Ivanka Trump says she “felt the bullet” from hundreds of miles away. One moment, she was watching TV with her children. The next, she was staring at blood on her father’s face, believing she might be witnessing his final seconds on earth. Yet in the middle of the terror, she felt a strange, unshakable calm. She was certain it wasn’t his tim… Continues…
Ivanka’s account of that day in July is less about politics and more about a daughter watching her worst fear almost come true. In Bedminster with two of her children, she saw the chaos erupt on television before Trump had even stood back up. Her first instinct was not to analyze, but to protect—turning her kids away from the screen as she tried to process what she was seeing. Horror, fear, and maternal instinct crashed together in a single, disorienting moment.
Yet beneath the panic, she describes an almost irrational certainty that her father would survive. That sense of “it’s not his time” has since shaped how she chooses to live with the memory. Rather than dwelling on trauma or rage, she speaks of recommitting to love, connection, and perspective. Trump’s survival, she says, is a blessing she refuses to darken with bitterness—even toward the shooter. In a world quick to spiral into anger, Ivanka’s response is to guard her children, honor her fear, and still consciously choose gratitude over hate.





