La vida
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My Husband Left Me for My Sister and Moved in With Her—Then, Three Years Later, He Abandoned Her Too for Her Best Friend
My husband has left me for my sister. Hes moved in with her. And, three years later, he abandons her
La vida
06
I’m 46, and if you looked at my life from the outside, you’d probably say everything is fine. I married young—at 24—to a hardworking, responsible Englishman. I had two children in quick succession—at 26 and 28. I left university because the schedules didn’t fit, the kids were small, and I thought “there’s time for all that later.” There were never any big dramas or rows. Everything went the way it was “meant to.” For years, my routine never changed. I’d wake before everyone, make breakfast, leave the house tidy, and head off to work. I’d come back in time to handle the chores, cook, wash, tidy up. Weekends were all about family gatherings, birthday parties, endless obligations. I was always there; I always took care of things. If something was missing, I fixed it. If anyone needed anything, I was always there. It never occurred to me to ask if I wanted something else. My husband has never been a bad person. We’d have dinner, watch TV, and head to bed. He wasn’t especially affectionate, but he wasn’t unkind either. He never asked for much, but he didn’t complain. Our conversations were about bills, the children, jobs to do. Then, on an ordinary Tuesday evening, I sat quietly in the living room and realised I had nothing to do—not because everything was perfect, but because, in that moment, nobody needed me. I looked around and understood that for years I’d kept this household running, but now I had no idea what to do with myself inside it. That day, I opened a drawer of old documents and found diplomas, unfinished courses, ideas scribbled in notebooks, projects put aside “for later.” I looked at photos from when I was young—before I was a wife, before I was a mother, before I became the one who made everything right. I didn’t feel nostalgic. I felt something worse: I realised I’d achieved everything without ever asking if it was what I truly wanted. I started to notice things I used to accept as normal: That nobody asks how I am. That even when I come home exhausted, it’s still me who sorts everything out. If my husband says he doesn’t fancy a family gathering, that’s fine, but if I’m reluctant, it’s still expected I’ll go. My opinion exists, but it doesn’t carry weight. There were no arguments or shouting matches, but there was never any real space for me. One evening at dinner, I mentioned I wanted to restart my education or try something different. My husband looked at me, surprised, and said, “But why now?” He didn’t mean any harm. He just didn’t understand why something that had always worked should change. The children were silent. There was no argument. Nobody forbade me from anything. Yet I realised that my role was so clearly defined that stepping outside it was uncomfortable. I’m still married. I haven’t left, I haven’t packed my bags, I haven’t made any dramatic decisions. But I’ve stopped pretending. I know that for more than twenty years, I’ve kept a family together in a structure where I was essential, but never the main character. How Do You Rebuild Yourself After Living a Life Where You’re Needed—But Never the Main Character?
Im 46 now, and to anyone looking in from the outside, it would seem like my life is perfectly fine.
La vida
03
I’m 41 and the house I live in once belonged to my grandparents. After they passed, my mum stayed here, and when she was gone, the home was left in my name. It’s always been a quiet, tidy, and peaceful place. I work all day and come home alone. Never did I imagine that all of this could be turned upside down by a decision I made “just to help someone.” Two years ago, a distant cousin rang me in tears. She was splitting up, had a little boy, and nowhere else to go. She asked if she could stay with me “just for a few months” until she got on her feet. I agreed—she was family, and I thought it wouldn’t really affect me. At first, it was fine—she took one room, chipped in a bit towards bills, headed out early for work. Her son stayed with a neighbour during the day. Everything was OK. After three months she quit her job, saying it was temporary and that she was looking for something better. She started staying home all day. The little boy didn’t go to the neighbour anymore—he was always here. The house began to change: toys everywhere, noise, unexpected guests. I’d come home exhausted only to find strangers sitting in my living room. When I asked her to give me a heads-up, she said I was overreacting and that “this is her home too, now.” Soon she stopped contributing to bills—first, she said, she couldn’t manage, then she’d “catch up later.” I paid for everything: bills, food, repairs. One day I came back to find she’d rearranged all the furniture to make it “cosier”—without asking. When I protested, she was offended and said I was cold and didn’t know what it meant to live as a family. It got even more tense when she started inviting her ex round—the very man she claimed she was escaping. He’d come by in the evening, stay the night, use the bathroom, eat our food. One day I caught him coming out of my room, having “just grabbed his jacket” without asking. That’s when I said things couldn’t go on like this—there had to be boundaries. She started crying, shouting, reminding me I took her in when she had nowhere to go. Six months ago, I tried to set a deadline for her to move out. She said she couldn’t—she had no money, her son was at school nearby, and how could I throw her out? Now I feel trapped. My home isn’t mine any more. I sneak in quietly so I don’t wake the child, eat dinner in my room to avoid arguments, and spend more time outside than in. I still live here, but it no longer feels like home. She acts like she owns the place—I pay for everything, yet I’m called selfish if I ask for some order. I really need advice.
