The truth about my mother hit me three years after she died. It didn’t come in a dream or a confession.
It came in a wooden box hidden behind old sweaters, in letters written by a woman I’d never heard of.
A woman my mother once loved. A woman she gave up so I could exis… Continues…
I grew up thinking my mother’s strength was in how little she let herself break.
Only later did I realize it was in how much she quietly carried.
Those hidden letters revealed a version of her I had never met:
a young woman in love with another woman, forced to choose between her heart and the life her family demanded.
She chose the path that led to me, but she never stopped
walking beside the ghost of the life she left behind.
Meeting Margaret didn’t shatter my image of my mother; it completed it.
I saw how love can be both sacrifice and salvation,
how a person can be split between two truths and still move forward with grace.
Now, when I walk with my own daughter,
I refuse the easy lie of “I’m fine.”
I let her see that love, in all its forms,
deserves not just to survive—but to be seen.