The Belt Was the Warning

I still remember that belt. Just thinking about it makes me feel sick.

It wasn’t just an object. It was a threat. A reminder. A way to keep me in line.

He never needed to raise his voice. Never needed to say a word. He just had to leave it there, in plain sight, making sure I saw it. Moving it around so I couldn’t escape it. Draped over the back of a chair. Coiled neatly on the table. Hung on the doorframe like it was nothing at all.

But it wasn’t nothing.

I knew exactly what it meant—the consequences if I made even the smallest mistake.

And I did make mistakes. Of course, I did.

A plate left in the sink too long. A shirt not folded the way he liked. Speaking when I shouldn’t. Being too slow. Being too fast. Being anything at all.

The worst part wasn’t even the belt itself. It was the waiting. The moments when I saw it, when I knew it was coming, when I felt my stomach drop and my hands start to shake before he even touched me.

I hate that belt. I hate that even now, I can still feel it. The sting, the snap, the burn that lingered long after he was done. I hate how it made me small, made me silent, made me afraid to exist in my own home.

But more than anything, I hate him.

Because he knew.

He knew exactly what he was doing. And he enjoyed it.

Share the Post:

Related Posts

Portrait of a young man with curly hair and a dark padded jacket, standing confidently in front of a brick wall

Volunteering? Yeah, It’s Actually Pretty Great

I never set out to be a volunteer – it just started with small things like helping at Silver Sundays, serving tea or doing some planting. A couple of years ago, I began getting more involved, especially at Restore Hope – a place that’s felt like a second home since childhood. With my family already part of it, getting involved felt natural. Now, I help out at events, pack veg boxes for local families, and support wherever I’m needed. Volunteering has helped me grow in confidence and taught me patience, teamwork, and the impact of simple kindness. It’s not just about what you give – it’s about what you gain too.

Read More
Black and white photo of a wet, half-buried notebook on a gritty pavement

She Burned My Words

I had this book where I wrote down everything she did, like my own secret diary. But she found it, and she burned it all. All my words, all my proof, gone.

I felt so small, like I couldn’t do anything to stop her or prove what she did.

Read More