My Unexpected Arrest Fucked With My Shame for Years
Life had dealt me some shitty cards and then the coup de grâce showed its sorry ass

My annus horribilis
Rushing to get my six-and-a-half-year-old daughter ready, I grabbed our coats; we were meeting up with a friend and her thirteen-year-old twins: a school holiday cinema date.
As I closed the front door, I glanced over at my car, hesitating for a few short moments:
Should I drive?
Still, the idea of having a glass of wine with lunch popped into my mind; life had been unbearable.
***
Unbearable didn’t even cut it. Life had pushed us to the edge for well over three years after my then partner made the step to go into business with his affluent friend.
At the time, Tommy (not his real name) had had a well-paid job, which afforded us to own a quirky 18th-century cottage, travel, and provide our daughter with a private education.
For all of that, Tommy was miserable as hell, working for a boss who lacked integrity and thus showed zero respect for Tommy; the stress would often put his back out. And to be honest, Tommy had always vocalised his dreams about running a small bistro or café one day.
Together, Tommy and his friend took on the task of searching for a property to rent, eventually unearthing a four-storey derelict building that his friend had (ambitiously), decided to buy!
Deep inside, I was nervous as fuck. It wasn’t so much about Tommy leaving his job, but the heavy enormity of the venture; yet I did respect his why and told myself it would be okay.
Still, my anxiety was perpetually simmering, and my intuition was digging me out during many sleepless nights. I pushed these threatening thoughts down and called them out as nerves.
Well before the restaurant was even up and running, Tommy’s friend became grieved about the whole thing, and with a bang, he wanted out, regardless that it was he who decided on a more difficult path: the huge task of turning a derelict building into a functional bar and restaurant. Money was bleeding out like a ruptured artery.
The friendship cascaded into a bitter feud. Living with the intense pressure of this impediment over our heads pushed Tommy into dark moods. How would we be able to continue with the hefty outgoings, minus his friend’s financial support? We were too far in —to pull out.
I studied two days a week and was a full-on mum to our then-four-year-old daughter. I also worked four twilight shifts per week at an out-of-town store. I never got home until well after midnight.
Looking back, it wasn’t a surprise that I developed an autoimmune skin disease. I assumed this amount of stress was normal when starting up a business.
Finally, after almost eighteen months in, we opened on Christmas Day 2005. We organised two lunch sittings: one for his guests, and one for ours. Still, the feud escalated, as Tommy's friend completely backed out.
Tommy and I were committed to our beautiful venue becoming successful, yet regrettably, the location was just a little too far off the beaten track, and so, too obscure to establish a regular clientele. We held a handful of successful parties in our funky bar. They brought in good revenue, yet not enough bookings came up to help keep us afloat. We now had the responsibility of having to pay for everything, including the staff wages. Tommy and I never received a penny throughout the entire business venture.
We managed to hold everything together by a thread until February 2007; out of money and options, we solemnly closed the restaurant doors. The feud intensified; legal letters and legal battles became a daily anxiety-induced nightmare.
Gutted, we waved goodbye to our beautiful cottage and found an affordable doer upper. The extreme stress weakened already corroded roots, as the emotional storms of the business tore through the pleasures of what had once been a balanced life. And if tourniquets morph into human beings, then this is what transpired, as I attached myself to the carpenter we had hired to help with our house renovations.
Looking back, I can see it was a distraction — my emotional immaturity reaching out for a human life raft. His rough charm made me feel seen and heard, whereas Tommy and I hadn’t connected deeply or with passion, and to be honest, cracks had started to form before the business venture.
So many of these cracks stemmed from my own coping mechanisms, and I hadn’t helped with the way I drank to avoid the complexity of our relationship, as well as the damaged part of myself: a wounded child — even though I was in my thirties. I struggled with connection as much as my then partner.
Blindly starting the fling with the carpenter gave me the bravado to tell Tommy it was over; I couldn’t do it anymore! I naively assumed Tommy would happily leave our family home, but he wasn’t going anywhere for love nor money; it was his home after all.
The atmosphere was toxic, as we bickered and shouted. During one tense episode, Tommy twisted my arm back, and as I freed myself from his grip, I jumped up, snatching the phone and dialled 999 — only to slam the receiver back down. I hadn’t wanted to involve the police, but I had felt powerless.
Not more than ten minutes later, there was a sharp rap at the door. Cautiously pulling it open, my mouth dropped; there stood a police officer wearing a stern face. She spoke without any emotion:
“There are four police cars parked further down the road!”
I gulped as I attempted to compute how or why she was standing at my front door, and what she was telling me. She took a few steps into the hall. Seeing Tommy sitting in the corner, she asked:
“Is there anyone upstairs?”
I stuttered, “Yes, my daughter, she’s asleep!”
With that, she bolted up the stairs. A few minutes later, she came back down, gave us some curt advice, and left.
Anxiety flooded my veins and filled my gut. My mother used to call the police on my father (who would be knocking punches through the walls or with my brothers), and so there I stood, feeling like some sort of a criminal. I had always prided myself on being a good citizen.
It couldn’t get any worse than this — could it?
