Trauma Memoir
Date Published: February 10, 2026
Publisher: Unbroken
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“Conversations with social services
painted a stark reality: Clinging to family ties meant sinking even further
down the waiting list for government-subsidized housing. Each visit, each
affidavit signed was a double-edged sword, an acknowledgment of need but also
an admission of failure.
Determined to reclaim control, she traded
the fragile refuge of relatives’ walls for the cold, transient safety of a
homeless shelter. Aunt Rose and Uncle John left us at the nearest shelter in
north Houston, and then their car disappeared into the distance, leaving behind
the echo of unspoken decisions. I watched until the red blur of their
taillights melted into the horizon, Joshua’s small hand tightening around mine
as if he, too, felt the finality of it all.
Joshua, just three, clutched my hand
tightly, his wide, innocent eyes unaware of the silent verdict passed. I had
just finished fourth grade, old enough to read between the lines of hushed
arguments and the heavy pauses that filled the spaces where comfort should have
been. In our small room at the shelter, we pushed the twin beds together,
Joshua nestled between my mother and me, forming a fragile cocoon spun from
habit and an aching need for safety. Hope was a foreign guest.
Mornings broke with mechanical precision,
the harsh buzz of alarms signaling another day in survival mode. Breakfast in
the cafeteria was a ritual of its own, a sea of shattered faces, trays sliding
along metal counters, the faint aroma of powdered eggs and overcooked oatmeal
lingering in the air. Then came exile. From 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., the shelter’s
doors locked behind us, thrusting us into Houston’s blistering streets.
Back inside, Joshua and my mother
surrendered to sleep, their exhaustion a fragile shield against despair. I
sought refuge in the brittle pages of Reader’s Digest magazines and dog-eared
novels scavenged from donation piles. Words became my sanctuary, their inked
lines a delicate lifeline anchoring me against the gnawing edges of shame and
fear. … It felt dangerous to hope, like inviting another betrayal into our
fragile world.”
OR
“The crisp morning air nipped at my
cheeks as I trudged the cracked sidewalk from the Haverstock Hill Apartments to
school, my breath forming faint clouds that vanished into the pastel hues of
dawn. Each step carried me further from the muffled arguments that echoed
through the thin apartment walls, replaced by the faint rustle of leaves and
the distant chirp of waking birds. The school’s brick facade emerged like a
beacon, its doors promising a temporary escape, a refuge from the turbulent
echoes of home.
Inside, the scratch of pencils and the
rhythmic hum of classroom chatter wrapped around me like the hush of a library
aisle. The walls, adorned with colorful posters and motivational quotes, stood
in stark contrast to the grayness of my daily reality. Hands shot up eagerly in
the air, and I was always among them, heart racing with the thrill of knowing
the answer. Teachers’ nods of approval and the bright ink of “Excellent work”
scribbled atop my papers weren’t just marks; they were also affirmations that made
my chest swell, my spine straighten. They said I mattered, a quiet whisper of
worthiness that cloaked me in invisible armor against the chaos left at home.
These small tokens of recognition planted seeds of belief in myself, a
foundation upon which I could eventually stand tall.
One afternoon, my mother paused mid-task,
her gaze locking onto mine with an intensity that made the air feel heavier.
“Adriene,” she said, voice low but firm, “Good grades, A’s, will get you out of
this lifestyle. School will save you from a future like this.” Her words
lingered long after she turned away, embedding themselves in the corners of my
mind like a mantra. I scribbled them in the margins of my notebook, a vow I
whispered before every test, a lifeline to a future I could barely imagine.
That same year, I won the elementary
school spelling bee. At the district level, there was one lone contestant, an
eighth grader, against me, a fifth grader. How could that possibly be fair? I
stood on the spelling bee stage, palms slick with nerves, the word “mozzarella”
hanging in the air like a fragile thread. One misplaced letter, and the thread
snapped. Second place. The sting of defeat was sharp, but my mother’s rare,
warm smile softened it, so different from her usual tight-lipped frown. “What
would you like as a reward?” she asked. My eleven-year-old heart dared to dream
of coolness, a double-ear piercing. She studied me, a gentle curve playing at
the corner of her mouth. “Sure. Why not? You’ve earned it.”
So, we packed up Joshua, took the three
buses and transfers necessary to go from our apartment to the mall, and went to
get my ears pierced. The journey itself was an adventure, filled with laughter
and a tenderness that felt almost foreign. The experience bolstered my
confidence and reinforced the notion that school was my salvation. My mother’s
decision to reward me with a double-ear piercing for my success was a rare
moment of tenderness, a fleeting gesture that stood out amidst the harshness of
our daily life, anchoring me in the belief that I was worthy of celebration.”
Adriene Caldwell is an author and advocate from Houston, Texas. Her memoir, Unbroken: Life Outside the Lines, traces the quiet aftermath of childhood trauma and the long arc of healing. Through writing, talks, and UnbrokenCaldwell.com, she champions hope, resilience, and storytelling as tools for recovery.

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