I left my two-year-old daughter with my husband for three days, and when I came home, I was horrified by what my husband had done with our daughter

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I left my two-year-old daughter with my husband for three days, and when I got home, I was horrified by what my husband had done to our daughter 😱😢

One day, my superior summoned me and told me I had to go on a mission that weekend.

The first question that came to mind was: who would my daughter stay with? My mother had to go to the doctor. My mother-in-law lived in another city. I had no choice but to leave my daughter with my husband.

My husband, although he had always been a loving and caring father, had never been alone with the child for more than a few hours. But he immediately agreed.

— “She’s my daughter too.”

I agreed; I had no other choice.

Friday morning passed calmly. I kissed my little girl goodbye and explained to my husband again when and how to feed her and when to put her to bed. He smiled nervously, hugged me, and simply said,

“Everything will be fine, don’t worry!”

But I spent those three days in anguish. I called dozens of times, but my husband didn’t answer. I tried to reassure myself that he was a good man and a good father, so everything was fine.

When I got home, I was horrified to see what my husband had done with our daughter in my absence. 😢😢 Continued in the first comment. 👇👇

The apartment was empty. No toys, no laughter—only silence. On the table was a note:

“The monster is at your mother’s house, and I can’t live like this anymore. My lawyer will contact you.” »

With trembling hands, I called my mother. She immediately told me what had happened. The first day, my husband was still coping. He fed her, played with her, even joked.

But then his nerves broke. He stopped cooking, left her alone, didn’t react when she cried. And on the third day, he took the child, took her to my mother’s, and disappeared.

I sat there, unable to understand—how? How could he treat his own child like this?

Today, we are divorced. My daughter doesn’t speak to her father. But maybe that’s not necessary—she has me and my family.

Moms, what do you think? Why do men sometimes give up so quickly, as if parenthood is a burden only for women?

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