When the house finally settled into silence, the day’s chaos echoed louder than ever. I sat alone at the kitchen table, that tiny pink shoe resting beside my coffee cup like a witness. The adrenaline had long faded, but the tremor in my hands remained, a quiet aftershock of all the terrible possibilities my mind had raced through.
In the stillness, details I’d pushed aside came back with clarity: the biker stepping back to give us space, his hands visible, his voice careful; the officers speaking gently, assuring me he’d only called because he’d seen me juggling kids and groceries. Shame pricked, not because I’d been afraid, but because I’d forgotten that fear doesn’t get to be the only truth. That weathered stranger on the motorcycle hadn’t been a threat—he’d been a mirror, reflecting how tightly I’d been gripping my own defenses. That night, I let go just enough to remember that courage isn’t never being scared; sometimes it’s allowing goodness in, even when your whole body is braced for harm.





