“Locked In, Left for Dead, Still Chose to Rise”-mystic-episode-clawsout20
Feral But Sober brings you into the world of Mystic — a mother of five, the oldest of three siblings, and a woman who has survived more violence, loss, and betrayal than most people could imagine. Her story is not easy to hear, but it is powerful, necessary, and a testament to the strength it takes to keep choosing life when everything around you is trying to take it.
Mystic married young after moving to Colorado at 19. What looked like a fresh start quickly became a nightmare. Her first husband was violently abusive — locking her in cabinets and closets, starving her, feeding her meth, and beating her so severely she suffered a broken nose, eye socket, cauliflower ear, and multiple fractures. The day she tried to leave with her son, he attacked her again. Her little boy escaped and called for help, and that moment changed everything. Mystic soon learned she was pregnant, and with the support of her family, she finally got away. Their relationship dragged on in cycles until 2015, but by 2016 she was divorced and trying to rebuild.
But trauma doesn’t disappear just because the paperwork does. After losing her mother, Mystic spiraled into addiction — heroin, coke, LSD — while trying to hold together a second marriage that was also abusive. She worked three jobs, kept a home, and still felt completely alone. Addiction pushed her family away, and she let people into her life who did not have her safety in mind. One of them injected her with a mixture of heroin and rat poison, locked her in a bathroom, and left her to die. Her son once again saved her life by calling for help.
Her second husband used drugs with her oldest son. Mystic joined them. She lost control, lost her home, lost her job, and eventually lost her children to the state. Her family tried to intervene, but the damage and distrust ran deep. By July 21st, she had to say goodbye to her youngest boys as CPS took custody. She and her husband were homeless — sleeping under tarps, in trap houses, fighting each other, fighting withdrawal, fighting to survive. They divorced, he got sober, and she kept drifting.
In April of 2025, Mystic told her dad she wanted to quit. He couldn’t help. Her sister moved their dad and stepmom in with her but told Mystic she had to get clean first. So Mystic went to rehab. And then the unthinkable happened: her oldest son overdosed on methamphetamine. She left treatment, rode eight hours in a taxi, and learned the truth. She relapsed that night and wanted to die too.
But grief can break you open or break you down — and Mystic chose the first path. In May 2025, she flushed everything she had left and walked away from the life that was killing her. She moved states, lived with a church deacon when she had nowhere else to go, tried Mississippi, tried Oklahoma, and eventually found her way back to her family. She is rebuilding relationships, healing old wounds, and learning how to live without the substances that once numbed everything.
Today, Mystic is sober. She has a boyfriend who treats her with care. She is reconnecting with her children. She is learning how to breathe again. And she is telling her story — not for pity, not for shock value, but because someone out there needs to know that even after the worst kind of loss, you can still choose to live.
This episode is heavy, honest, and full of the kind of truth that changes people. Mystic’s story is a reminder that survival is messy, healing is not linear, and sometimes the bravest thing a person can do is stay alive long enough to become who they were meant to be.