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Finally Free: 16 Years of Endurance Under Cruelty

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The End! For 16 years, he humiliated me, and I put up with it…

Everything changed one spring…

I could never have imagined that something could disrupt the mire I had been living in for so long.

I had long lost hope.

When I turned 22, I married. I believed I had found “the one,” the only woman with whom I would spend my life. Laura was my everything. She captivated me, drawing me in with an almost magical allure. I was so blinded by her that even her quirks seemed endearing.

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

Or her favourite “joke”—making me spin on the spot in front of our friends, like I was a model being appraised.

She made decisions for me.

She picked where I would work.

Where we would go on holiday.

Which friends of mine I could keep, and who to cut out of my life.

And I let her.

I thought that was how it was supposed to be, that this was what love meant.

I was blind.

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

I was mistaken.

Laura gave up on us in that struggle.

She didn’t care about my fears, my worries, or the doctors’ bleak prognosis.

She had accepted that she already had children from her first marriage, meaning we might not have any together.

But that was a source of pain for me.

And for her, it was an opportunity to demean me further.

She made me feel guilty for everything.

— “You can’t give me a child!”
— “You even struggle with cooking; your food will make me ill!”
— “You’re not a real man if you can’t manage this simple thing!”

I felt utterly worthless.

I tried to fight back. I searched for doctors, took tests, and went through treatments.

But it was all in vain.

She broke me, and I endured.
Over time, I surrendered.

I closed myself off, stopped socializing, and distanced myself from everyone.

I became a shadow of my former self.

I no longer recognized the confident young man who once dreamed of a family, happiness, and children.

When I looked in the mirror, I saw a pitiful creature who was too afraid even to speak up.

Whenever I attempted to assert that I didn’t deserve constant humiliation and that I wanted respect, Laura laughed in my face:

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

She knew I had nowhere to go.

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

And I began to believe it myself.

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

And I stayed.

But in March, everything turned upside down…
I had only one friend left—Sophie.

She had moved to Greece for work some time ago, but returned in the spring because her husband fell seriously ill.

Then he passed away.

Sophie was left alone in her home. Her sons had long since settled abroad.

I started visiting her after work, sometimes staying over.

At first, Laura didn’t like this, then she began to create scenes, and eventually resorted to threats.

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

One evening, Sophie looked at me and said:

— “God willing, she’ll file for divorce!”

We locked eyes, and suddenly I realized: here was my chance.

Sophie offered me a place to stay when she went back to Greece.

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

I agreed.

I left. I chose myself.
Since then, I’ve been living in her flat.

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

— “Good morning, Stan!”

I look at my life and recognize: I am free.

I am no longer afraid.

I’ve started smiling again.

I’ve learned to live anew.

I glance towards Laura’s house, and mentally say to her:

“Rescue is always possible, darling!”

I put on a clean shirt, step outside, walk down the street with my head held high.

Now, I cannot be broken.

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