So, Im 41 and the house I live in used to belong to my nan and granddad. When they passed, my mum stayed
La vida
06
I Was in a Five-Year Long-Distance Relationship With My Girlfriend and Planned to Propose, Until a Stranger Called to Reveal She Was Secretly Dating Me and Two Other Men at the Same Time
Id been with my girlfriend for five years. Because of work, we lived in different citiesme in Manchester
La vida
04
I’m 50, and a year ago my wife left home with the kids while I was away—when I came back, the house was empty. A few weeks ago, I got a court order for child support, and now the payments are taken straight from my wages—no choice, no negotiation, no delay, the money just goes. I won’t pretend to be a saint: I cheated, more than once. Never fully hid it, but never truly admitted it. She accused me, I claimed she was seeing things. I also had a nasty temper—shouting, snapping, throwing things, ruling the house with my voice. I never hit them, but I scared them, and my kids learned to fear me. Coming home, they’d go silent; if I raised my voice, they’d retreat to their rooms. My wife walked on eggshells, careful with every word, never arguing back. I saw it as respect—now I know it was fear. Back then, I didn’t care—I was the breadwinner, the boss, the one making the rules. When she left, I felt betrayed, thought she’d come crawling back, so I refused to pay a penny—not because I couldn’t, but out of spite. I told her if she wanted money, she should come home, I wouldn’t support anyone living away. But she didn’t return; she went straight to a solicitor, filed all the paperwork, laid out every detail, and in no time the judge ordered automatic deductions. Now my wage is slashed before I even see it. There’s nothing to hide, nowhere to run—the money is gone before I touch it. Now I have no wife, no kids at home. I rarely see them, and when I do, they keep their distance. They say nothing. I’m no longer wanted. Financially, I’m more cornered than ever—rent, child support, debts, and there’s barely anything left for me. Sometimes I’m angry. Other times, I’m ashamed. My sister told me I brought it all on myself.
I’m fifty years old, and about a year ago, my wife walked out with the children. She left while
La vida
06
I’m 50, and a year ago my wife left home with the kids while I was away—when I came back, the house was empty. A few weeks ago, I got a court order for child support, and now the payments are taken straight from my wages—no choice, no negotiation, no delay, the money just goes. I won’t pretend to be a saint: I cheated, more than once. Never fully hid it, but never truly admitted it. She accused me, I claimed she was seeing things. I also had a nasty temper—shouting, snapping, throwing things, ruling the house with my voice. I never hit them, but I scared them, and my kids learned to fear me. Coming home, they’d go silent; if I raised my voice, they’d retreat to their rooms. My wife walked on eggshells, careful with every word, never arguing back. I saw it as respect—now I know it was fear. Back then, I didn’t care—I was the breadwinner, the boss, the one making the rules. When she left, I felt betrayed, thought she’d come crawling back, so I refused to pay a penny—not because I couldn’t, but out of spite. I told her if she wanted money, she should come home, I wouldn’t support anyone living away. But she didn’t return; she went straight to a solicitor, filed all the paperwork, laid out every detail, and in no time the judge ordered automatic deductions. Now my wage is slashed before I even see it. There’s nothing to hide, nowhere to run—the money is gone before I touch it. Now I have no wife, no kids at home. I rarely see them, and when I do, they keep their distance. They say nothing. I’m no longer wanted. Financially, I’m more cornered than ever—rent, child support, debts, and there’s barely anything left for me. Sometimes I’m angry. Other times, I’m ashamed. My sister told me I brought it all on myself.
