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Elizabeth Packard: The Woman They Called Insane Until She Changed the Law

Elizabeth Packard was not simply a “wronged wife.” She was a mother. A thinker. A religious dissenter. A wife under the rule of a husband who belie

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Elizabeth Packard was not simply a “wronged wife.”

She was a mother. A thinker. A religious dissenter. A wife under the rule of a husband who believed disagreement was disobedience. She was a woman living under laws that treated a married woman’s mind as something her husband could explain better than she could. And when they tried to make her disappear, she did something dangerous. She remembered herself.

She was a woman who survived legal kidnapping, religious punishment, psychiatric labeling, institutional confinement, and the public burden of being called insane by men who wanted obedience mistaken for health. After three years in the Illinois Hospital for the Insane, she was released with a label meant to bury her: “incurably insane.”

But Elizabeth Packard did not disappear under that word. She studied the system that swallowed her. She documented what she saw. She fought for married women, people confined in institutions, and anyone whose liberty could be taken because power found them inconvenient.


 


I Know This Road
I am not “being mean” because I know how to disagree out loud.

I am not “hard to love” because I refuse to hand over my mind with my manners.

I am not “divisive” because I can see the difference between peace and being managed.

Some roads women recognize before we ever learn the names.

Some of us know it from history.

Some of us know it from a great-grandmother who got quiet when certain men entered the room.

Some of us know it from an auntie they called “crazy” because she told the truth too early.

Some of us know it from church basements, courthouse hallways, family secrets, hospital rooms, kitchens where the women cleaned up the mess and were still blamed for noticing the fire.

 

So when I disagree in public, I am not just arguing.

I am protecting the doorway of my own mind.

When I lose friends, I am not losing myself.

When I stand alone, I am not abandoned by truth.

When people say, “Why can’t you just let it go?” I remember how many women were buried under that sentence.

When people say, “You’re making too much of this,” I remember that confinement often begins with someone deciding a woman’s perception is inconvenient.

 

So no, I will not apologize for my discernment.

I will not shrink my knowing down to a size that comforts people who benefit from my silence.

I will not pretend disagreement is cruelty.

I will not confuse social approval with safety.


Additional Reading

Sometimes Integrity Gets You Removed: And That Doesn’t Mean You Were Wrong – Survivor Affirmations

Elizabeth Packard | National Women’s History Museum

disability history museum–Modern Persecution, or Married Woman’s Liabilities

When Someone Else’s Path Becomes a Rulebook for All Women – WESurviveAbuse

The Forgotten Black Woman Inventor Who Changed the Lives of Women and People with Disabilities – Survivor Affirmations

🌍 The Sacred Right to Take Up Space – Survivor Affirmations

Survivor Affirmations: Actually, I CAN and I WILL (podcast short) – Survivor Affirmations

Even in Silence. Even in Fear. I Was Resisting. – Survivor Affirmations

Being Silenced Doesn’t Mean I Was Wrong – Survivor Affirmations

Hajia Gambo Sawaba: She Did Not Wait to Be Allowed – Survivor Affirmations

🌺 Marielle Franco: She Spoke. Even When It Was Dangerous to Speak. – Survivor Affirmations

Affirming Television Moments: When the Women Tore Down the Wall – Survivor Affirmations

Denise Ho: 🌿Once You See It, You Can’t Go Back – Survivor Affirmations

Mama I Love You: Women Are Amazing, Unique, and Special! – Survivor Affirmations

Their Words Do Not Name Me. Survival Does. – Survivor Affirmations

Keep on Movin: Quotes on Perseverance from Black Women – Survivor Affirmations