“You Are a Survivor”

Somewhere along the way, we started labeling ourselves by what happened to us. 

The divorced woman. 

The grieving husband. 

The cancer patient. 

The abandoned child. 

The parent with an estranged son or daughter. 

The person who lost everything. 

But what if we looked at it differently? What if instead of defining ourselves by the storm, we defined ourselves by the fact that we made it through? 

Think about your life for a moment. 

Maybe you’ve buried people you loved or sat in a doctor’s office waiting for test results. 

Maybe you’ve survived a divorce, betrayal, addiction, financial hardship, loneliness, depression, or heartbreak and there were days you weren’t sure how you would make it to tomorrow. 

Yet here you are, breathing, living and reading these words. 

You survived, not because it wasn’t hard, or that it didn’t hurt and knocked to your knees. 

You survived because somehow, some way, you got back up. 

We spend so much time calling ourselves victims of our circumstances that we forget the truth: victims stay trapped in the story. 

Survivors keep writing new chapters. 

That doesn’t mean the scars disappear or the memories stop hurting. It simply means the difficult thing didn’t get the final say. 

You did. 

The next time you find yourself replaying everything you’ve been through, pause and ask yourself one question: ‘Am I still here?’ If the answer is yes, then congratulations. You survived 100% of your worst days. 

And that makes you something far more powerful than a victim. It makes you a survivor. 

Wishing you love and light,

~Anne Dennish~

“When Your Child Cuts You Off”

There are so many conversations now about adult children who walk away from their parents. Support groups. Articles. Videos. Podcasts. Thousands of people quietly trying to survive a heartbreak that very few people truly understand unless they’ve lived it themselves. I never imagined I would be one of them. 

In the beginning, I thought it was all me. I tore myself apart looking for answers. I replayed years of motherhood in my head, wondering where I failed, what I missed, and what I could have done differently, because when you love your child with your whole heart, losing them emotionally feels like losing part of yourself. And for a long time, I carried that pain in silence because I was ashamed to even admit it was happening. 

But somewhere along the way, I realized something that changed me. Sometimes people are influenced by the voices around them. Sometimes relationships shift under the weight of outside opinions, loyalties, resentment, or stories you never even got the chance to defend yourself against. And sometimes no matter how much love you gave, it still isn’t enough to stop someone from leaving. 

So this is my truth now. I still love my child deeply. I always will but I cannot spend the rest of my life waiting at a locked door hoping someone else decides to open it. I have spent enough years grieving people who are still alive and while there will always be sadness tucked quietly inside me, there is also something else beginning to grow there too: acceptance. Peace. A life that still belongs to me. 

If you are going through this too, please know you are not alone. And please know this — your worth as a mother is not measured only by who stayed. 

Wishing you love and light,

~Anne Dennish~

Memoir Writing With Anne Dennish – GenZ Podcast

Take a listen to my latest podcast with GenZ Publishing! Feel free to leave comments or ask questions!

Enjoy!

Wishing you love and light,

~Anne Dennish~