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I Came Home to Dinner, Prepared by My Wife That Evening; I Needed to Talk to Her, and the Conversation Was Going to Be Tough, So I Started With This Phrase

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15March2025

I arrived home for dinner, the meal that Ethel had been preparing all evening. I needed to speak with her; the conversation ahead would not be easy, so I began, Theres something I have to tell you She gave no answer, turned back to the stove, and I saw the familiar ache in her eyes.

I had to keep the dialogue going, so I blurted out that we should get a divorce. She asked, Why? I couldnt meet the question, so I sidestepped. Her frustration boiled over; she threw everything within reach at me and shouted, Youre not a real man! There was nothing left to say. I retired to bed, but sleep eluded me while I heard her sobbing. I struggled to explain what had happened to our marriage; I didnt know how to tell her that my love had long since faded, that only pity remained, and that I had given my heart to Jane.

The next day I prepared all the paperwork for the divorce and the division of assets. I offered Ethel the house, the car, and 30% of my business shares. She smiled, tore the documents up, and told me she wanted nothing from me, then broke down in tears. I felt a pang of regret for ten years together, yet her reaction only hardened my resolve to end it.

That evening I came home late, skipped dinner, and went straight to the bedroom. She was sitting at the kitchen table, writing something. In the middle of the night I woke to find her still scribbling at the desk. I no longer cared what she did; the intimacy we once shared was gone.

In the morning she presented her own conditions for the split. She insisted we keep a cordial relationship for as long as we could, arguing that, with our sons exams looming in a month, any further conflict would upset his nerves. It was hard to argue with that. Her second condition seemed absurd: for a whole month she wanted me each morning to carry her out of the bedroom in my arms and set her down at the front door, as a reminder of the day I first brought her into my home after our wedding. I said nothing; I was indifferent. At work I mentioned the request to Jane, and she sneered, calling it a pathetic attempt by my wife to manipulate me back into the family.

When I first lifted Ethel onto my shoulders, I felt awkward. We had become strangers to each other. Our son saw us and shouted, Dads carrying Mum! Ethel whispered, Dont say anything to him I set her down by the front door, and she walked off toward the bus stop.

The second day went more smoothly. I noticed, for the first time, the fine lines around her eyes and a few grey hairs I had never seen before. All the warmth she had poured into our marriagehow could I ever repay that?

Soon a tiny spark flickered between us, growing a little each day. I also realized she was becoming lighter and lighter to bear. I said nothing to Jane.

On the final day, as I was about to lift her again, I found her near the wardrobe, lamenting how much weight she had lost recently. She truly had become very thin. Was she grieving for our relationship? Our son burst into the room, asking when Dad will carry Mum again? as if it were a family tradition. I lifted her, feeling exactly as I had on our wedding day. She hugged my neck gently. The only thing that troubled me was her frail weight.

I set her down, grabbed the car keys, and drove to the office. I ran into Jane and told her I didnt want a divorce after all, that our feelings had cooled only because we had stopped paying attention to one another. She slapped me and fled in tears.

Deep down, I realised I wanted to see Ethel more than anything. I rushed out of the office, bought the most beautiful bouquet at a nearby florist, and when the shop assistant asked what message to write on the card, I answered, It would be my greatest joy to carry you in my arms until the end of my days.

I returned home, heart light and a smile on my lips, climbed the stairs and burst into the bedroom. Ethel lay on the bedstill.

Later I learned she had been bravely fighting cancer for the past few months. She never told me anything, and I never saw it, being preoccupied with Jane. Ethel was a remarkably wise woman; she had invented those divorce conditions so that I wouldnt become a monster in our sons eyes.

My hope is that this story might help someone hold onto their family. Many give up without knowing they are only one step away from a breakthrough.

Lesson: when pride and avoidance replace honest conversation, even the strongest bonds can crumble; genuine communication is the only way to keep a family whole.

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