Last year during the absolute sh*tshow that was living in Melbourne during COVID lockdowns I realised my marriage of 29 years was over.
I mean I didn’t wake up one morning and say you know what, "I think I will try something different today, I haven’t been single for a few decades, so why not?" No, I like to think I am a bit deeper than that but, like the constant rain that the east coast of Australia has had this year, our relationship rupture started with a tiny drizzly shower - it's annoying, but you dry off and it's over - but then one day you realise it has been raining for months, or years. There is no time to dry off, you are sodden and sad and the rupture isn’t a little annoying puddle, it’s a flood and it is still raining. There are leaks everywhere and you need to feel the sun again; you physically can’t go another day without sunshine.
But can you actually do it? Can you say 'those words' out loud to the person you have shared a lifetime with? To your kids? To your mum? Or, your friends who have invested years in you as a part of a couple? You have spent years rehearsing them in your head, but are you brave enough to do it for real? Can you say "This marriage is over?!"
Listen to Kate Mullholland and Nelly Thomas - who were both in their late 40s when they decided to leave their husbands - speak to Mia Freedman on No Filter about choosing happiness, discovering your sexuality, and all the good, and the bad, that comes with leaving a marriage. Post conintues after.