On June 6, 2017, media veteran Michelle Hord started her day like any other, driving to Manhattan to facilitate a workshop in Tribeca. Eager to see her 7-year-old daughter, Gabrielle, that afternoon after school, she anticipated about how she would tell her second-grader that she and her father were finalizing their divorce. But that conversation would never come.
After receiving a hysterical call from her daughter’s nanny, she rushed to their Westchester county home and faced an unimaginable tragedy. Gabrielle was found murdered in her home at the hands of her father.
The next few months would be a testament to the strength of Hord’s faith. She somehow endured a two-year murder trial, which ended in a guilty verdict for her ex-husband, who is currently service a life sentence in prison.
In her new memoir released in March, “The Other Side of Yet: Finding Light in the Midst of Darkness.” Hord chronicles her path from utter despair to building resilience, reconciliation and allowing herself to let joy back into her life.
She recently spoke to Know Your Value contributor and MSNBC host Yasmin Vossoughian, about coming back from tragedy, honoring her daughter’s legacy and offering guidance for others who are suffering unimaginable loss.
‘Gabrielle gets my son off the buddy bench’
Hord described Gabrielle as a curious, loving girl whose feet never touched the ground.
“It’s like she was skipping and walking on bubbles when she walked, very effervescent,” Hord told Vossoughian. “Very early on she had a great sense of humor, loved the arts, loved learning and always had that natural curiosity … as someone that grew up in journalism I loved to see in her.”
But after she passed, Hord realized it was Gabrielle’s immense heart and sense of inclusion that made an indelible mark on others. “After I lost her, I was getting notes from parents and classmates that said things like, ‘Gabrielle gets my son off the buddy bench,’ and ‘Gabrielle would always make sure my daughter didn’t have to sit alone in the cafeteria’,” she recalled. “So, to know that at the tender age of seven she was taking in some of the messages that I had hoped and was already doing those sorts of things just makes me incredibly proud.”
An ‘out of body experience’
When Vossoughian asked Hord about the moment she realized her daughter passed away at the hands of her ex-husband, the man Hord once loved, she hesitated for a moment.
“I think, to call it an out of body experience is probably the best way to describe it,” she said. “Having grown up in the business, I talk in the book about the fact that I started at ‘America’s Most Wanted.’”
Hord’s first journalism job was producing missing children’s stories for the program, including reporting at crime scenes and consoling distraught families.
“It was the incredulousness of it, frankly, given the fact that there was nothing to indicate in terms of threats or violence in the home, that this could have been in the realm of possibility,” she said. “The sheer shock was just shattering.”
Hord recalled her initial reaction to her nanny’s frantic phone call. “I remember going and finding a little quiet space in this conference center and just getting on my knees and saying ‘God, I don’t know what I’m walking into, but please just give me the strength to do to endure it.”
In the two years that followed, it would be that calling to faith – and her previous experience with loss – that carried her through the trial process and gave her the strength to deliver a searing victim impact statement in front of her ex-husband and the courtroom.
“My grandfather was a Baptist minister, I’ve grown up in the Baptist church,” she told Vossoughian. “To me faith is like an insurance policy – when you need to cash it in you realize how strong it is. My mom died when I was in my early 20s, so those early encounters with grief … let me know that my faith could sustain me.”