I’m fifty years old, and about a year ago, my wife walked out with the children. She left while
La vida
019
I Sat at the Table Holding the Photos That Had Just Fallen out of My Mother-in-Law’s Gift Bag—They Weren’t Cards, They Weren’t Greetings, Just Prints from a Phone, Like Someone Wanted Them to Last. My Heart Pounded as the Kitchen Clock Ticked and the Oven Hummed: Tonight Was Supposed to Be a Perfect Family Dinner, Everything Set, Napkins for “Guests”—But My Mother-in-Law Came In, Dropped the Bag, and With That Familiar Look Said, “I Brought Something Small,” No Smile, No Warmth—When I Opened It Out of Politeness, the Photos Hit the Table Like a Slap: My Husband, My Husband Again, and Then My Husband With Another Woman—Not “Just a Friend.” She Sat Down Calmly, as If She’d Served Tea Rather Than a Bombshell, and When I Asked What This Was, She Simply Replied, “The Truth.” The Rest of the Night, Through Shaky Hands and a Dinner I Refused to Let Her Ruin, I Realised Her Goal Wasn’t to Help Me—It Was to Humiliate Me. But I Served Dinner Anyway. My Mother-in-Law Expected a Scene; Instead, I Covered the Photos With a Spotless White Napkin and Said, “You Want to See Me Weak. It Won’t Happen.” When My Husband Came Home, I Told Him to Explain, Here and Now, in Front of Her—And When She Was Exposed, She Stormed Out, Outplayed at Her Own Game. Tonight, I Claimed a Quiet Victory. What Would You Have Done? Give Me Your Advice…
I was sitting at the table, holding the photos that had just slipped out of the gift bag my mother-in-law
La vida
011
I’m 30 and a Few Months Ago I Ended an Eight-Year Relationship with No Cheating, No Fights, No Drama – I Just Realised I Was Always ‘The Girlfriend in Waiting’, and He Didn’t Even Notice We Never Lived Together, Both Had Our Own Careers and Independence, No Financial Barriers, Just Years of Him Saying ‘Not Yet’ to Building a Real Life Together For Years I Asked to Move in Together—No Wedding Pressure, No Grand Plans—Just a Shared Home and an Ordinary Life, But He Always Had an Excuse, and Our Relationship Settled into a Comfortable, Unchanging Routine One Day It Hit Me: I Was Growing, But Our Relationship Was Not—I Feared I’d Reach 40 as the ‘Forever Fiancée’ Without a Real Home or Future, Simply Because He Didn’t Want the Same Things Breaking Up Was a Long, Thoughtful Decision—When I Told Him, There Was Only Silence and His Conviction That ‘We Were Fine’, Which Proved How Different Our Needs Were Afterwards, I Grieved the Habits and Familiarity More Than the Love, and Was Surprised That Friends Supported My Decision, Saying I’d Waited Long Enough and Deserved to Move Forward I’m Still Processing It All—Not Looking for Anyone New, Not in a Rush, Just Learning to Move On
Im 30 now, and a few months ago, I ended a relationship that had lasted eight years. There were no betrayals
La vida
05
Countdown to Launch Day On the third-floor office, she closed the folder of incoming documents and stamped the last application, careful not to smudge the ink. Neat piles lined her desk: “benefits,” “recalculations,” “complaints.” In the hallway, the queue was already forming, and by their voices she recognised the regulars she saw week after week. She liked this job for the simple results: paper turned into payments, certificates into free bus rides, signatures into the reassurance that no one had to choose between medicine and heating. She glanced at the clock. Forty minutes till lunch, but she still had to check last week’s register and reply to two county emails. Inside, there was a constant weariness—like a tightly knotted tension in her shoulders. She’d gotten used to it as background noise, keeping herself anchored in order. Order was her protection against falling apart. Stability in life came down to numbers. The mortgage on the small flat on the edge of town where she lived with her son after the divorce, monthly fees for his college, plus her mum’s medicines and part-time carer after her stroke. She never complained, just counted. Each month was a report: income, expenses, what could be set aside, what couldn’t. When the secretary called to a meeting, she grabbed her notepad and pen, switched off the monitor, and locked her office. The conference room was already occupied by her department head, two deputies, and the