real life

“Ending my fairytale marriage was the best thing I ever did.”

By CRIS GLADLY for YourTango.com

We started dating two days after we graduated from high school.

We each had a handful of high school relationships before that. His were pretty innocent, mine were fairly traumatic. But still, it was high school, how serious could any of it have really been? Sexually, we both were each other’s first.

We went off to university together, got married immediately after, and moved to work at not-for-profit companies and save the world. We had a child, one that we both waited years to have and wanted wholeheartedly. Then, we imploded.

So many times over the years people said “awwwww” to our story. They found it so enchanting. To them, we were the quintessential fairytale romance; the scenario people push on their kids as the ideal marriage prototype. Boy meets girl. Boy and girl fall in love, get married, and only have sex with each other. They have a baby, are good citizens, and live “happily ever after” until they are rocking on the front verandah together in old age. How precious.

Only it doesn’t actually work out that way.

At least, it didn’t for us. By marrying the person we’d been dating since we were 18 years old, neither of us ever had a true sense of ourselves as an adult individual outside of our connection to each another. There was never a fully developed him. There was never a fully developed me. As a result, we always resisted the us.

The idea that someone can decide so young who and what is right for them, and then be expected to stand by that decision for the next 60 odd years doesn’t seem romantic, it seems wrong. And I’m annoyed by anyone who hears the story of our coupling and finds it enchanting. To those people who say that they are shocked that we’re splitting up, really? Because when you reflect on the absurd odds stacked against us, I, for one, am totally astounded we ever made it this far.

I knew it was going to end.

The day our daughter was born…

I remember distinctly the first time a voice in my head gave me an inkling that my marriage would soon be over: the night our daughter was born. The nurse came into the hospital room to help me use the bathroom for the first time after my arduous delivery.

As I staggered wearily back to the metal-framed bed, the sympathetic nurse said, “Oh, honey, you look so exhausted.” At which point he stirred from his nap on the in-room sofa bed and groaned, “I am!” The nurse and I exchanged an “Oye, men!” eye roll and she snapped back at him, “I was talking to the person who just squeezed a human being out of her body.” “Oh,” he replied, and went back to sleep.

As I settled back into the bed, a cold sinking feeling slipped into the pit of my stomach. I pulled the crisp hospital sheets across my legs and heard the voice in my head say loud and clear, “You will be doing this on your own.”

He had an affair (I bet you saw that coming).

A month after our daughter’s first birthday, he left. Walked out. Said he just couldn’t “do this” anymore (“this” being our unhappy marriage) and that he loved me, but had to go. He needed space to think. I asked if he was having an affair. He swore that he wasn’t. He was lying. Our therapist is the one who finally broke the news to me. She was acting super twitchy at my individual appointment and kept asking me if we had talked. When I told her we hadn’t, she started talking in circles and implied he might be involved with someone else.

My heart stopped cold. I knew instantly who it was. The “she’s just a friend” gal pal from work. Their friendship had been a ticking time bomb of inappropriateness. Two weeks before he walked out, the two of them went to the movies together while I was at home with the baby working on a late night deadline. Apparently that’s the night their “friendship” elevated to a whole new level. All of this hit me like a freight train as my therapist stared at me silently, pleadingly, waiting for me to connect the dots.

I said “It’s f*cking [her], isn’t it? … Mother f*cker!!” And then, in naming it out loud, my world stopped.

Suddenly everything around me evaporated. My peripheral vision went out. My throat closed up. Everything became this searing, blinding white light. I felt a sharp pain and a rush of heat shoot up the back of my head. And then the air in the room began crashing down on me like a weight. Oceans of pressure smashing me, smashing me, smashing me down into the seat. I couldn’t breathe and my head began pulsing and pounding. And then I heard it: a noise. A loud, sharp, cracking sound … deep down inside me somewhere. I actually heard it! My entire self splitting open.

Revisiting it all again in my mind, seeing the vulnerability and humiliation of that trusting girl I used to be (who to her core believed that “my guy” was not capable of being “that guy”), I realise that a part of me ended in that moment. That’s what the pain and the light and the cracking sound were – an execution.

He had an affair.

Looking back on it now feels like watching a dog get shot.

