You escaped the abuser—then faced the jury.
Write. Laugh. Hope.
You finally got out.
Bruised, breathless, breaking—but out.
And just when you thought the worst was over,
the system showed up to finish the job.
Not with fists.
With forms.
With interrogations.
With disbelief in a badge and a clipboard.
Because escaping abuse doesn’t end the violence—
it just changes its wardrobe.
You become the defendant in your own survival story:
Why didn’t you leave sooner?
Why didn’t you scream louder?
Why didn’t you document the damage,
smile politely,
and stay calm while dying slowly?
They want receipts for your pain
but dismiss your truth as “too emotional.”
They ask if you’re sure—like trauma is a math test.
They call you unstable for reacting
to the thing they said you should be over by now.
And if you dare to speak up?
You become the spectacle.
The headline.
The “case study.”
While your abuser sits untouched—
or worse, believed.
This isn’t justice.
This is retraumatization in a courtroom costume.
It’s the patriarchy with a press pass.
It’s systemic gaslighting dressed up as due process.
Write. Laugh. Hope.
Because your voice was never too loud.
It was just too real for a world that still protects the echo
instead of the scream.
