When They Call You the Villain: A Conversation among Grandmothers
When They Call You the Villain: A Conversation Among Grandmothers
There are stories that begin with laughter, and there are stories that begin with truth. This one begins with both.
I didn’t write this book to defend the women who’ve been misunderstood. I wrote it to honor them.
The ones who were labeled cold because they stopped rescuing.
The ones who were called selfish because they finally rested.
The ones who were named “the villain” simply because they outgrew their silence.
This isn’t a book about bitterness. It’s about release.
It’s about the kind of wisdom that only comes after years of loving, losing, forgiving, and finally choosing peace.
Four grandmothers. Four stories. One table filled with tea, truth, and tenderness.
They sit together, not to judge or advise, but to reflect — to say the things they once swallowed to keep the peace.
Each chapter is a conversation — a moment where wisdom meets weariness, and grace meets growth.
By the end, you may find pieces of yourself in their stories.
You may remember a mother, a sister, or a version of you who gave too much trying to be loved enough.
You may even feel the peace that comes when you stop explaining your healing to those who never earned your pain.
This book is not about becoming someone new — it’s about coming home to who you’ve always been.
“They may call you the villain,
but peace will call you free. Welcome to the table. Let’s begin.