The Words My Daughter Whispered
I have a 6yo daughter, Lily, who has always been difficult. Tantrums, hitting, screaming over small things. We finally took her to a child psychologist.
Last week, she emailed me saying she wouldnโt continue treating Lily, it was โbest for everyone.โ I called Dr. Harper again, and she finally revealed that during their last session, the kid whispered something that left her shaken.
โShe saidโฆ โWhen I grow up, Iโll hurt mommy the way she hurts me. Iโll make her cry every day, like she does to me.โโ
I stood there in silence, my phone pressed to my ear, the hallway suddenly colder than before. My breath caught in my throat. I wasnโt even sure if Iโd heard correctly.
Me? Hurting Lily? Iโd never laid a hand on her. I mean, sure, Iโd raised my voice. Iโd snapped. But who wouldnโt, when a kid throws a juice box at your face for giving her the โwrongโ cereal?
โI think,โ Dr. Harper said gently, โyou both need help. But I canโt be that help anymore.โ
I didnโt know what to say. After I hung up, I just sat at the kitchen table with my head in my hands. My husband, Dan, was at work, and the house was silent except for Lily singing to her stuffed animals in the next room. Her voice was soft, even sweet. It was hard to reconcile that sound with what Iโd just heard.
That night, I watched her sleep. Her chest rising and falling in little puffs, her fingers curled around a raggedy unicorn. She looked so peaceful. Soโฆ harmless. But those words haunted me. โIโll make her cry every day.โ
The next morning, I told Dan what the psychologist had said. He didnโt take it well.
โShe must have misunderstood,โ he said immediately. โLily doesnโt even talk like that.โ
โShe does with us, no. But maybe when sheโs aloneโฆ maybe she feels things she doesnโt tell us.โ
Dan frowned. โYou think she really believes you hurt her?โ
I didnโt know. I honestly didnโt know. That night, I didnโt sleep much. I started watching Lily more closely. Not just her tantrums, but the quiet moments tooโhow she shrank back when I reached for her hair to brush it.
How she flinched when I raised my voice at the dog. She wasnโt afraid of me physicallyโฆ but maybe emotionally, Iโd become a giant she didnโt know how to navigate.
A few days later, I picked her up from school and decided to take the long route home. We passed by a park. It was chilly, but sunny.
โWanna stop for a bit?โ I asked.
She shrugged. โOkay.โ
We sat on a swing together. She didnโt say much, just kicked her legs a little.
โYou know,โ I began, โwhen I was little, I had big feelings too. Sometimes I didnโt know what to do with them.โ
She looked at me, curious. โLike what?โ
โLike sadness. Or anger. Sometimes I yelled. Or I cried when I didnโt want to. But I didnโt know how to ask for help.โ
Lily was quiet. Then, softly, she said, โSometimes you yell like that too.โ
I nodded. โI know. And Iโm sorry, sweetie. I think Iโve made things harder for you.โ
That night, after she went to bed, I started writing down every time I got mad. Not just mad at herโmad at traffic, mad at work emails, mad at Dan for leaving his socks on the floor. I realized I was angry a lot. And I didnโt hide it well.
Then I started writing down every time Lily got upset. There were patterns. If I came home late from work, sheโd throw a fit. If I was distracted on my phone, sheโd act out. If I cried in the bathroom, sheโd bang on the door screaming.
She was reacting. She wasnโt just difficult. She was mirroring.
I started researching more on emotional mirroring in children. How they pick up on stress, how they absorb the tone of the house. I cried reading stories from other parentsโhow often theyโd blamed their kids before looking inward.
I found a new therapistโthis time for me. A woman named Vera who met with me weekly. I told her everything. How I loved my daughter but sometimes felt trapped. How I hated how I yelled but couldnโt seem to stop. How I sometimes imagined what life would be like if Lily were justโฆ easier.
And Vera didnโt judge. She just listened. And slowly, she helped me unpack years of anxiety, perfectionism, grief. Things I didnโt even know were connected. I had buried my feelings so deep, they came out sidewaysโthrough tone, sarcasm, impatience.
Meanwhile, Lilyโs behavior started to shift. Not overnight. She still had her moments. But they were different now. Shorter. Less venomous. She was drawing moreโpictures of โour houseโ with everyone smiling. She started sleeping with her bedroom door open.
One evening, a month later, she came into the kitchen while I was chopping carrots and said, โMommy, I like when you smile.โ
I knelt down. โI like when you smile too.โ
Then, the twist.
Two months into my therapy, we got a call from the school. Lily had hit another student. Again. The other child was okay, just a bruise. But the principal wanted a meeting.
We went the next day. Her teacher, Ms. Ellis, sat with us in the small conference room.
โShe told me something thatโฆ well, I feel like you need to know,โ Ms. Ellis said. โAfter the incident, I asked her why she did it. She said, โBecause I saw him push her, and I wanted to stop him.โโ
โPush who?โ I asked.
โAnother little girl. A kindergartner. She saw a third grader shove her on the playground.โ
Dan and I looked at each other.
โShe told me she used to feel like that,โ Ms. Ellis continued. โLike people were mean, and no one helped. So she helped.โ
It hit me like a wave.
Lily hadnโt lashed out just to lash out. Sheโd felt something. She saw someone in pain and didnโt know how to respond gentlyโbut the intent came from a place of defense. Protection.
After we left the meeting, we sat in the car. Dan reached over and took my hand.
โSheโs not broken,โ he whispered. โSheโs justโฆ learning how to be in the world.โ
That night, I talked to Lily again. We made a deal. Whenever she felt like she wanted to scream or hit, sheโd draw it instead. And she did. Every time. Crayon scribbles of dragons and tornados and sad-faced suns. Sometimes sheโd hand them to me wordlessly, and Iโd hang them on the fridge like art.
Then one day, she brought me a drawing of two people holding hands under a big tree. One had yellow hair like hers. The other had a ponytail like mine. โThis is you,โ she said. โAnd me. Weโre not mad.โ
I cried. Right there on the floor, holding that picture.
The real change came when we decided to take a weekend trip. Just the two of us. A cheap little cabin upstate. No Wi-Fi, no screens. We went on hikes, picked flowers, and talked about clouds. At night, we made shadow puppets on the wall.
It was during one of those nights that she said, โMommy, do you like being my mom now?โ
It gutted me. Because I realizedโsheโd felt that I hadnโt. And I had never said it outright, but kids know. They feel it in how you talk, how you look at them, how quickly you sigh.
I hugged her and whispered, โIโve always liked being your mom. I just didnโt always know how to show it.โ
Since then, Iโve changed. Not just how I parent, but how I exist. Iโve slowed down. I listen more. I hug her longer. I let her speak, even if itโs messy and loud and not what I want to hear.
Dr. Harper was rightโshe couldnโt help us. But she started something. She forced me to look inward instead of always pointing outward. And in doing so, she saved not just Lily, but me too.
The words Lily whispered that day? They were born out of pain. But they became the seed of our healing.
Now, when she throws a tantrum, I donโt see a bad child. I see a child learning. And when I lose my temper, I donโt spiral into shameโI apologize, we repair, and we move on.
And maybe, just maybe, thatโs what she needed all alongโnot a perfect mom, but one who grows with her.
So, to anyone reading thisโif your child says something that scares you, donโt just fear it. Listen. Look deeper. Sometimes the ugliest words come from the deepest wounds. And sometimes, theyโre really just saying, โPlease see me.โ
If this touched you in any way, share it. You never know who needs to read it today. ๐




