Two years ago, my wife walked out on me and our kids during the worst point in my life. After struggling and finally picking my family up again, I spotted her in a café, alone and in tears. What she said next completely blindsided me.
When Anna walked out of our apartment with nothing but a suitcase and a cold, “I can’t do this anymore,” I was left standing there holding our four-year-old twins, Max and Lily.
My dignity was shattered, but not as much as my heart.
I didn’t even get a second glance from her. It was like a switch had flipped. One minute we were a family, and the next, I was alone with two kids and a mountain of bills.
This had all happened because I’d lost my job, and we lived in one of the most expensive cities in the country.
I’d been a software engineer at a tech company that promised big returns, but some shady things happened, and it went bankrupt before we knew it. I went from a six-figure salary to unemployment checks overnight.
The day I told Anna the news, I saw the disappointment in her eyes. She was a marketing executive and one of the most put-together women I’d ever seen.
Even after getting married, I never saw her hair out of place or even a wrinkle on her clothes.
She even looked polished while giving birth to our children, like a real-life princess, and that’s what I used to love about her. But I never thought she’d leave during tough times.
That first year was pure hell. Between the crushing loneliness, the constant worry about money, and the exhaustion of juggling work and childcare, I felt like I was drowning.
I drove for ride-share companies at night and delivered groceries during the day.
All the while, I was juggling childcare. Max and Lily were heartbroken and asked about their mother constantly.
I tried to explain as best as I could to four-year-olds that Mommy was gone for a while, but they didn’t seem to understand.
Luckily, my parents were nearby. They helped with the twins at night and whenever I needed them, but they couldn’t help financially.
They were already retired and struggling with the rising cost of living.
Max and Lily were my lifeline, though. Their little arms wrapping around me at the end of a long day, their tiny voices saying, “We love you, Daddy,” kept me going. I couldn’t let them down.
They deserved at least one parent who would lay the world at their feet.
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