company solicitor. On the table: a jug of water, plastic cups. The boss spoke in a flat, emotionless tone, as if reading the news. “Colleagues, the quarterly review brought new directives for efficiency—starting the first of next month, we launch a new service model. Some roles will transfer to a central hub. Our branch on Alexandra Road is closing; benefits will now go through the Citizens’ Advice Centre and the council portal. Payment procedures are changing, and some categories will be reassessed.” She scribbled notes, but the words started to stick. “Branch on Alexandra Road closing”—that wasn’t just an address. It served those from the council estates and the nearby villages, the elderly for whom the town centre was two buses away. “Reassessment” always meant someone would lose out. The solicitor added, “This is confidential until the official announcement. No communication or leaks. Any breach will be considered a violation. You’ve signed the NDAs.” The boss paused on her, a moment longer than the rest. “There’ll be staff changes. Those who manage the pressure and show discipline will be considered for promotion. We look after our own.” The words landed on the table, heavy. Her throat felt dry. Promotion meant a pay rise—less fear about the bank and the pharmacy. But “closing” and “reassessment” echoed louder. After, she returned to her office and opened her internal emails. There it was: “Draft Order—Not for Circulation.” Attached: a table with dates, addresses, and descriptions. Scrolling down, she saw: “From the 1st, service ceases at…” and below, a list of vulnerable groups whose benefit terms were changing. One section read, “Without an online form, payments are suspended until documents are provided.” She knew “suspended” meant for many the money would vanish for a month, two—some people wouldn’t understand, wouldn’t manage to apply in time, wouldn’t even know what was required. She printed just one page—the launch date and general order—then filed it in “confidential.” The printer’s warm page left a ghost on the tray as she closed the lid, as if that could hide the implications. By lunch, the corridor’s queue grew thicker. She worked quickly but attentively, catching herself looking at each person as a potential future casualty. The pensioner whose hands shook as she handed over her son’s income certificate. The man in a hi-vis jacket requesting reimbursement for medical travel. The single mum, needing another recalculation after her ex stopped paying maintenance. She knew their faces and stories. In local government, people never disappear—they always come back with new paperwork or the same old worries. Now she was expected to keep silent as the system quietly changed the names on the doors. She stayed late that evening. The office was still, just the distant slam of security’s door below. She opened the table and pored over the details—not out of curiosity, but to see if there was any soft landing at all. Any chance for home visits, a transition period, some leaflets to prepare? She found only, “Public information: via website or posters at the advice centre.” That was it. No phone calls, no letters, no meetings with community reps. She shivered at the simplicity. Next day, she went to the boss. Not with complaints, just questions, as usual. “Can I clarify—at Alexandra Road, half our visitors don’t have smartphones or internet. Without electronic forms, they’ll miss out. Can we run face-to-face services in both places for a month, at least? Or do a drop-in at the village?” The boss rubbed his brow. “It’s not our choice. We’ve got targets to cut costs, raise digital rates. We can’t run two sites, and outreach means transport, travel costs, paperwork. There’s no budget.” “Then can we at least warn them in good time? We see them every day.” “We’ll do official comms when the order comes in, no sooner. You know what happens otherwise—panic, complaints, people phoning county hall. We still have to close the quarter.” She felt anger rising, but it wasn’t all at him. He was stuck in the same spreadsheets, just at a higher level. “If they lose their benefits, they’ll come back to us. Here.” “They will,” he replied placidly. “We’ll explain. We’ll have new instructions. You’re strong, you’ll cope.” She left his office feeling firmly put in