I became a zombie.

We were separated for six months. He crashed at his boss’s house. I stayed with our daughter in our apartment and immediately began initiating steps to divorce him. I remember going to the courthouse and waiting in line to pay for the do-it-yourself divorce papers. There was a big line that day and it seemed everyone was there for a marriage license (of course). I felt so ashamed to be there. Like people could see it on me … that girl was betrayed!

When it was my turn in line, I said quietly, “I need divorce papers, please.” The sturdy woman behind the glass, needing to know which stack of forms to give me, asked, “Are there children involved?” My heart wrenched inside my chest and I squeaked out a very broken, tear-choked, “Yes.” Everyone in line stopped and looked at me. It took every ounce of strength I had not to dissolve into a weeping puddle on the clerk office floor … and everyone knew it.

We moved to get away from the scene of the crime. Due to some positive realisations that had emerged in therapy, we decided to give things another try after the move “for our daughter’s sake”. We gave it four more years, and every day of it felt like the movie Groundhog Day (only not remotely funny).

We removed ourselves from the place everything happened (and the other woman), but the dynamics that caused the affair never changed. I spent every day of the next four years going through the motions with a fake smile plastered on my face. But I was dead behind the eyes. The internal shattering that occurred in the therapist’s office left a void and there was no coming back from it. Not with this man. Not in this life. And my daughter deserves better than a numbed-out mum. So, I finally said the words out loud to him: “I want a divorce.” His reply? Simply, “OK.”

An odd calm settled over us and we were able to really look each other in the eye for the first time in years. We were never really happy together. So, maybe finally letting each other go as husband and wife was the most loving and honest thing we’ve ever done.

He stopped wearing his wedding ring a long time ago.

Just like when he moved to the sofa under the guise of the flu, and never came back to our marital bed, he removed his ring under the guise of work. He was working on a mural and I found the ring sitting all alone on an empty shelf in his work space. It sat there untouched for two weeks before I took the ring and hid it in my jewelry box to see if he’d notice it missing and come looking for it. He never did.

I took off mine too.

Finally, I brought it up and he said he took it off because it hurt his hand while he was working and he just hadn’t gotten around to putting it back on yet. I said that it was important to me that he put it back on.

He said there was no latent meaning behind his not wearing it. I said that the ring is our symbol to each other and to the world that we are married. I said that choosing not to wear it, knowing how much it would upset me, most certainly had meaning. He said he understood why I might feel that way. He did not put the ring back on.

I took my ring off six months later. Figured: f*ck you! If you aren’t wearing yours, I’m not wearing mine either. But my finger felt vulnerable and naked. I’ve worn that ring every day for more than 13 years. I never really cared for the ring, I’d just gotten so used to wearing it. He hated my ring. Hated it!

He purchased it when we were fresh out of college, paying for it in a seemingly unending stream of micro-payments: $5 here, $25 there. By the time it was paid off, he deeply resented that ring. Probably frustrated by having to spend the money when we were just starting out and totally broke. It kind of feels like we’ve always been broke.

The other day, I decided that I need to find myself a new ring. A gift to myself. Something symbolic of the change I am making in my life. I fully admit that I am an overly-symbolic person. Not wearing a ring during this transition doesn’t feel right. When I first took my wedding ring off, I started wearing other rings on that finger to feel less emotionally naked; only those were meant for other fingers and were way too big. For months I’ve used double stick tape to hold my decoy rings in place.

I’ve decided that a new ring is absolutely essential and I’m on the hunt for just the right one. Nothing flashy. Nothing extravagant. Just something to slide on my size-5 finger that restores my symmetry and honors my commitment to myself: to fly, to soar, and to muster the courage to leap from the nest.

“With this ring”… do I promise to show myself love, patience, kindness and unfailing courage? I do. I absolutely do.

This article originally appeared on YourTango: “Ending My Fairytale Marriage Was The Best Thing I Ever Did.”

