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Divorce often feels like the scarlet letter no one talks about. Some in our generation may call it “trendy”—particularly as women have become more independent and empowered—but whether it’s socially acceptable or not, it is still a label no woman enters marriage expecting to wear.

Women are often self-sacrificing—sometimes to a fault. We give and give until our souls feel nearly drained. And in marriages marked by abuse, substance abuse, infidelity, inconsistency, or dishonesty, we still convince ourselves that if we just give a little more, love a little harder, try a little longer, something will change.

Divorce is not a decision a woman wakes up one morning and casually makes. It is years of questioning him and questioning herself. Years of knowing something isn’t right, yet desperately trying to stay because staying once felt like the right thing to do. It’s one minute thinking she’s stayed too long and another asking herself if she should wait just a little longer.

But where does she draw the line? At what point does the cost to herself become too high?

When she finally decides to stand up for herself, the narrative often shifts. The selfless woman is suddenly labeled selfish. The devoted wife becomes the one who “didn’t try hard enough.”

Yet there comes a point when effort turns into numbness. Her cries go unheard. Her questions are deflected. Silence does not mean acceptance; it signals that she is letting go. It marks the beginning of choosing herself.

Still, she almost always stays longer than she should. From a young age, many girls are taught to care for others’ needs above their own. She will cater to him, to her children, and even to society’s expectations that she should endure what she should have never tolerated in the first place.

She lives in the storm between her past and her unknown future—sometimes for months, sometimes for years. The back-and-forth questions disrupt her sleep: Why didn’t I try harder? Why did I tolerate the disrespect? Why did I accept the emotional neglect for so long? The “what could have been” wrestles constantly with what is, leaving her exhausted and grieving a life she once imagined.

Then one day, the fear of staying becomes greater than the fear of leaving. The realization settles in that if she does not get out soon, more damage will be done—to her spirit, to her sense of self, to her future.

Choosing to break free comes at a cost. It means letting go not only of a marriage but also of a version of herself and the future she once envisioned. That loss is real. That grief is real.

She has already spent years fighting for something that was never going to work. She has already done much of the grieving before she ever walks out the door. And when she finally does, she no longer questions who she was supposed to be.

The papers have sat there for longer than she cares to admit. Whether it’s today or tomorrow or a few months or years from now, there will come a moment when she steps forward into who she is meant to become.

As one door closes, another quietly opens.

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Angela Williams Glenn

Angela Williams Glenn writes about the struggles and joys of motherhood. Her book Moms, Monsters, Media, and Margaritas examines the expectations verse the realities of motherhood in our modern day digital era and her book Letters to a Daughter is an interactive journal for mothers to their daughters. She’s also been published with Chicken Soup for the Soul, TAAVI Village, Bored Teachers, and Filter Free Parents. You can find her humorous and uplifting stories on Facebook page.

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