her place. Colleagues were chatting about holidays and “more changes again.” She said nothing. Not because she agreed; she didn’t know how to say it without becoming the problem herself. At home, she reheated yesterday’s soup and set two bowls. Her son came in late, weary, headphones around his neck. “Practicals might be moved,” he said. “They might send us to a different site. If not, I’ll have to sort something myself.” She nodded, hiding how hard it hit her. He had it tough enough, studying and working, and sometimes he still looked at her as if she was meant to be the rock. After he went to his room, she rang her mum’s carer to confirm their schedule, then called her mum, who spoke slowly but tried to sound upbeat. “Don’t forget yourself,” her mum said. “You take it all on.” She started to say her usual “I’m fine,” but instead blurted out, “Mum, if your local chemist was shutting and you had to get prescriptions in town now, would you want to know in advance?” “Of course,” her mum replied. “I’d ask you to stock up, or I’d get the neighbour to help. Why?” She said nothing. It wasn’t about the chemist. That night, she couldn’t sleep. “Confidentiality” in their world, she realised, wasn’t about safety, but about keeping a lid on things—so people couldn’t organise, ask questions, or even staff wouldn’t doubt the numbers. On the third day, a village woman came in for disability care benefits. She held her folder as if it was the only thing keeping her upright. “They said I have to prove it again,” she whispered. “I brought everything. Please make sure it’s right. If it’s delayed…I don’t know how I’ll manage. My husband’s disabled, I don’t work.” She checked the paperwork, the launch date pounding in her mind. The woman would never use the online system—not from refusal, but from exhaustion and lack of skills. “Do you have a phone? Internet?” “Just a basic phone. The neighbours have internet, but I rarely have time.” She nodded, replying within the day’s rules. “Let me sort it all now, by the current process. And here—” she handed over a leaflet with the Citizens’ Advice address and schedule—“Come in straight away if you hear any changes, don’t wait.” The woman thanked her as you thank someone not just for help, but for recognising your humanity. As she left, the “come straight away” felt almost cruel. “Straight away” would be too late. The department group chat later pinged with a reminder from the solicitor: “Reminder: sharing draft orders is grounds for dismissal.” She saw the reactions added; someone typed “understood.” She stared at the screen as fear turned into a kind of resolve. By that evening, a list of addresses due for transfer and benefit categories with new rules lay in front of her. She knew she shouldn’t print it, but she printed one copy just to check the cases. It sat on her desk—too white, too obvious. She locked the door, sat with her hands on the edge of the desk. The 24–48 hour window was real. Two days left until the formal order, but the launch date wasn’t a secret any longer. If people found out now, they could still submit their forms, rally family to help with the portal, sort out paperwork. If not, they’d get to Alexandra Road to find the doors locked and a security guard telling them off. She weighed her options: warn her colleagues? It would spread fast and she’d take the blame. Tip off the neighbourhood chat? They’d trace the source. Phone vulnerable people? She didn’t have everyone’s number; that would be blatant. One path remained: anonymously send the information to someone discreet who could share it quietly. There was a veterans’ group in the area, some active neighbourhood chat admins, and a local paper reporter—she’d worked with her before. She photographed just the section with the date and address—no names or internal codes. Then, after finding the journalist’s contact, she typed and retyped the message, hands shaking not from drama but from knowing there was no going back: “Please check: from 1st, Alexandra Road closes, some benefits move to Council Advice Centre or online. People should file early. OK to publish anonymously. Document is a draft, but the date is set.” She cropped the photo to hide internal markings. Muted her phone, as if that could render her invisible. Sent, deleted the chat, deleted