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min read

Why I Failed to Save Her

There are trolls on the internet who said Emily’s death was my fault. That I was too consumed by my career to pay attention to my daughter. Those people have no idea.

An incredible gift and incredibly gifted. I always knew this about my daughter Emily from the moment she was born. She was a beautiful baby, and a difficult one. Colicky, fussy, sensitive to everything the world put against her skin. But when she smiled at me, all of my frustration dissolved, like the last bit of snow on a sidewalk giving way to an unusually warm spring day.

I knew she was special, not in the way every parent believes their child is special, but in the way you know when you are watching gifts bubble to the surface one by one. Her beauty was obvious from the start. Her empathy, her creativity, her intellect took time to discover as she grew, like wildflowers you don’t notice until suddenly the whole field is full of them.

When she needed slippers for pajama day at school, I drove to Walmart after my evening newscast to buy them. I stayed up all night helping her finish projects. That was simply what love looked like then, uncomplicated, purposeful, enough.

I used to always tell her: “With so many gifts comes great responsibility to the world.” Maybe that was too much pressure to place on such a sensitive soul.

It is difficult to say exactly why a dark cloud moved over my daughter’s eyes at fourteen. One day, those eyes were clear and bright, the color shifting with her moods, green to gray to blue, and the next, a shadow had settled in them that I could not explain and could not chase away.

I would learn later that in her attempt to seek the attention of boys at her school, she had been sexually abused. She admitted to me that she had gone into the bathroom tucked under the stairs with different boys at their request. I could not wrap my mind around it. I was more focused on what she had done than on what had been done to her. I was trying to understand her behavior, but I was judging it at the same time. And she felt that.

As teenage boys do when it comes to sexual exploits, they talked. Soon, Emily’s reputation in that Catholic school community was damaged in a way she would never be able to repair. She was carrying not only her own shame but the judgment of an entire community, at the very age she needed understanding most.

I was the person she loved most, and I failed her in that moment. I remember her clinging to me after her confession, clinging the way she had as a baby, needing the same thing she had always needed: to be held without condition. And I was so tangled in my own hurt and confusion that I may have seemed cold. That was the door that closed between us. Neither of us could ever fully recover from it.

I took her to counselors. I tried hard to repair whatever had broken inside her. But what was broken could not be fixed, not with the tools I had, not the way I was looking at it then.

Years later, after her death, I saw those bathroom incidents for what they truly were: sexual abuse by teenage boys who took advantage of a girl who wanted only attention and love, attention and love she had never reliably received from her own father. At the time, I saw only a failure of morality; a failure of my parenting. I did not yet see the wound beneath the behavior.

Emily in February of her freshman year in high school

The years that followed were consumed by trying to turn a barreling freight train around. I took classes on parenting oppositional and defiant children. I grounded her. I punished her. I got angry. I stayed calm. I cried, more than I had ever cried in my life, more than I knew was possible. None of it worked.

When I caught her smoking marijuana in my house and she attacked her stepfather and me, I called the police, hoping that fear might do what love could not. It didn’t work either. It was the biggest failure of my life, those years. They dominated everything.

I look back now and feel sorry for my other children, Abby and Adam, who became like angels, partly because when one sibling is in crisis, no one else wants to draw attention to themselves. I remember them crawling into bed with me, holding me while I cried too loudly, on the night Emily packed her bags and moved in with her father. He saw in the arrangement an easy way to reduce his child support payments and fought for fifty percent custody with a legal document that portrayed me as the worst mother imaginable. I was unprepared for the war launched against me by my child and her father at the same time.

But I never stopped loving her fiercely. And that love, eventually, became my only strategy. After high school, after the disappearances, after everything, I stopped leading with rules and started leading with lunch. I invited her over. I took her shopping. I showed up. She came when she could, and when she was too sick to come, I told myself there was still time.

There are trolls on the internet who said Emily’s death was my fault. That I was too consumed by my career to pay attention to my daughter. Those people have no idea. My daughter had all of me, to the detriment of myself, my other children, and my husband. I say this not in my own defense, but because shame is one of the things that kills. It keeps parents from asking for help, keeps families silent, keeps the door closed on the very conversations that might save a life.

