
CASE DISMISSED
I don’t talk about this night often. Not because I’m ashamed—at least not anymore—but because it represents a version of me that no longer exists. Still, it’s part of my story, and pretending it didn’t happen would be dishonest. So here it is, in my own words.
At the time, I was living under narcissistic abuse. The kind that doesn’t always leave visible bruises, but slowly erodes your sense of safety, your voice, and your trust in your own reality. I was exhausted, worn down, and constantly navigating chaos that I didn’t create.
That night, the narcissist in my life is the one who told me to call the police—after people in our home refused to leave. I was trying to protect my children and to stand up for another child who was being mistreated. I did what I believed was right. I asked for help.
When the police arrived, things escalated quickly. I was emotional, yes—but I was also standing my ground in my own home. I was warned to be quiet. And I said the words that still echo in my memory: I will not be quiet in my own house.
That was enough.
I was arrested.
When the flashing lights showed up, my body went cold before my mind caught up. There’s a specific kind of silence that happens in moments like that—where the world keeps moving, but you feel separated from it, like you’re watching yourself from above. I remember thinking, How did I get here? Not dramatically. Just honestly.
The narcissist did not come get me from jail.
I had to call my dad.
That detail matters more than people realize.
Jail is not like the movies. It’s boring, uncomfortable, humiliating, and sobering all at once. Time moves strangely there—both too fast and impossibly slow. But instead of breaking down, something unexpected happened.
I started talking to the other women.
And what I learned shook me.
Most of them should not have been there.
One woman was battered and bruised—clearly hurt—arrested for defending herself from her narcissistic, abusive husband. Another was there over an unpaid ticket for a dog that had no tags… three years earlier. The dog had since died. She had no money to pay the fine, and that was enough to put her in a cell.
There was injustice everywhere I looked. Quiet, normalized injustice.
And in that moment, I knew none of us were criminals. We were survivors. Women caught in systems that punish the vulnerable while protecting the wrong people.
So instead of crying, I sang.
I sang praise songs to the Lord—softly at first, then with more confidence. One by one, the tension in that cell eased. Conversations slowed. Breathing softened. Eventually, we all fell asleep.
They thought I was a yoga instructor.
I smiled at that.
Because what I really was… was grounded. Anchored. Held by something bigger than fluorescent lights and concrete walls. I believe we all found peace that night. And I believe God’s justice was present in that cell long before the legal system caught up.
Because the case was dismissed.
I fought it in court. And the truth stood.
I don’t romanticize that experience. I don’t wear it like a badge of honor. But I refuse to carry shame for something that was rooted in abuse, protection, and truth.
That night didn’t break me.
It woke me up.
It showed me where my boundaries had been violated for too long. Where my voice had been suppressed. Where standing up—for myself, for children, for truth—came at a cost I was finally willing to pay.
If you’re reading this and you’ve had a moment you wish you could erase—an arrest, a confrontation, a decision made under pressure—I want you to hear this clearly: you are not your lowest point. You are not disqualified from a good life. You are not beyond repair.
Sometimes the pause you didn’t choose becomes the pause that saves you.
This is not a confession.
It’s a release.
And it’s proof that growth doesn’t always come wrapped in pretty packaging. Sometimes it comes in injustice, courage, worship, and the quiet knowing that God sees everything—even in a jail cell.
-Kristi