the photo from the gallery and trash. Each action mechanical—habitual, but this time serving not order, but self-preservation. She ripped up the paper into scraps, bagged it, and took it straight to the communal bins. Washed her hands, though there was no dirt. Next day, the news was already circulating in community chats: “They’re closing the branch,” with a photo of an announcement that didn’t exist yet. Tension rose in her office. Colleagues whispered; the boss stalked the halls; the solicitor demanded affidavits of “non-involvement.” She continued taking her appointments, all the while expecting to be called in. People did come—more crowded, more urgent, but determined. The man from down the street brought his mum, helped her register online, but insisted on filing a paper form, just in case. The single mum wanted a printed checklist “because the chat said they’ll stop accepting them soon.” A village woman phoned to ask if she could lodge her application early. “Yes,” she said, her voice wavering with relief. That evening, her boss summoned her. On the desk, a printed screenshot from the chat—the same phrases from the draft. “You know what this is?” he asked. She looked at the sheet, answered evenly, “I do.” “This was a leak. County Hall is asking questions. The solicitor wants an inquiry. You were at the meeting—you had access to the email. You’ve worked here the longest. I’m not looking to make an example of you,” he said, weariness not menace in his voice, “but I need to know if I can rely on you.” She felt herself clench inside. His “rely” meant “keep quiet.” She could blag ignorance, maybe get away with it, stay in a system built on little silences. “I didn’t share documents,” she said carefully. “But I do think people deserved fair warning. If they found out, maybe it was the right thing.” He was silent for a long time. “Fine. In that case—I won’t make a scene of this. But the promotion’s off. I’ll move you to the records section—no public work, no payments. Officially, it’s workload adjustment. Really, it’s so you’re not tempted. Agreed?” She heard neither kindness nor punishment—just the urge to save face for all. Records meant less contact, less meaning, but less risk. Lower pay, not much bonus. The mortgage wouldn’t disappear. “And if I refuse?” she asked. “Then a hearing, warnings, possible dismissal. You know how this works. I’d have to sign off on it.” She left with her transfer note, to be signed by end of day. Colleagues looked busy, but she felt their eyes. No one came near. In such places, people fear not management, but the risk of standing next to someone “dangerous.” That night, she sat at the kitchen table in silence. Her son came out, saw her face, and asked, “What’s happened?” She told him—briefly, just facts. He listened, then said, “You’ve always said the most important thing is not to be ashamed.” She smiled—too perfect for their kitchen, but still true. “As long as we can eat—and I can look people in the eye.” Next day she signed her transfer, hand trembling over the signature—but the line stayed straight. Records work smelled of paper and dust: shelves, boxes, files. She got her keys and a list of quiet, ghostly tasks. A week later, the official poster went up on Alexandra Road. People complained; that’s how it goes—but some had applied early. A former colleague, eyes averted, whispered, “Some made it. Those who got word early, or had grandkids help. Maybe it wasn’t for nothing.” She nodded, carrying her files. She wasn’t a hero, hadn’t saved everyone or overturned the system. Just took one small action, and paid for it. That evening, she visited her mum, delivered shopping and medicine. Her mum eyed her closely. “You look more worn out.” “Yes,” she replied. “But I know why.” She unpacked the bags, took off her coat, and washed her hands in warm water—the only thing right now fully under her control. Outside, the city rolled on—and the countdown to someone else’s launch date had already begun.
Before Launch Day On the third floor, in her office at the council building, she closed the black folder
La vida
06
My Father Abandoned Us, Leaving Mum Saddled with Debts – Since Then, I Lost My Right to a Happy Childhood
My father left us, leaving my mother with significant debts. From then on, I lost my right to a carefree