In the end, I think about the kind of person Emily was before the darkness found her. She felt everything, other people’s pain, a stranger’s sadness, an animal in distress. She brought me breakfast in bed. She painted me pictures. She spent hours making just the right gift, writing just the right words in a card, because making the people she loved feel seen was the thing that made her happiest. Emily and I loved to hike together at a state park near our home. In nature, we felt most like ourselves. She was a wildflower, vivid and singular, not made for a world that handles sensitive things so carelessly.

Men, from her father, to the boys who abused her, to the boyfriend who hit her, to the one who gave her heroin, were more powerful than my love. I failed to save my daughter in a world where cruelty finds the softest targets first.

We never stood a chance. I had the cards stacked against me, and I made mistakes I could not undo. Both of those things are true. I carry them both.

What remains is this: I still go to that trail in May, when the wildflowers are coming up along the path and the trees are filling back in and the sky is the particular blue it gets in spring. And I feel her there, in all of it. In every living thing, turning its face toward the sun. That is what Emily did through her art: she sought the light, always. I believe she found it. And in May, on that trail, so do I.

Faith, Hope & Courage,

Angela

Angela Kennecke holding photo of daughter Emily

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Angela Kennecke

Angela Kennecke is an Emmy-winning journalist and grieving mother who lost her 21-year-old daughter, Emily, to fentanyl poisoning on May 16, 2018. She founded Emily’s Hope to turn her pain into purpose—working to end the overdose epidemic by breaking the stigma, advocating for evidence-based treatment, and promoting prevention through education.

24 responses to “Why I Failed to Save Her”

  1. Jackie Beigh Avatar
    Jackie Beigh

    In this day my heart breaks for you and your family. A beautiful soul gone much too soon.
    While I can’t relate to grieving a loss you have suffered I can relate to the battle of fighting the powerful forces of dark in the world that try to steel your child. I can relate to the frustration, hurt, confusion, fear, anger, regret, and grief of parenting you described in your piece. When a dreamed of perfect world is not so perfect, why as mothers do we absorb the blame. Thank you for your vulnerability, courage and sharing the love for your daughter with the world. Prayers for peace and comfort to you on this day and all days forward. Know you are an amazing mama.

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      Thank you for this, and for understanding that grief doesn’t require an identical loss to be real. The fear, the confusion, the blame we absorb as mothers; you named it so perfectly. Why do we do that to ourselves? I think because we love so completely that anything less than perfect feels like our fault.
      I’m grateful you’re still fighting for your child. Keep going. 💜

  2. Lisa Utech Avatar
    Lisa Utech

    Oh my. I am bawling right now. I have lost two children. But both of mine were from Cancer. I see a lot of the same things in my son. His father and I divorced when he was one. He suffered from depression and I had a feeling he was drinking a lot when he was a teenager and even later. I don’t think he ever felt accepted or loved by his father. Never enough. Shortly after his 32 Birthday he was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Jerrad and I spent months in Rochester Mn. The leukemia was so aggressive. In January of 2024 he had a bone marrow Transplant in Rochester. We were there for seaways l three straight months. His dad was never there. He never showed up once. My husband ( his stepfather was always there. Always supportive. Sadly Jerrad passed away July 9 2024. I cry every day. Thinking if only
    I had loved him more. We were so very close. Jerrad had a heart of gold. Always worried about me. He kept fighting this ugly Cancer to the end. He told me “mom I’m so sorry you have to go through this twice. He told the chaplain that he was worried about his mom. And he told her he was tired. He had just turned 35 on 6-7-2024. We used to think that 6-7-89 was such a neat Birthday. Now he celebrates every 6789 in Heaven. My daughter passed in 1990 at the age of four. They were the only children I had. My heart has a huge hole that will never heal.

