June 3, 2026

In Late Autumn, I Dug a Grave for My Daughter in the Backyard, Questioning Why No One Came to Check on Us

The days following felt heavy, like trudging through a fog that refused to lift.

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At work, I moved through the motions, my hands performing tasks while my mind lingered elsewhere.

Each evening, I’d find myself staring out the window, watching the light fade into a dull gray.

My wife sat across from me at the dinner table, the silence between us growing deeper.

“How was your day?” she’d ask, the question more habit than curiosity.

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“Same as usual,” I’d reply, offering nothing more.

She didn’t push, and I was grateful for that.

Our conversations had become echoes of the past, each word carefully chosen to avoid the subject that loomed over us.

I knew she felt the same weight I did, the same helplessness in the face of decisions made by people who didn’t know us, who didn’t know her.

Our daughter had become a file, a case number among many others.

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