The next morning, sunlight streamed through the window, but it didn't feel warm.
It felt like a reminder: life was different now.
I looked down at my son, still sleeping peacefully.
His small face made my chest ache—not from sadness, but from responsibility.
I had two choices:
*Stay broken.
*Rise.
I chose… rise.
The first step was simple but terrifying: find work.
After years of staying home, the world outside felt foreign.
Emails, resumes, interviews—words I hadn't touched in years.
I opened my laptop and stared at the blank screen.
"What can I even do?" I whispered.
Then I remembered something my mother once told me:
"The world doesn't wait. You have to grab it yourself."
Grabbing it. That's what I had to do.
I started small—freelance writing.
It wasn't glamorous, but it was something.
And every word I typed was a small victory over the person I used to be.
Days turned into weeks.
Some nights, I fell asleep with my son on my lap, my fingers still trembling from typing.
Slowly… progress.
A client emailed me: "Great work. Here's another project."
A small smile formed on my lips.
It wasn't much, but it was mine.
For the first time in months, I felt… hope.
Then came the message I never expected.
A notification from my ex.
"We need to talk about finances… and custody."
I swallowed hard.
I was no longer the scared woman on the living room floor.
I had begun to build something… something he had never believed I could.
And this time, I would face him with strength.
