A Decade of Hope
On our 10th anniversary, I decided to let my husband finally take the lead. For years, I had planned every celebration—dinners, gifts, every last detail. So when he casually said, “I’ve got dinner covered,” I dared to believe it might be meaningful this time.
I dressed up in the red dress he once loved and waited, both nervous and excited. I hoped he had something romantic in store.
The Crushing Reality
Hours passed. No message. No call.
When the doorbell finally rang, my heart raced—until I saw it was just takeout. For him. Alone.
I found him on the couch, TV on, burrito bowl in hand. “Oh, I forgot you were home,” he chuckled. He didn’t notice the dress. He didn’t mention the occasion.
When I asked about my dinner, he shrugged. “Order something. You can join me for the game.”
Ten years of marriage, and I was invisible.
Choosing Myself
I walked out. I needed to feel seen again.
I wandered into a small Italian restaurant I had always passed but never entered. “Table for one,” I told the host.
Someone noticed my dress. I enjoyed wine, pasta, and tiramisu. I even shared dessert with a kind stranger named Daniel. He made me laugh. He asked about my favorite books. He never called after, but that wasn’t the point. For a moment, I felt alive.
The Breaking Point
The next morning, I placed divorce papers on the table. Eric scoffed. “Over a burrito bowl?”
But it wasn’t just that. It was ten years of being overlooked, of carrying the emotional weight alone.
That night, something inside me shifted. I didn’t know exactly what came next, but I knew one thing for sure: I would never again be the only one remembering, planning, and hoping.