When my ten-year-old daughter Sophie told me she wasn’t invited to her father’s wedding, my heart sank. She had tried so hard to be kind to his fiancée, Diana—making cards, helping at dinners—yet she was told she “didn’t belong.”
I couldn’t let her believe that. On the morning of the wedding, I curled her hair, dressed her in a soft blue dress, and told her, “You are his daughter. You belong.”
At the reception, I stood with Sophie by my side and raised my glass. I shared the truth—that my little girl had been told she wasn’t welcome. The room fell silent, and in that moment, everyone saw what mattered most: a child who simply wanted to be part of her father’s day.
Sophie left with her head high, her hand in mine. Later, as we ate cake in the backyard, she whispered, “I’m glad you’re my mom. You make me feel like I belong.”
That day, I didn’t just defend her place in the world—I reminded her that her voice matters, and it always will.