Late one night, Rick flew into a rage over dinner and a wrinkled shirt. He shouted that I should be kissing his feet for all he did. But instead of breaking down, I made a quiet, firm decision: I was done. Three days later, karma showed up in the form of a hospital and a lie.
Rick hadn’t just been out cooling off—he’d crashed while riding with another woman. Not just any woman, but Samantha, who was under investigation for fraud. The police had texts, GPS logs, and hotel records going back a year. While I was home holding everything together, he was living a double life.
He cried in the hospital bed, begging me to stay, to forgive him. But I was already gone. I filed for divorce that Monday. His mother tried guilt-tripping me, saying he was a broken man, but you can’t guilt someone who finally knows her worth.
Now it’s just me and the kids, and the house feels calmer than ever. We eat cereal for dinner sometimes, laugh over laundry, and no one yells about shirts. I used to think the chaos came from motherhood. But it turns out, the real baggage was Rick—and letting him go was the best thing I’ve ever done.