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I Realized My Mistakes and Wanted to Reconcile with My Ex-Wife After 30 Years, But It Was Already Too Late…

I understood my mistakes and wanted to return to my ex-wife after 30 years, but it was far too late
I saw the error I had made and longed to go back to the woman Id spent three decades with, but the hour had passed, and the door was shut forever
My name is Edwin Whitmore, and I live in Grimsby, where the steel-gray skies of Lincolnshire stretch endlessly over the fields. I am 52 years old, and I have nothing. No wife, no family, no children, no jobjust emptiness, like the cold wind howling through a derelict house. I was the one who tore it all down, and now I stand atop the ruins of my life, staring into the chasm I dug with my own hands.
For 30 years, I stood beside my wife, Margaret. I was the providerworking, bringing home the wages, while she kept the hearth warm. I liked having her at home, liked that she belonged only to me. But with time, I grew irritated by her care, her habits, the sound of her voice. Love withered, choked by routine. I told myself it was normal, that this was just how things were. I was comfortable in that dull, gray stability. But then fate threw me a test I couldnt pass.
One evening, at the pub, I met Lydia. She was 32, two decades my juniorpretty, full of life, with a spark in her eyes. She felt like a dream realized, a gust of fresh air in my stagnant world. We began seeing each other, and before long, she was my mistress. For two months, I lived a double lifeuntil I realized I no longer wanted to return home to Margaret. I was in love with Lydiaor so I thought. I wanted her to be my wife, my new future.
I mustered my courage and told Margaret the truth. She didnt scream, didnt smash platesjust looked at me with hollow eyes and nodded. I thought she didnt care, that her feelings had died long ago. Now I see how deeply I wounded her. We divorced. We sold the house where our children had grown up, where every corner held memories of our past. Lydia insisted I leave Margaret nothing. I obeyedtook my share and bought a spacious flat for Lydia. Margaret was left with a tiny bedsit, and I didnt even help her financially. I knew she had no way to survive, no job, but I didnt care. My sons, Thomas and William, turned from mecalled me a traitor and severed all ties. Back then, it didnt matterI had Lydia, a new life, and I thought it was enough.
Lydia fell pregnant, and I awaited our child eagerly. But when the boy was born, I noticed he bore no resemblance to either of us. Friends whispered, my brother warned me, but I pushed the thoughts aside. Life with Lydia became hell. I worked myself to exhaustion, supporting the house, the child, while she demanded money, vanished at night, stumbled home drunk, reeking of whisky. The flat was chaosno food, no order, arguments over nothing. I lost my jobexhaustion and bitterness took their toll. I endured this nightmare for three years before my brother convinced me to take a DNA test. The result struck like a hammerthe boy wasnt mine.
I divorced Lydia the same day I learned the truth. She vanished, taking everything she could carry. I was aloneno wife, no children, no strength left. So I decided to go back to Margaret. I bought flowers, wine, a cake, went to her like a stray dog crawling home. But another man lived in her tiny flatthe new owner gave me her address. I went there trembling with hope. A man answered the door. Margaret had found work, remarried a colleague, looked happyalive, radiant, as Id never seen her. She had rebuilt her life without me.
Later, I found her in a café. I fell to my knees, begged her to return. She looked at me like I was a pitiful fool and walked away without a word. Now I see the idiot I was. Why did I leave the woman who stood by me for 30 years? Why trade my family for a girl who drained me dry and cast me aside? For a fantasy, for blind faith in love? Im 52 now, and I am nothing. My sons dont answer my calls, my job slipped through my fingers like sand. I lost everything I held dear, and the fault is mine alone.
Every night, I dream of Margarether quiet eyes, her voice, her warmth. I wake in the cold of solitude and realize: I was the one who pushed her away. She wont wait for me, wont forgive me, and I dont deserve forgiveness. My mistakea brand that sears the soul. I wish I could turn back time, but its too late. Far too late. Now I wander the streets of Grimsby like a ghost searching for what I destroyed myself. I have nothingonly regret, which will follow me to the end of my days. I ruined my family, my life, and I bear this weight alone, knowing theres nothing left to mend.
