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When your young you don’t know toxicity in your family, or the meaning of toxic love |
| I loved my daddy with a child’s whole heart, the kind that doesn’t question shadows when they fall across the room. To me, you were laughter and lessons, a voice I trusted, a presence I leaned into without knowing it leaned back unevenly. Love made excuses before I ever learned the word why. I didn’t see the sharp edges then— only the way you filled space, only the pride I felt saying your name, only the hope that bloomed every time you looked my way. Toxic is a word that came later, after time had softened the noise and distance gave me clarity. While you were alive, you were just Daddy— human, complicated, someone I loved without conditions or defenses. I mistook survival for normal, confusion for loyalty, and silence for peace. Love, after all, doesn’t come with warning labels when it’s all you know. Now I grieve two things at once: the man I loved and the truth I couldn’t see. Not with anger— but with understanding that love can be real and still not be safe. You are gone, and so is the illusion. But the love was never a lie— only incomplete. I forgive myself for loving you fully before I knew better. That love was innocent. And I will not shame it. |