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He tried to backpedal. Tried to fix it. Tried to rewrite the story now that his escape plan had fallen apart.
I laughed—not bitterly, but freely.
I moved out three weeks later. Took only my things and my peace.
Months passed. I started freelancing, working from coffee shops, rediscovering what it felt like to be alone without feeling lonely. One day, I met a woman named Ava who was crying quietly at the table beside me. She thought her boyfriend was cheating. Thought she was the problem.
I didn’t give advice. I just listened. And when I shared my story, her shoulders relaxed like she’d finally been allowed to breathe.
We’ve been friends ever since.
I learned that healing isn’t just about leaving what hurts—it’s about walking toward something better.
Six months after my divorce, I traveled to Italy alone. I cried when the plane landed, not from sadness, but from pride. I wandered cobblestone streets, drank coffee slowly, sketched sunsets, and remembered how it felt to belong to myself.
That’s where I met Marc. Quiet. Thoughtful. Kind without trying.
We didn’t rush. We didn’t fix each other. We just existed, honestly, together.
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