When my son came to visit me for the first time in 12 years, it should have been a moment of joy. Instead, it became the beginning of a heartbreaking ultimatum.
Twelve years apart from your child is more than just lost time—it’s lost birthdays, missed milestones, a silence that cuts deep. When my son finally walked back into my life, after over a decade of separation, I was overwhelmed. I felt grief and hope stirring inside me all at once. It was a chance to reconnect, to begin again, to heal a bond that had been damaged by circumstances outside of our control.
But what happened next is something I never expected.
My then-partner—my second husband—gave me an ultimatum: “He has to leave and you have to tell him”
No discussion. No compassion. No space for the complexity of emotions I was holding. Just a demand. A control tactic wrapped in the false disguise of “boundaries.”
This is what emotional blackmail looks like.
It doesn’t always scream. Sometimes, it whispers. Sometimes it sounds like “I just want what’s best for us,” or “You need to prove your loyalty to me.” But make no mistake: real love does not come with a price tag. Real love does not ask you to choose between the people you love—it finds a way to support your healing and wholeness.
In that moment, I was forced to reckon with the truth:
This wasn’t love.
It was possession.
It was control.
And it was a pattern I had come to recognize too well.
Emotional abusers often present a charming, public persona.
They are kind to others. They smile for the cameras. They say all the right things at parties. But behind closed doors, their love is conditional. Their affection is transactional. And they use ultimatums as tools to isolate you, silence you, or force your loyalty.
I chose to reconnect with my son.
I chose to honour the part of me that longed for my child.
I chose not to betray myself for the comfort of someone who only loved me when I was easy to control.
If you’ve ever been given an ultimatum like this—whether by a partner, a parent, or anyone in your life—know this:
🌿 You are not selfish for choosing your truth.
🌿 You are not disloyal for protecting your peace.
🌿 And you are not alone.
These tactics are more common than we speak about. It’s time we shed light on them. It’s time we stop accepting love that hurts more than it heals.
Let’s keep talking.
Let’s keep naming it.
Because behind every “Not the Person You Think They Are” story is a survivor finding their way back to truth.

There is more pain inflicted in the name of love than any other way…
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Things keep hitting my through my healing like a steam train, its amazing how the mind sees things differently when you are in the middle of trauma, and everything becomes clear when your coming out of Trauma!
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I can relate to that, Linda. Pity we didn’t see it sooner though!
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I think sometimes we do but choose to ignore it because we want it to work!!!
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If I remember correctly, there was always several excuses…
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Yes but love shouldn’t be about pain, yes we have to endure pain, sometimes but when it’s all pain we have to find the strength to walk away.
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