When Jake asked me to move to Alaska to save money and start our future, I didn’t hesitate. We planned everything—left jobs, packed bags, said our goodbyes. But when I came back early from a girls’ weekend, I walked into my house to find all my boxes stacked by the door… and his new girlfriend walking out of the bathroom. He wasn’t coming. He never planned to.
I left that night with nothing but a weekend bag and a broken heart. On the plane to Alaska the next morning, I cried for what I thought I lost—but also for what I knew I was about to reclaim: my independence, my strength, my life. My mom welcomed me with open arms and a quiet kitchen. She didn’t ask questions. She just handed me coffee and said, “Let’s get to work.”
And we did. I got a job on a fishing boat, made more money than I ever had, and built a routine that made me feel alive again. Jake? My friends kicked him and his girl out of my house a week later. I didn’t need revenge. I had peace. I had Alaska. I had me.
Two years later, I have a house in the mountains, a partner who shows up every day, and a life I built on my own terms. Jake said Alaska wasn’t for him. He was right—it was for me. And it gave me back everything I forgot I deserved.