Inside Our Fight Against Abuse, Cover-Ups, And Silence
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What if a simple “I love you” could steady someone on their hardest day? We open our hearts and our home to talk about building safety from the ground up—personally funding 480 academy scholarships, writing a child’s-eye-view book for noisy and unsafe homes, and speaking plainly about the harm that thrives when institutions deny, delay, or deflect accountability. The conversation moves from raw statistics to real stories, then lands on the everyday work of repair: quiet rituals, clear boundaries, and love spoken out loud.
We take you inside the new Stucco Squad book, When Home Is Too Loud, where Tyler learns he’s not to blame and practices safe, concrete choices. It’s trauma-aware, shame-free, and designed for kids to read with caregivers—complete with activities and coloring pages that help slow down, name feelings, and plan ahead. The numbers behind domestic abuse are staggering, and we unpack why reported cases understate reality and how culture and power can frustrate the path to justice. We support good officers and service members; we refuse silence around cover-ups and coercion. That balance matters.
Between the heavy pages, we protect space for joy: old-school gestures like opening doors and handwritten notes, putting phones away at dinner, and raising a daughter to be confident without being conceited. Our dogs show up as healers, too—sensing spasms before they hit, anchoring the room with quiet presence. We talk country dreams, a drama-free home, and the grace of telling people you love them now, not later. If you care about survivor support, children’s mental health, domestic violence awareness, and practical family resilience, this conversation is for you.
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