***
I’ll take the train.
We quickly found our friends and walked around the outdoor shopping centre. It was a drab, grey February day. As we moved on to the cinema, I gave out a gasp when I realised my purse was missing from my bag. We took the steps back from where we had come, yet it was nowhere to be found!
My friend pipes up: “You never know, someone may have handed it in at the police station?”
The five of us turned back towards the train station, where the police station sat just behind. As we stepped into the small reception area, I spoke with the Desk Sergeant, and he was more than helpful, disappearing into the back room to have a look through the lost property.
He stepped back out holding my purse. I couldn’t believe my luck! I was overjoyed and thankful to the honest person who had made the effort to hand it in to the police.
We skipped the cinema and poured into a Pizza Hut; the kids ordered their food, but with little appetite, I just sipped through a few small glasses of wine throughout the time we sat there.
As we stepped outside into the cold dark evening, I hadn't felt particularly tipsy or drunk. We reached the train station and said our goodbyes, as my friend and her twins walked across the bridge to their platform, I turned to buy our tickets at the self-service booth.
I lost my footing and fell back. A couple standing not far from my daughter and me watched this happen. Concerned for my daughter, they reported me to the two British Transport Police, patrolling the train station.
20th February 2008: coined my Black Wednesday, a memory painfully branded into my heart.
When I think about that night, anxiety surges through my body with great intensity for my daughter. Although I am now more forgiving of myself, even as I write this memoir seventeen years later, I still grapple with the:
What ifs and Why didn’t I drive? thoughts.
As both officers approached me, the madness of the past three years and my current hell, fuelled my adrenaline; I fought back, physically, and verbally. I wasn't me anymore, and it was as if the whole event and situation shut off, and my repressed anger erupted. The officers had to work extra hard to handcuff me and carry me off the platform, throwing me into the back of a police van. I must have looked deranged. I had flipped, and the alcohol in my system was the switch.
I don’t know why to this day—why I just didn't simply converse with them as I normally would of. It just happened so fast.
I recall the small crowd on the platform that gathered around to watch the commotion; I am grateful that we didn’t have smartphones back then; being mentioned in two articles in the local newspapers felt sickening enough. Some residents where I lived looked at me with a certain look in their eyes. As I read the words, I remember struggling to stand, as my legs went limp, as the shame flooded over me.
The emotional backlog of three years of chronic stress: our business, our home, our relationship, the ugly separation, and being drugged and abused by our friends, just a few short months before; fuelled by the glasses of wine I had drunk on an empty stomach.
I continued to yell and curse as they threw me into a cell, at the station I had visited only a few hours earlier, to ask about my purse. Had that been a divine warning? The juxtaposition of those two visits is unsettling.
For all of this, and gratefully, over the years my daughter has always reassured me how well she was looked after, that she enjoyed riding in the unmarked car, and eating sweets until her father came to collect her — and that she wasn’t at all scared.
I impulsively lashed out at the two Custody Officers, not having any idea of what I was doing or the implications of these ‘assaults’. You only have to touch the police for them to call it an assault. Yet I acknowledge why they can’t have any grey areas.
I hardly slept during the night on the hard concrete floor — scared and clueless as to how it escalated to where I was now. In the morning, I was back to me again, calm, and full of remorse.
I was spoken to as the lowest of the low by all the police staff, as they pushed me around, barking at me that I was going to prison! Their faces were pumping with hate as they spat at me like I was a nasty criminal. And for that moment in time, that is what I was. I had lashed out at them, and that is a massive no-no.
Both the insides of my arms were covered with bruising, from being cuffed and pushed around. They didn’t have an ounce of care, and when I showed the one officer who had his face right up to mine:
“Look what you’ve done to me!”
He snarled: “So!” as his face contorted into sarcastic indifference.
I had never experienced being despised with that much intensity, up until that point in my life.
They didn’t know that I was a genuine and good person, a loving mum, and a therapist who cared about her clients. They didn’t know the hell I had suffered or the chronic amount of stress and unhappiness from the business and my relationship.
They didn’t know my whole life had been one car crash after another. They didn’t know that my unhealthy coping mechanisms were from trying to drown out the pain I felt from my father’s shame for me and telling his new family I didn’t exist.
They didn’t know my mother had messed with my mind by incessantly criticising me growing up and manipulating me with the fear of hell.
They didn’t know I was raped at sixteen and never reported it because of my co-dependency or that I was used and abused by other older men too.
They didn’t know the real me.
I didn’t know the real me.
They were used to dealing with drunken and violent behaviour, dishonesty, and people who don’t give a shit — day in and day out. And to them, regardless of my mitigating circumstances, I was just one of those criminals that night.
But I was a human, making human mistakes.
I had made it worse by hitting out and being offensive. Additionally, I hadn’t been aware of the law in which you are prohibited from being under the influence of alcohol with any dependents under the age of seven.
All those families I witnessed for years in pubs and restaurants. Did they know that too? I don't believe they do.
Had I been drunk? I hadn’t felt it earlier at the restaurant. Regrettably, I hadn’t had any self-awareness back then.
