
(When the only babysitter you can afford is the person hurting you)
People often ask, “Why don’t they just leave?”
But the better question is:
How is anyone supposed to leave when the childcare system makes escape structurally impossible?
This post maps the trap:
You cannot leave an abusive partner without childcare, and you cannot get childcare without the stability you’re trying to escape.
🧩 The Core Mechanism: Childcare as a Gatekeeper to Freedom
Leaving an abusive marriage requires:
- Money
- Time
- Transportation
- Legal appointments
- Court dates
- Housing applications
- Medical care
- Safety planning
- Emotional bandwidth
Every single one of these requires childcare.
But childcare in Colorado costs:
- $1,542–$1,748/month for an infant
- 43.4% of a single parent’s income
- More than rent in many counties
And infant slots are so scarce that only 1 in 5 infants/toddlers have access to licensed care.
This means the first step in leaving — getting the child somewhere safe while you navigate the system — is already blocked.
🧨 The Abuser Becomes the Default Caregiver
When formal childcare is:
- Too expensive
- Waitlisted for years
- Unavailable in your county
- Inaccessible without a job
- Inaccessible without documentation
- Inaccessible without transportation
Parents are forced to rely on:
- The abusive partner
- The abusive partner’s family
- Their own unsafe family of origin
- Neighbors with no training
- Older children acting as caregivers
This is not a “choice.”
It is coercive dependence manufactured by policy.
🏚️ The Survival Loop
Here’s the loop that traps survivors:
- You need childcare to work.
- You need work to afford housing.
- You need housing to leave the abuser.
- You need childcare to attend court.
- You need court to secure custody.
- You need custody to protect your child.
- You need childcare to do any of this.
- There is no childcare.
The system collapses at Step 1.
And when you can’t complete the steps, the system blames you for “failing to protect your child.”
🔗 How Abusers Exploit the Childcare Gap
Abusers weaponize childcare scarcity because the system hands them the tools:
- “You can’t afford to leave.”
- “You’ll lose the kids.”
- “You can’t work without me.”
- “You’ll never find childcare.”
- “You’ll be homeless.”
- “You’ll lose your job.”
And in many cases, they’re not wrong — not because the survivor is incapable, but because the system is designed to collapse without a second adult.
This is especially true for:
- Trans parents
- Queer parents
- Parents with limited family support
- Parents with disabilities
- Parents of infants
- Parents in rural areas
The more marginalized the parent, the tighter the trap.
🧵 The Legal System Makes It Worse
To leave an abusive marriage, a parent must navigate:
- Protection orders
- Custody filings
- Mediation
- Hearings
- Evidence gathering
- Safety planning
- Shelter intake
- Housing applications
Every appointment requires childcare.
Every delay risks retaliation.
Every missed hearing is used against the survivor.
The system demands perfect compliance from people living in chaos.
🧠 The Psychological Toll
Survivors describe:
- Feeling “held hostage by logistics”
- Being unable to plan more than 24 hours ahead
- Losing jobs due to childcare breakdowns
- Being told by courts they “lack stability”
- Being told by teachers they “aren’t involved enough”
- Being told by caseworkers they “should have left sooner”
The system creates the instability and then punishes the survivor for it.
📌 Closing Line for the Post
You can’t leave someone when the state has made them your only babysitter.
We Believe You



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