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      I am so deeply sorry. Jerrad sounds like exactly the kind of soul who made everyone around him feel loved. He was worrying about you even in his final days, apologizing for what you were going through. That is not a child who doubted your love. That is a child who felt it completely.
      The “if only” is the cruelest part of grief. I carry it too. But I want you to hear this: you were there. Every day in Rochester. Every hard day until the end. His father’s absence only makes your presence more profound.
      Two children. What a weight to carry. And yet here you are, still showing up, still opening your heart. Jerrad and your daughter are lucky to have a mother who loves them so fiercely and always will. 💜

  3. Terry Avatar
    Terry

    My heart hurt reading this post. Hurt for Emily, for you, for her siblings. The guilt of a mom is a shape shifter. You might reach an understanding with yourself on one perceived failure but another will manifest. You did the best you could and while you might feel it wasn’t enough, your heart never wavered with a mother’s love. I pray you give yourself grace.

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      “The guilt of a mom is a shape shifter.” I am writing that down. You named something so many mothers carry but can never quite put into words.
      I wrote this piece not from a place of guilt, but from a place of clarity, the kind that only comes with time and grief and a lot of hard looking. I made mistakes. I’ve made peace with them. I share them because I believe another mother might see her own child more clearly because of it.
      Thank you for reading, and for your kind heart. 💜

  4. Atlanta Avatar
    Atlanta

    This shows your immense love and your immense pain. The shadow and the light of your daughter and yourself are revealed in this struggle. You were joined together painting a picture of life as it is, not as we wish it. Thank you for the beautiful words coming from your heart. From your’s and your daughter’s tragedy comes the help for others. ❤️🤗

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      “The shadow and the light.” What a beautiful way to hold all of it, not just the loss, but the wholeness of who she was and who we were together. You’ve given me something in those words.
      Thank you for reading with such a generous and perceptive heart. 💜

  5. Mary Richards Avatar
    Mary Richards

    What raw and deeply personal emotions you share. I cannot imagine your loss, guilt or gut wrenching sorrow. Although I haven’t had a child affected as your Emily, I know the situation from the other side. My step/adopted daughter was recently convicted and sentenced to 20 years for selling these drugs that destroy our children. In the process of her arrest and conviction she lost custody of her two boys. They have been shuffled among foster homes and are now in the Children’s Home. One boy has been on Prozac for over a year. In our zeal to get him off of it we have been ostracized by the staff, social workers and CASA. These poor souls will NEVER recover from their loss.

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      The ripple of this crisis reaches so far, into courtrooms, into foster homes, into the hearts of little boys who didn’t choose any of this. What you’re describing is one of the most painful layers of addiction that rarely gets talked about: the children left behind, and the people who love them fighting to be heard.
      Please don’t stop advocating for those boys. The fact that you’re pushing back, even when you’re being pushed out, tells me they have someone in their corner who won’t quit. That matters more than you know.
      Thank you for reading, and for carrying so much with such quiet strength. 💜

  6. Lori Korthals Avatar
    Lori Korthals

    This. Is……. Beautiful. Raw. Art. And a million other words. Thank you momma for opening your heart in a way that may give voice to heal, help, and hold others. Art through words. Emily through words. She lives through both. While we CAN do hard things, we continue to need the encouragement from others to do them. May the messages here be that encouragement to you. Keep creating art for, with, and through Emily.

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      “She lives through both.” I will carry that with me for a long time.
      Thank you for seeing this piece as art. That means everything to me, because Emily was an artist. To honor her through words the way she honored the world through paint feels like the closest thing to keeping her here.
      Your encouragement is exactly what I needed today. 💜

  7. Pat Roos Avatar

    Angela, such a beautiful remembrance, such an opening up of your heart and your soul. Beautifully written. It breaks my heart that it’s often only through loss that we figure out what we should have done, and learned what kind of person we should have been. If only, if only….

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      “If only” may be the two most painful words in the English language. And yet they are also, I think, the beginning of wisdom. The problem is the price we pay to get there.
      Thank you for reading with such an open heart. It means the world to me today. 💜

  8. Dana Frost Avatar
    Dana Frost

    Angela STOP BLAMING YOURSELF.Being a parent doesn’t come with a book on how ❤️🙏do it!And you what you have done with the ashes her dieing has brought forth though you. I am a man who at the age of 13 was raped by another man I just couldn’t tell my parents.And Emily would be so proud of Emily’s Hope