The following day, when I was released on bail, I penned genuine apology letters to each of the four officers involved; I don’t know if they read my words or cared.
I understand now how I should have paid for a solicitor to help me speak up, someone who understood the law. Since then, I have learnt about policing statistics. It’s an unfair justice system, and I had no previous convictions; yet I put my hands up to reacting badly.
I was vetted to see if I was a fit mother and had to attend weekly probation meetings for six months. In the waiting room, I would sit amongst young male offenders, who covered their faces with hoodies, staring down at their cheap white trainers. I felt branded a criminal deep down into my bones. Would my massage and beauty clients want to come to me if they knew?
Looking back, I am sorry that Tommy was desperate and in pain himself. I would do anything to take it back. It was a traumatic and painful period, on top of all the loss. I thought I would lose my daughter over one mistake, albeit a thoughtless and selfish mistake.
It took a few years, nonetheless, Tommy and I managed to put our differences aside and co-parent our daughter from two different homes. She was, and is, always in the centre of our world, and we came together as much as we could for her.
As painful as the last twenty years have been, and how much it's changed me, it has enabled me to exorcise my demons. I understand now that it was my wounded inner child who had been taking over the steering wheel of my life — because of her unmet pain. The hardest part is forgiving myself, without even contemplating the need for others’ approval. Life isn’t black and white; the layers are nuanced and complex.
A few months before I had dialled 999, I had to fill out some official documents, in which I was asked if I had a criminal record. I remember laughing to myself, thinking: ‘As if — like that would ever happen!’
Now I know that life can turn around in an instant.
© Chantal Weiss 2025. All Rights Reserved
About the Creator
Chantal Christie Weiss
I write memoirs, essays, and poetry.
My self-published poetry book: In Search of My Soul. Available via Amazon, along with writing journals.
Tip link: https://www.paypal.me/drweissy
Chantal, Spiritual Badass
England, UK



Comments (15)
Thank you for sharing a very personal and well-written story. What you went through is incredibly sad, and I hope you find the road to healing. Congratulations on a well-deserved Top Story.
Oh my goodness. The hell that you went through. Gosh, I'm so sorry 🥺 Sending you lots of love and hugs ❤️ It must have been tough to write this and I truly admire your strength
Your story is deep, insightful and riveting. Thank you for allowing us in to walk the memory with you. So much love to you!
The story is inspiring
That was such a powerful story, and quite brave to share. Congrats on the TS. It's very well deserved
This situation sounds like a total nightmare. I can only imagine how stressed you must've been. Starting a business is always a risk, but when it involves a friend and a huge investment, it gets even more complicated. I've had my fair share of business setbacks. Once, I was part of a project that seemed great on paper, but in reality, it was a disaster. We underestimated the costs and ran into all sorts of problems. It was a really tough time, and I learned a lot about the importance of careful planning and risk assessment. In this case, it seems like Tommy's friend's sudden change of heart really threw everything off. Did they have a written agreement? That might've helped sort things out. And how did Tommy handle the stress? It sounds like it took a toll on him emotionally. I wonder if there was any way to salvage the situation. Maybe they could've found a new investor or restructured the business plan. It's a shame when something like this ruins a friendship and causes so much financial stress. What do you think they could've done differently?
This is so incredibly vulnerable and powerful, Chantal. You have so much bravery for sharing such an emotional and personal piece. Your writing really captures the desperation of living through difficult times. Congrats on this very well-deserved Top Story! 🎉
Very raw and beautifully written
Intense and beautifully reflective. The layers of trauma being slowly peeled back. Thank you for sharing.
This piece is raw, powerful, and deeply human. It's more than a memoir — it's a courageous act of vulnerability. The way you’ve laid bare the tangled emotions, the weight of trauma, and the messiness of real life is profoundly moving. Your storytelling is compelling and emotionally honest, pulling readers into your world with vivid imagery and sharp, poignant reflection. There’s a rhythm to your writing — from the initial rush of an ordinary day unraveling into memory, to the emotional crescendo of Black Wednesday — that makes the piece feel both personal and universal. So many people carry hidden stories of pain, shame, survival, and resilience, and your voice speaks to them. The moments where you reflect on your own accountability without losing compassion for yourself are especially powerful. That balance — of truth-telling without self-erasure — gives this piece its heart. A beautiful, brave, and unforgettable read. Thank you for sharing something so intimate. It takes guts to write like this — and grace.
Quite awsm
Thank you for sharing something so raw and deeply human. It’s a heartbreaking, powerful reminder of how easily life can unravel—and how strength often looks like survival, not perfection. Congratulations on your Top Story!
This was so intense and so beautifully worded. I really feel for you and honestly, I don't think anyone should be treated this way for making a small, very human slip up. It's horrifying how everyone disregards everything that people are going through when one small mistake is made. This was such an incredible story. Congratulations on top story too! This really deserved it.
I feel like I've watched an entire TV mini series! This was so vivid and real, full of mistakes and hard-earned lessons, all the biggest events in one person's life - all in one story. Excellently written, congrats on the well deserved TS 🙏🏻😁
Thank you so much #Vocal. You've made my day!