Society of Women Who Love Shoes "Healing One Sole at a time"

Society of Women Who Love Shoes "Healing One Sole at a time" SWWLS is a registered 501c3 nonprofit charity. We help individuals with money, shoes, clothing, education, and more. We also help 10 shelters in the area.
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For the DFW Area
https://www.facebook.com/SWWLS.Dallas/ Society of Women Who LOVE Shoes and Fashion is a networking group while helping families of abuse. Entrance fee is $20.00 and New or Gently used shoes to be donated to community shelters. We have contests: Sexy shoe, Highest heel, and Most Unique shoe. PRIZES!!! **Men are welcome but wear a Tie so you can judge the Shoe contests. If you wo

uld like to Spotlight your business please donate a gift to be given to one of the Shoe contest winners. We also are collecting Raffle items. All proceeds benefit families of abuse. Contact [email protected] . WE are "Healing One Sole at a time" by helping familes of abuse.

03/23/2026
12/06/2025

As a little boy, he was taught that women were “evil,” that violence at home was normal, and he grew up in a world of trauma most kids could never imagine. 💔 But this kid from the Midwest broke free from the strict “corn belt” rules he was raised under… and became one of the best-selling artists in music history. His name and story are in the comments 👇🏻🥹

12/06/2025

It is getting very cold outside. If you have extra blankets or jackets please hand out to the homeless or donate to shelters for domestic violence victoms.
Thanks and stay warm!

10/08/2025

Good read someone shared with me.

I entered this world already carrying loss. My mother died the very day I was born. I never knew her face, never heard her voice. And my father… well, he made his choice early on. He chose another woman over me. There were no birthday calls, no letters, no visits. Just silence.

When I was seven, though, he appeared as if he had remembered I existed. I can still see the day in my mind. His hand was rough as it wrapped around mine, and there was this brief moment where I thought, Maybe I finally get to have a dad. He led me up to a stranger’s house, a small place with peeling paint on the shutters. He knelt down, smiled at me in a way I wanted so badly to believe, and said:

“Go on inside, buddy. I’ll be right back. Just going to get some food for you. Ten minutes.”

Ten minutes. I clung to those words like they were a promise carved in stone. I stepped through the doorway, sat down on the edge of the couch, and waited. Ten minutes turned into an hour. An hour turned into night. My father never came back.

The woman whose house it was? She wasn’t my family. Not by blood. She was his wife—my stepmother. She had every reason, every right, to pick up the phone and call the police, or hand me over to social services. I was not her responsibility.

But she didn’t.

Instead, she brought me a blanket. She made me a plate of food. And then, quietly, without ceremony, she chose me.

From that night forward, she raised me as her own. She was the one who sat with me when I had nightmares, the one who taught me how to ride a bike, the one who showed up to school plays and clapped louder than anyone else. She stitched together all the broken pieces a little boy shouldn’t have had in the first place, and she did it with nothing more than steady love.

I think back now, as a grown man in my forties, and realize something important: she didn’t have to. She could have stepped back, said it wasn’t her place, let the system take over. But instead she leaned in. She gave me what I needed most—not money, not toys, not even answers about why my father abandoned me. She gave me belonging. She gave me the chance to grow up knowing what love feels like.

And I’ll tell you something—love given by choice has a different weight. It feels like a gift that never runs out, because it wasn’t owed. It was offered.

Now, every weekend, I make the drive to see her. I don’t miss a single one. It’s a rhythm in my life, a ritual that keeps me grounded in gratitude. She’s older now, her hair silvering, her steps slower. But when I see her walking toward me across the yard, I swear it feels just like it did when I was little and she’d call me in for dinner.

And there’s a photo—a simple one, nothing fancy. In it, she’s walking toward me, and I’m walking toward her. Two people who aren’t bound by blood, but by something even stronger: the decision to love.

It’s easy to think family is only about DNA, about last names, about who you look like in old photos. But that’s not always true. Sometimes, family is written in choice. Sometimes, the person who shows up for you—day after day, year after year—is the one who defines what family really means.

That woman saved me. She gave me the life my father couldn’t, or wouldn’t. She taught me that love is not limited to where you come from—it’s about who chooses to stay.

So when people ask me about my mother, I say this: I lost one the day I was born. But God gave me another when I was seven. And though she didn’t bring me into this world, she sure as hell made it worth living in.

This is love. Not by blood, but by choice. And in the end, that choice turned out to be the purest kind there is.

09/22/2025

My journey after domestic violence.
No more will I be ashamed of what I've been through in my life. When I was living in abuse and after I left I was ashamed of what i went through because I grew up in a very loving family. My parents were wonderful and never argued in front of us 6 kids, I never thought that I would be in abuse. I said no man would ever put his hands on me!
People say why this and why that when it comes to women that stay in domestic violence situations.
It is time to say…
Why did HE abuse her? Until you live it you have no idea. I would look in the mirror at a person I no longer knew. After giving birth to 4 children I was at 95 pounds, skin and bones from all the stress.
I thank God for family and all the people God brought into my life.
I am proud of me and how far I've come, this is just the tip of the iceberg of my story.
Please for any young girl ,woman ,or child that you know that is in a domestic violence situation, physical and or mental, please seek help before it's too late! Remember not everyone walks out some are carried out!
I'm here if you need help just reach out to my email [email protected]
Domestic violence =
Old
Young
Black
White
Gay
Straight
Men
Women
Rich
Poor

Address

Dallas, TX
75014

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Our Story

Society of Women Who LOVE Shoes is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that helps families of abuse. We hold your hand through the process, from calling shelters in the middle of the night looking for an empty bed to helping you with furniture, clothing and of course shoes.

The way we raise money is by having fun events. There is an entrance fee and we ask for New or Gently used shoes and other items to be donated to community shelters. We have contests: Sexy shoe, Highest heel, and Most Unique shoe. PRIZES!!! **Men are welcome but wear a Tie so you can judge the Shoe contests. If you would like to Spotlight your business please donate a gift to be given to one of the Shoe contest winners. We also are collecting Raffle items. All proceeds benefit families of abuse. Contact [email protected] .

We have chapters in the DFW and Houston areas. If you are interrested in opening a chapter in your area, please do contact us.

WE are "Healing One Sole at a time" by helping familes of abuse.