Being caught in the middle doesn’t feel like conflict — it feels like captivity.
It feels like being stuck in a snare with no way to move without hurting someone.
Like a mouse trap waiting to snap shut.
Like you’re locked in a raccoon cage, unsure if speaking the truth will free you… or cost you everything.
People talk about “taking sides” like it’s simple.
But when you’re caught in the middle of family, trauma, loyalty, and truth, nothing about it is simple.
It’s one of the loneliest places a person can stand.
What You’re Really Caught Between
Sometimes “caught in the middle” means choosing between two opinions.
But sometimes — like in my life — it means standing between your own child who was harmed and your own child who did the harming.
Between the daughter who still carries wounds and the son whose actions caused them.
Between the victim in your home and the perpetrator who shares your blood.
Between your mother — who continues contact with the perpetrator — and your daughter, the victim.
Between your loyalty as a mother and your integrity as a protector.
Between who you used to be and who you’re becoming.
Between the pressure to keep quiet and the truth that refuses to stay silent anymore.
It’s not two sides.
It is layers of emotional conflict, guilt, fear, and responsibility colliding inside your chest.
Why This Position Freezes You
People say, “Just say what you feel,” but they don’t see what comes with it.
When you’re in the middle, speaking the truth feels dangerous.
You fear hurting someone you love.
You fear being misunderstood.
You fear being shunned.
You fear being blamed for protecting the wrong person — when you know exactly who needs protection.
You fear your mother’s reaction.
You fear the silence, the withdrawal, the guilt she might use.
You fear your childhood patterns pulling you back into old roles.
You fear becoming the target for finally telling the truth.
That fear freezes you.
Not because you’re weak, but because you’ve carried too many people’s emotions for too long.
You’re Allowed to Step Out of the Middle
This is the truth many of us need spoken out loud:
You are not betraying anyone by protecting the victim.
You are not abandoning someone by refusing to enable harmful choices.
You are not wrong for saying, “Enough.”
You are not required to cushion your truth to keep someone else comfortable.
You can love someone and still say, “This crosses a line for me.”
You can grieve what happened without sacrificing your integrity.
You are allowed to choose clarity over chaos.
You are allowed to choose protection over appeasement.
You are allowed to choose truth over silence.
You are allowed — fully allowed — to walk out of the middle.
How to Un-Freeze When You’re Caught in the Middle
Here are the steps that help you move from paralysis to clarity:
1. Name What’s Actually Happening
Write it plainly.
Do not soften it for someone else’s comfort.
2. Ask What Aligns With Your Values
What decision reflects the kind of mother, woman, friend, or human you want to be?
3. Decide Who Truly Needs Protection
Protect the vulnerable one.
Protect the honest one.
Protect the one who did not choose this.
4. Set One Clear, Simple Boundary
Not a debate.
Not a speech.
A boundary.
“This is not okay with me.”
“I won’t participate in this.”
“I love you, but I cannot be involved if you continue this.”
5. Speak With Clarity and Compassion
Firm does not mean unkind.
Compassion does not mean surrender.
6. Allow People to React However They React
They may:
– Shame you
– Guilt you
– Pull away
– Play victim
– Get angry
– Give the silent treatment
Their reaction belongs to them.
It is not proof you did something wrong.
It is evidence that you set a boundary they didn’t like.
7. Anchor Yourself After the Conversation
Your body may shake.
Your stomach may twist.
Old fears may roar.
That is normal.
Here are anchoring practices:
• Breathe: 4 seconds in, 6–8 out.
• Hand on chest: “I am safe. I told the truth.”
• Move your body: walk, stretch, shake out your hands.
• Ground yourself:
5 things you see
4 things you can touch
3 things you hear
2 things you smell
1 thing you taste
• Write what triggered you.
• Remind yourself: “A trembling body is a brave body.”
• Talk to someone who truly understands the situation.
Anchoring doesn’t erase fear — it prevents fear from dragging you back into silence.
Taking a Stand Doesn’t Make You Divisive
Taking a stand does not divide a family.
Harm divides families.
Silence divides families.
Minimizing what happened divides families.
Standing for what’s right is clarity, not conflict.
Protecting a victim is integrity.
Refusing to stand in the middle is courage.
A Soft, Steady Closing
There comes a moment when staying in the middle becomes impossible.
Not because you stopped loving people.
Not because you’re choosing sides out of anger.
But because the truth finally whispers:
“You don’t belong in the snare anymore.”
Stepping out isn’t selfish — it’s sacred.
It’s the moment you choose protection over silence, healing over guilt, and courage over captivity.
It’s the moment you finally allow yourself to stand somewhere solid —
where your truth has room to breathe.









