Grace in the Breakdown
For the Motherless Mother Becoming a Single One
There’s a kind of quiet that settles over a woman when she realizes—
she has no one left to call.
No mother to ask,
“How do I do this alone?”
No partner to say,
“Don’t worry, I’ve got the car.”
Just… her.
And the kids.
And the schedule.
And the to-do list that doesn’t flinch when your heart breaks.
This is where I found myself.
Somewhere between the decision to leave—or the devastation of being left—
in the soft, aching center of single motherhood.
And on the day I tried to travel,
life greeted me with a flat tire.
Not just a slow leak.
Not just a temporary setback.
A full stop.
On the side of the road.
With no idea what to do next.
And for a second, I stared at the car like it was a metaphor for me.
Worn down.
Out of air.
Not built to fix itself.
There was no one to call who would drop everything to come rescue me.
No mom to gently tease me for never learning how to change a tire.
No partner pulling over with a quiet solution and a reassuring glance.
Just me.
And the decision to leave the car behind.
Because some days, surviving doesn’t mean fixing everything.
It means knowing when to walk away
and when to come back later with help, or not at all.
I came home tired—emotionally and otherwise.
And there, waiting for me, were my children.
Bright-eyed.
Buzzing with energy.
Completely unaware that I’d cried in a gas station bathroom an hour earlier.
They had picked out their outfits for the first day of school.
They wanted me to watch their fashion show.
“Look, Mama!”
“Do I look grown-up in this one?”
“Should I wear the sparkly shoes or the white ones?”
And I smiled.
Big.
Bright.
Believable.
Because that’s what we do, isn’t it?
We put on grace like a fresh coat of lipstick.
We clap and twirl and cheer—
even when our insides feel like shattered glass.
We hold space for their joy while quietly managing our own despair.
And still—there’s beauty here.
There’s something stunning about the way we keep showing up.
Not perfectly.
Not without tears.
But fully.
We are the mothers who braid hair with trembling hands.
Who give warm smiles with hollow hearts.
Who whisper, “You’ve got this,” to our kids
even when we’re not sure we do.
We are the ones who figure it out.
Who leave the flat tire on the side of the road
and come home in time for bedtime stories.
We are the ones who remember what it felt like to be mothered,
and try to give our children the best version of that memory.
Even when no one is mothering us.
If you’re in this season too—
flat-tired and fashion-showing,
motherless and making it—
I see you.
You’re not weak for crying.
You’re not failing because you couldn’t fix the car.
You’re not broken because your smile felt forced.
You are doing something heroic,
even if no one is clapping.
And I’m clapping for you now.
- Survivor, Casie Ellison
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