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Top Comments

I believe in marriage 9 years ago

I think each situation is different and I think that because we nurture ideas and make everything ok, no wonder half of marriages don't work out. Nobody cares much about whether they do or don't. As long as number 1 is happy. I am married to my husband and we ave a long history starting in school, been together since we were 19 and 20. i think the fact that we had some time to experience other things before we met again was a good thing. Marriage break down is devastating and I say these words humbly but my hubby and I are so aware that it doesn't take much to break a relationship, that we are doing all we can to nurture it during the hard stages. Having children, working opposite ends of the day etc. a decade on we still click, we still work on this because we want to love each other every day for the rest of our lives. not for the kids but because we deserve it. No one who is married for 60+ years that I've met have made it sound easy. They make it sound honest!


broken hearted 9 years ago

I've been married to my husband for almost 19 years ,together for 21 years. I was 22 and he was 28 when we married. After 5 years of unexplained infertility and a round of IVF we had 2 beautiful children. Fast forward 12 years later, the last 15 months have been been without any intimacy, kisses hugs etc. this was made worse by the the fact that our son has not been sleeping properly for the last 3 years constantly waking me up through e night or not going to sleep and sneaking into our bed. Both busy with work as well as financial pressure etc etc , just life in general. My husband just stopped talking to me, I became invisible and when he does take trouble to talk to me it's to scream, belittle and insult me, just for minor things most of the time. I made excuses for me about not coming to bed at the same time as me , he would stay up till 2pm " working on his computer" as he had so much to do and it was quiet . If he was not on his computer he is on his iPhone constantly. It all came out 6 weeks ago, after several unexplained nights away, soccer matches, nights out etc I confronted him. He told me after a major argument which unavoidable occurred with the kids around that he thought we had nothing in common, that I wasn't even on the same page as him, he has also since told me that we have grown apart and life with me was boring. That I didn't even notice that our marriage was over . Well since then I've found that there is someone else in the picture , probably since around the time he stopped sleeping with me, he claims that he is not sleeping with her however she just bought home. $500 bike as a gift for helping her with some finance work he did for her, he has also been mentioning a client of his for the past year which I thought was a male client, I also found whilst I was overseas for work photo's appearing on my iCloud phone , with her and my children and hers on a day out , whilst I was overseas. He has been confiding in her and has told me that he has many things to talk to her about and that he is attracted to heR and that he can't see us being intimate with each other moving forward . In the process he has bought up every argument that we had had in the last 18 years and has bought up every fault that I have as a reason why he can't be with me as my husband. I don't recognise is man anymore . He has changed and is so cold . All his values on family, marriage etc have dissapeared since this women has come into the picture , he has become cruel, disrespectful, rude , arrogant and uncaring . Her marriage has apparently also recently broken up and it seems that my husband has become a target for her . I thought that our marriage was solid and there was trust . However all this has shattered everything that I thought was true . I thought that even though we were going through a tough time in the last year that we would get through it . I just thought he was too tired busy and stressed out by work and that's why he wasn't interested in sex with me , but when he can't even hug or kiss me and won't let me touch him, I know that he must be cheating.
,his sense of reality is completely warped and he believes that we can still be best friends and don't need to divorce or live apart , seriously while he is with someone else . He can't have his family at home whilst he goes and sees someone, I asked him if he his asking for an open marriage and he didn't reply ????? No way . I've told home that he can go live with her and her 3 children and he can see his own kids every second weekend if she means so much to him but he won't leave as he feels entitled to his own home . He even told me that he would buy me another house to move into and we would share the kids and have them spend 50/50 custody , but he didn't need a divorce as marriage is just piece of paper and it doesn't mean anything . After 21 years together this is what he says , he says it's my fault that I didn't do anything to fix our marriage , that if I really wanted to I would have done something to fix it , but you can't fix a relationship when he won't communicate with you , or when you are so busy with work and the kids etc ,

divorceisfreedom 9 years ago

Thank you so much for sharing your story. Ok this is my humble opinion: Make serisous steps to protect yourself and the children. Make and exit plan and execute it. Include money, custody arrangments, where to dwell ect. This man can no longer be trusted and he will take you down with him. Find that inner strength and draw on family and friends to help plan and implement your exit. Get those divorce papers and get your life back. You owe it to yourself and to your children. Take a small step first...take off your ring. Again this is just my opinion but I think you are waiting for someone to tell you that its ok to make your move now. Good luck and come back here and update us on what is happening if you can. Be strong!!