At 55, I no longer measure success by what I owned, but by what I survived. As a Canadian-born Black woman, this birthday carries a different kind of weight. Not because of the candles on the cake, but because of the storms I endured to still be standing here with dignity, wisdom, and my children grown.
There was a time when survival (not celebration) was my daily assignment. I raised three children on my own after the breakdown of my marriage. Like many women, especially mothers navigating separation, I entered that chapter emotionally wounded and legally unprepared. No one sat me down to explain my rights. No one explained the long-term consequences of financial decisions made during separation. No one warned me how quickly a family can fall into poverty when protection, planning, and legal understanding are absent.
“I learned through hardship.”
I fought through verbal abuse, depression, physical illness, financial instability, and the crushing fear of wondering whether I could keep food in the fridge while protecting my children’s emotional well-being at the same time. There were seasons where exhaustion became my identity. Yet somehow, mothers continue. We cook while hurting. We smile while breaking. We carry children while carrying grief.
“What saved me was not pride; it was support.”
My mother and sister became part of the foundation that helped keep my family standing. They stepped in with love, childcare, encouragement, and sacrifice. Even to this day, their support remains part of my survival story. In many Black families, women become the invisible safety net for one another. Grandmothers, sisters, aunts, cousins quietly hold entire generations together while society often overlooks the labour behind that strength.
Turning 55 has made me reflect deeply on one truth: the decisions we make during crisis can shape a family’s future for decades.
Too many women leave relationships without understanding custody rights, property rights, child support, spousal support, insurance protections, estate planning, or the legal importance of documentation. Too many people sign agreements while emotionally vulnerable. Too many parents weaponize children against one another without understanding the lifelong damage conflict causes.
Love may build a family, but sound decisions protect one. I now understand that legal literacy is not a luxury. Knowing your rights can mean the difference between stability and homelessness. Between generational healing and generational trauma. Between protecting your children’s future or unintentionally damaging it through unmanaged conflict and poor planning.
Families do not only break apart in courtrooms. They also break apart: financially, emotionally, and spiritually when people refuse to plan wisely.
At 55, I have learned that protecting a family sometimes means making uncomfortable choices early:
- documenting finances
- seeking legal advice
- creating wills
- protecting mental health
- setting boundaries
- pursuing mediation instead of warfare
- and understanding that pride can cost more than peace
My life did not unfold perfectly, but I am proud that my children survived difficult years and reached adulthood with resilience. I am proud that despite every obstacle, I kept moving forward, and I am grateful that the very struggles that once nearly broke me have now given me the voice to help others avoid the same suffering.
“This birthday is not simply about aging. It is about endurance.”
It is about a Black mother who once struggled silently, now understanding that her survival became wisdom. It is about recognizing that behind many strong women are untold stories of sacrifice the world never fully sees.
Most importantly, it is about reminding families everywhere that the choices made today (especially during separation, conflict, and hardship) will echo into the next generation.
Choose protection over destruction, wisdom over revenge, planning over denial and healing over pride, because one sound decision can change an entire family’s future.