They were wrong.
Sydney P. · Manchester, New Hampshire · 2026
I am not a lawyer. I don't have a degree in social work. I don't have a nonprofit behind me or a team of advocates making calls on my behalf.
What I have is my children. And a system that decided — without following its own rules — that they belonged somewhere else.
My name is Sydney. I go by MizVicious online — and if you've found this page, there's a good chance your story sounds something like mine.
"I didn't come here to complain. I came here because I figured out how to fight — and I'm not keeping that to myself."
The Moment Everything Changed
There is a moment every parent in this situation knows. The moment when you realize that what is happening to your family is not a mistake, not a miscommunication, not something that will work itself out if you just cooperate a little harder or explain yourself one more time.
That moment, for me, was when I started looking at what was actually supposed to happen — legally, procedurally, by the book — and comparing it to what actually did happen. The missed hearings. The denied visitation that a court had already ordered. The drug test result that had a documented medical explanation that was ignored. The caseworker moving forward as if my rights were a suggestion rather than a mandate.
That's not a system making honest mistakes. That's a system betting that you won't know the difference.
"They count on parents being too overwhelmed, too afraid, or too beaten down to read the statutes. I read them."
Who I Am — And Why That Matters
I'll be honest with you — because that's the only way I know how to do this.
I have not had a perfect life. I've made mistakes. I have a past that includes time incarcerated, and I'm not here to pretend otherwise or bury it in footnotes. What I will tell you is that none of that — none of it — is a legal basis for what has been done to my family. And if you're reading this because something similar has happened to you, I want you to hear that clearly: your past does not disqualify you from your rights. Your children do not stop being your children because a caseworker decides they don't like your history.
I work in home health care. I show up every day for other people's family members — people who are vulnerable, who need someone to actually pay attention and actually care. I know what it looks like when someone is genuinely trying, and I know what it looks like when a system is failing the people it's supposed to protect.
I have been a community builder, a brand ambassador, an advocate, a researcher, and a writer. I spent over a year studying a complex, stigmatized community and learning how to write about it with accuracy, empathy, and depth. I know how to learn hard things. I know how to explain them to people who are coming to them for the first time — scared and overwhelmed.
That's exactly what brought me here.
What I Found When I Started Digging
When my children were removed, I did what most parents do at first — I tried to work with the system. I tried to follow every instruction, meet every requirement, show up to every appointment. I operated in good faith.
And then I started doing my own research.
What I found was a gap between what state agencies are required to do under federal and state law and what they actually do when no one is watching closely enough. I found documented due process violations. I found court-ordered visitation being denied without consequence. I found a reunification process that existed on paper but nowhere else.
I found that I was not alone. Not even close.
Parents across New Hampshire — across the country — are navigating the same maze with no map. They are showing up to hearings without understanding what's happening. They are signing documents they don't fully understand. They are being told what the system wants them to hear, not what the law actually says.
"I built my case from scratch, with no legal background and everything on the line. If I can do it — I can help you do it too."
Why I Built This
I am not a victim. I refuse to operate from that place, even when the circumstances would justify it.
I am a mother who is fighting. Every single day. And I am winning ground — not because the system made it easy, but because I learned how it actually works and I stopped letting that knowledge stay inside my own head.
This platform exists because every parent who comes after me deserves to not have to start from zero. You deserve to know what your rights are before a hearing, not after. You deserve resources written by someone who has lived this, not just studied it from a distance. You deserve a community of people who understand what it feels like to have your family used as leverage by the very agency that was supposed to keep them safe.
And you deserve to know that it is possible to fight back — methodically, strategically, and with documentation that forces the system to confront its own failures.
"You don't have to be a lawyer to understand your rights. You just have to have someone willing to break it down — and refuse to stop until you do."
What You'll Find Here
This is not a space for despair. It's a space for strategy.
You'll find plain-language breakdowns of the laws and procedures that agencies are required to follow — and how to document it when they don't.
You'll find real stories — mine and others' — because isolation is one of the most effective tools this system uses, and community is one of the most powerful tools we have.
You'll find practical resources — guides, templates, checklists, and step-by-step breakdowns that you can actually use, not just read and feel vaguely informed by.
And you'll find a community of parents who are not waiting to be rescued. We are building the knowledge base, the support network, and the track record that this fight requires — together.
My case is still active. My fight is not over. I am sharing all of this in real time — not from the other side of a victory, but from the middle of the battle — because that's where you probably are too. And that's exactly where this kind of resource matters most.
They counted on me not knowing how to fight back.
Every resource I create, every parent I reach, every piece of documentation I help someone build — that's my answer.
With love and zero apologies,
Sydney — MizVicious
Manchester, New Hampshire
Nothing here constitutes legal advice. This content is based on lived experience, independent research, and publicly available statutes and case law. Always consult a qualified attorney for guidance specific to your case.
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