. It isn’t.
It’s heavy. It’s emotional.
But it’s too important to ignore.
So this is me, choosing to speak up.
Choosing to say—enough is enough.
To anyone who’s hurting:
You don’t have to stay.
You don’t have to survive alone.
You don’t have to hide.
You are worthy of protection, of advocacy, of love that doesn’t leave you wounded.
Please reach out. Please run. Please fight for your life—because it is sacred.
And please know: when you’re ready, there will be hands reaching out to catch you.