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Breaking Free: After 16 Years of Endurance, It’s Time to Stand Strong!

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The End! For 16 years, I endured humiliation, but spring changed everything…

I could never have imagined that anything could shake the swamp in which I had lived for so long.

Hope had long since faded away for me.

At the age of 22, I got married, believing I had found “the one” with whom I would spend my life. Emma was my everything. She captivated me with a mystical allure that drew me to her. I was so blinded by her charm that even her quirks seemed endearing.

For instance, her habit of throwing open the window in the dead of winter to yank the duvet off me at dawn.

Or her favourite “joke”—making me spin around like a model being assessed for purchase in front of friends.

She made decisions for me.

She chose where I would work.

Decided where we would go on holiday.

Dictated which of my friends I could see, and who I should cut out of my life.

And I let her do it.

I thought that’s how it was supposed to be, that this was love.

I was blind.

I believed that having a child would change everything…
When our marriage started to crumble, I genuinely thought that a child would save us.

I was mistaken.

Emma abandoned me in that fight.

She didn’t care about my fears, my struggles, or the doctors’ grim prognosis.

She had already accepted that she had children from her previous marriage, and therefore, we might not have any of our own.

But to me, that was painful.

And to her, it was another opportunity to humiliate me further.

She turned me into the guilty party.

— You can’t give me a child!
— You can’t even cook; your food is going to give me an ulcer!
— You’re not a real man if you can’t handle something so trivial!

I felt worthless.

I tried to fight back. I sought doctors, underwent tests, and went through treatment courses.

But it was all in vain.

She broke me, and I tolerated it.
Over time, I surrendered.

I withdrew into myself, stopped talking to people, and distanced myself from everyone.

I became a shadow of my former self.

I could no longer recognise that confident young man who once dreamed of family, happiness, and children.

I looked in the mirror and saw a pitiful person too afraid to speak out.

Whenever I tried to argue that I didn’t deserve constant humiliation and wanted respect, Emma would laugh in my face:

— You? Who do you even think you are? You’re pathetic! You’re worse than any homeless person on the street!

She knew I had nowhere to go.

She convinced everyone around us that I was worthless, weak, and useless.

And soon, I began to believe it myself.

She told me that without her, I would be lost, that I had no chance of surviving on my own.

And I stayed.

But then in March, everything changed…
I had only one friend left—Sophie.

She had moved to Greece for work some time ago, but in spring, she returned because her husband had fallen gravely ill.

And then he passed away.

Sophie found herself alone in her home, while her sons had long moved abroad.

I started visiting her after work, sometimes staying overnight.

At first, Emma didn’t like it, then she started making scenes, and eventually, she resorted to threats.

— You’re not going there!
— I’ll drag you out by your hair!
— I’ll keep you locked up at home!
— I’ll file for divorce!

One evening, Sophie looked at me and said:

— God help us if she does file for divorce!

We exchanged a glance, and in that moment, I realised: this was my chance.

Sophie offered me a place to stay when she returned to Greece.

If I didn’t have to pay rent, I could live on my salary.

I agreed.

I left. I chose myself.
From then on, I lived in her flat.

I wake up in the morning, walk to the window, look at our old home where I once lived with Emma, and quietly say:

— Good morning, Stan!

I reflect on my life and realise: I am free.

I am no longer afraid.

I’ve started smiling again.

I’ve learned to live once more.

I glance towards Emma’s house and mentally tell her:

“There’s always a way out, darling!”

I put on a clean shirt, step out of the house, and walk down the street, lifting my head high.

Now, I cannot be broken.

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