When my biological father Jaxon Thomson and mother Rosie Thomson brought me home, I only had a backpack and my therapy dog with me. Just because their adopted daughter Sophie Thomson said she wanted to eat dog meat barbecue on Christmas, they actually killed my dog. I flipped the table and smashed the Thomson mansion into chaos. Rosie said disappointedly, "Don't you know Sophie suffers from depression? She was finally happy for once, and you ruined it all over a dog." Jaxon looked at me coldly: "You're just mentally ill. I really regret bringing you back." Sophie's eyes were red-rimmed as she pushed the barbecue in front of me: "Dad, Mom, don't blame Olivia. Olivia, since you love this dog, I'll give it back to you." I let out a cold laugh. What they didn't know was that Sophie's depression was fake, but my mental illness was real.
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In Fake daughter ate my soothing dog, Olivia—a traumatized biological daughter—returns to the Thomson household carrying only her backpack and her therapy dog, a lifeline for her real, diagnosed mental illness. Her adoptive sister Sophie, however, weaponizes performative vulnerability: claiming depression to justify demanding dog meat barbecue on Christmas. The Thomsons’ swift, chilling compliance—killing Olivia’s dog without hesitation—exposes their profound emotional abandonment and moral collapse.
The narrative masterfully inverts expectations: Sophie’s “depression” is revealed as manipulative fiction, while Olivia’s documented mental health struggles are dismissed as convenient labels. When Rosie laments, “Don’t you know Sophie suffers from depression?” and Jaxon coldly declares, “You’re just mentally ill,” the series critiques how privilege distorts empathy—and how real trauma is silenced when it conflicts with a more socially palatable narrative. Olivia’s icy laugh isn’t defiance alone—it’s the quiet detonation of years of erasure.
Olivia’s table-flip and mansion-smashing aren’t mere rage—they’re symbolic ruptures of a toxic hierarchy. Sophie’s final gesture—pushing the barbecue forward with faux remorse—only deepens the horror: the family has normalized cruelty under the guise of care. Fake daughter ate my soothing dog doesn’t offer easy catharsis; it demands accountability. Ready to witness the unraveling—and what comes after? Download the FreeDrama App now.
Fake daughter ate my soothing dog is not just a short drama, it’s like a mirror reflecting the struggles and growth of the characters…
This short drama Fake daughter ate my soothing dog is a double impact on visuals and emotions…
Each episode of Fake daughter ate my soothing dog is like a little puzzle…
Limited-time free event: This free viewing activity is jointly launched by ReelShort and FreeDrama. Click the button to download the APP and watch all episodes of Fake daughter ate my soothing dog for free.