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      Thank you for this, and for trusting me with something so personal and painful. What you carried alone at 13 took enormous courage to survive, and I imagine it has given you a deep understanding of why children sometimes can’t tell the people they love most what has happened to them. That means something to me today.
      I want to gently clarify something, because I don’t want to be misunderstood. I don’t blame myself for Emily’s death. I wrote this piece from a place of hard-won clarity, not guilt. I looked back honestly at a specific moment where I could have responded differently, and I named it, because I believe another parent might recognize themselves in it and choose differently. That is very different from carrying blame.
      I have made peace with my mistakes. What I haven’t made peace with is losing her. Those are two very different things.
      Thank you for believing she would be proud. I believe that too. 💜

  9. Rosie Murphy Avatar
    Rosie Murphy

    God Bless You today. Happy Heavenly Birthday to your Emily.
    I am looking so forward to the coming year. Your Adam has stolen our hearts.
    Much love,
    Rosie

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      Thank you so much, Rosie! Adam is lucky to have your family in his life!

  10. Steve Avatar
    Steve

    Angela, my heart aches for you and your daughter. I believe she was (and is) all the wonderful things you described. I hope nothing ever takes the good of her life, the good memories away. Those are real too.
    You did what you thought was right.
    We are not born knowing what to do.
    We do our best, out of the love within our hearts, but first time parents/any parents don’t *know* what to do, say, be. You did everything you could think of, you loved in every way you knew, and gave in every way you knew. I believe she knows that and maybe even knew it then.
    You did not cause the harm that started a snowball. You did not have the benefit then of knowing what you know now.
    I hope that in these walks snd memories of your beloved daughter, there is fresh peace, fresh joy, fresh wonderment at who she was. Your mother/daughter love is forever.
    I hope you can enjoy fully the wonderful-ness of the wonderful times. I hope they can be jewels that make your days beautiful , bring a smile to your face, and warmth to your heart.
    Blessings, joy, hope to you.

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      “Jewels that make your days beautiful.” What a gift of words you’ve given me.
      And yes, the good memories are real. The hikes. The breakfast in bed she brought me. The way she spent hours getting a card just right because making the people she loved feel seen was what made her happiest. Those are mine to keep, and nothing takes them.
      I want to gently say what I’ve shared with others today: I don’t carry blame for Emily’s death. I looked back honestly at a moment I could have handled differently, and I named it, because I believe it might help another parent see more clearly. But I have made peace with my mistakes. What I carry is not guilt. It is love with nowhere to go.

  11. Stacy Torneten Avatar
    Stacy Torneten

    Angela, I’ve followed your stories for several years, and although my journey hasn’t been the same, I connected deeply with your pain. When my incredible son turned to drugs, it shattered me. Addiction changed the course of his life and ours, and the guilt and shame were emotions I didn’t know how to carry.

    Al‑Anon became a place where I finally felt understood. Being surrounded by people who had walked similar paths helped me heal, and it allowed me to support others who were drowning in the same fear and grief.

    I’m so sorry for the loss and heartbreak you’ve endured. Your courage in sharing your story is powerful. You remind people that compassion matters — that instead of judging, we can simply reach out and say, “How can I help?”

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      Thank you for following along all these years, and for sharing this today.
      What you said about Al-Anon, finding a room full of people who finally understood, is such an important reminder that none of us were meant to carry this alone. The guilt and shame you described are so common among parents of children in addiction, and yet so many suffer through them in silence. You found a way through, and now you’re helping others find it too. That matters enormously.
      Judgment closes doors. Compassion opens them.
      Thank you for the kindness you’ve shown me and for the work you quietly do for others.

  12. Nancy Avatar
    Nancy

    I can only imagine the pain of losing your daughter. My heart breaks for you. I had two sons who struggled with addiction, and while they are doing well now, I know the fear, worry, and turmoil that addiction brings to a family. I know that your loss is far greater, and I am so sorry you had to endure that heartbreak. Please know that you are in my thoughts and prayers.

    1. Angela Kennecke Avatar
      Angela Kennecke

      Two sons in the grip of addiction, and you held on. The fear and turmoil you carried during those years is real, and the fact that they are doing well today is not luck. It is the result of a parent who refused to give up.
      Thank you for the prayers and for taking a moment to reach out.💜

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