You thought I would cease and desist.
Bend like frostbitten boughs,
splinter under the weight of you,
let you press your name into what was never yours.
But I am not winter-weakened wood.
I do not break that easily.
When I built The Arch Foundation, it was because something inside me knew—grief untransformed would rot me alive.
I have had a lifetime of companionship with caregiving’s shapeshifting grief—twisting through childhood, marriage, motherhood.
When my father’s stroke felled him at thirty, it turned our family into a diseased knot, every limb and branch slowly blackening.
Later, my own body betrayed me—a decade of illness, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome reshaping my marriage, my parenting, my friendships.
Grief seeped into every pore.
And then, my son’s accident.
The sterile hospital rooms.
The recalibration of what life would look like now.
Watching Connor ask me if I could fix his legs—and knowing I couldn’t.
I realized how invisible caregivers were.
How unseen.
How unsupported.
I didn’t set out to build something national.
I set out to build something real.
A space for caregivers carrying their crumbling worlds on their backs.
A place where survival wasn’t the end goal—healing was.
I created the thing I couldn't find:
time away, in nature.
Not talking about caregiving—but laughing again.
Breathing again.
Reconnecting to something larger than our grief.
No one believed it would work.
Except a few.
Except me.
I knew—if I was drowning, if my husband had drowned caring for me while I was sick—I wasn’t alone.
So I built it.
Where there was a gap, I planted something wild.
We didn’t fit into neat boxes.
We didn’t follow the scripts.
And somehow, against every odd, The Arch grew.
When the opportunity came to merge with a larger organization, I believed I was saying yes to expansion.
Protection.
Sustainability.
Growth.
I negotiated carefully:
My program would remain true to its vision.
We would mold to caregivers’ realities, not contort them to fit polished programs.
Caregivers would run it—because authenticity matters.
They agreed.
And for a while, it looked like it could work.
My team—twelve fierce women, molded by the hard edges of caregiving—came with me.
Together, we built something beautiful inside their walls.
The most volunteer hours.
The highest survey scores.
The deepest impact.
We won awards.
We gained national recognition.
We grew in ways statistics couldn’t measure—in the way people softened when they realized they weren’t alone.
It was working.
Until it wasn’t.
When COVID hit, the ground shifted.
People were laid off.
Funding streams dried up.
Everything blurred.
I stayed—not because I was protected, but because I had brought my own funding, my own fire.
When they asked me to fold three jobs into one, I said yes—if my boundaries were honored.
Compensation.
Respect.
Clarity.
I wrote them down.
I spoke them aloud.
They nodded.
Their mouths were full of smoke.
The mountain campus wasn’t ready.
We were told it would be—running water, showers, dignity.
But when we arrived:
twenty caregivers.
Two portapotties.
No showers.
No working kitchen.
“It’s just the caregiver program,” someone whispered behind our backs.
Supposed to be a place of rest.
Instead, it became another battlefield.
My team—caregivers themselves, scarred spines, weary bones—didn’t just facilitate healing retreats.
They cooked.
They cleaned.
They hauled coolers and scrubbed pans in freezing water.
They stitched something tender from broken things.
And then, the emergency.
A caregiver collapsed.
My team moved without speaking—muscle memory of past traumas guiding them.
Stabilize.
Load vans.
Keep breathing in, keep breathing out.
She lived.
And when the vans returned to campus, when we sat around paper plates under a bruised sky, nobody spoke for a long time.
One volunteer smoothed the tablecloth over and over, like she could erase the edges of the day.
Another just stared out at the trees, her fork untouched.
We had done what we came to do:
Saved a life.
Held a crumbling space together with our bare hands.
But the celebration never came.
Instead, I was summoned—not to be thanked, but to be reprimanded.
"You didn’t follow protocol," they said.
As if protocol would have kept her heart beating.
As if we hadn’t done exactly what survival demanded.
I sat in the meeting, my hands folded tight against my stomach, willing them not to tremble.
Their words buzzed overhead like flies.
The list of our supposed failures was longer than the list of what we had survived.
The air tasted like antiseptic and arrogance.
It crawled down my throat, sour and sharp.
I realized then:
These women who claimed to champion empowerment had no interest in real strength.
They were architects of control.
Caretakers of comfort zones—not people.
And suddenly, the landscape tilted.
I wasn’t leading a program anymore.
I was surviving inside a system that saw my work, my team, my body, as an inconvenience to manage.
The heartbreak didn’t come all at once.
It seeped slow—like smoke under a door you thought was sealed.
Until one day, you realize you’re choking.
I stayed longer than I should have.
I reread the agreements late at night, words curling into smoke in my hands.
Still, I showed up every morning, voice steady, pretending I hadn’t heard the laughter behind closed doors.
Loyalty, I called it.
Denial, I named it later.
The decision didn’t come with fanfare.
No slammed doors.
No raised voices.
It came in the quiet—after a stretch of nights when my joints screamed louder than my heart.
"I'm done," I said.
Not with a scream.
With certainty.
"I'll finish the season. I'll hold my commitments. But after that, I leave with my name, my program, and my story intact."
They scrambled.
Tried to dictate the terms of my exit.
But I stayed steady.
I chose leaving.
I chose myself.
Author’s Note
What follows is not a summary of this story, but its echo, a poem.
These lines came to me in the aftermath — when the words I couldn't say aloud finally asked to be shaped.
It is the language of the body after the leaving.
The truth beneath the telling.
*Happy to say we built it thrice and are still holding caregiver and women’s retreats.
Winter Weakened Wood
You thought I would cease and desist. Bend like frostbitten boughs, splinter under the weight of you, let you press your name into what was never yours. But I am not winter-weakened wood. I do not break that easily. I built something with steady hands, with the weight of years pressed into stone, with echoes that did not need your permission to ring. I built it once. I built it again. And the second time, it grew wilder, without your hands twisting the roots. But you— you were ivy. Slipping through the cracks, threading yourself around my ribs, pulling tight, whispering care that smelled of decay. And I— I unraveled. Did you learn anything in the wreckage? I did. I see where the fire burned too hot in my hands, where I let heat speak louder than wisdom, where I mistook the flames for the work itself. Still, you pulled at the seams, thinking my undoing would be your triumph. But power built on possession never lasts. And once I left, the others came. One by one, whispering their own scars, their own stories of vines that choked. But I— I burned the ivy. Tore it from my skin. Left it curling in the embers. And now, I walk unbound. The wind does not ask where I have been. The trees do not lean to hear my name. And I— I do not turn to see what still smolders. © Heather Zoccali 2025
Simply stunning
Wow, Heather! Speechless and full of goosebumps! Thank you for addressing the sour feeling of being reprimanded for saving a life.