
“The Midwife Who Couldn’t Stop Talking,” which expresses my experience with a highly dysregulated practitioner. The only “accountability” was that, after my complaint letter, the practice withdrew its efforts to bill me for this visit.
I keep talking about what happened to me because the lack of justice makes it impossible to “let it go,” as if that is even a thing. The forced FGM surgery didn’t just happen; it continues to resonate in my mind and body every time I feel the impact of what was done, which is countless times a day. Every time I try to move past it, the system reminds me I can’t: none of the doctors who harmed me are held accountable and are allowed to continue harming others, the institutions protecting them are silent, and the world at large doesn’t see the ongoing cost.
The failure of justice is the reason I create justice where I can, through my own expression, which carries its own undeniable power and transforms my experience into something real, seen, and felt.

“Confronting the Predatory Gynecologist,” which shows how it felt to calmly inform him that informed consent should have been a thing, and for him to puff up like an angry genie in reaction. There has been no institutional accountability, and no justice that I haven’t made with my watercolors, words, and wits.
The non-consensual surgery was years ago, and while it was by far the worst violation, I’ve had many healthcare practitioner attempts to invalidate. Very unfortunately, the most recent was with a midwife, the kind of practitioner I trusted with both of my pregnancies and births. The midwife’s inability to attune and meet me where I was caused me significant harm. As in too many prior encounters, responsibility is denied, and there is no attempt to make a repair. The midwife answered my email with excuses instead of an authentic apology. The director is silent. I’m left with no choice but to integrate this betrayal myself. My nervous system feels it, my body carries it, and I have to respond.
The process involves ongoing integration in small bits. Each begins when I notice the signals, the emotional and physical echoes, and I do something supportive with them. I write. I post on social. I sketch. I begin to paint a watercolor. I illustrate my lived experience so people can understand it, because otherwise it is invisible and impossible to explain.
Our nervous systems are built for connection. They need compassionate witnessing to integrate experience. When that witnessing isn’t available from the people who caused harm, or the systems that should protect us, the nervous system remains unsettled, frozen in a loop of stress, alertness, and planning. Expressing my experience through words and watercolors is how I give my own nervous system what it needs: acknowledgment, validation, and release. It’s how I repair a relational rupture with myself when relational repair from others isn’t possible.

“A Lion at My Neck,” which expresses how it felt when a Coast Guardsman sexually assaulted me after our vessel needed a tow. There has been no accountability, no justice.
Every sketch, watercolor, or blog post expresses what happened and what I need now. It is me giving form to the pain, anger, and betrayal. It’s me showing my experience to the world because otherwise it disappears into isolation. This is what it means to create accountability when no one else will: to be your own witness, to find your own compassion, and to offer your story so others can witness it, too.
Sharing my watercolors with my healthcare practitioners is especially powerful because it gives them access to the reality of my experience in a way words alone can’t. These images carry the emotional and physical impact of what I’ve lived through, and they appeal for acknowledgment where there is often avoidance or denial. When I show them my work, I’m not asking for permission or pity, but offering a direct, undeniable witness to my truth. It shifts the dynamic from one of passive reporting to active recognition, and in doing so, it creates a space where my nervous system can feel seen and validated, even within the healthcare system that most often fails to provide it.
I don’t have the justice I want from the institutions that failed me. But I do have the ability to respond to what my body, nervous system, and mind need. That’s how I survive, keep being me despite the pressure to shut up and go away, and that, in its own way, is a kind of justice, too.



