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I Was 36 When I Was Offered a Big Promotion After Almost Eight Years with My Company – Moving from a…

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I was 36 when my company dangled a promotion in front of me after nearly eight years of loyal tea-making and spreadsheet-wrangling.

And it wasnt your garden-variety promotion, either. I was meant to leap from operations into the heady realm of Regional Coordinatorbigger pay packet, an open-ended contract, shiny new perks. The only hitch? Two days a week, Id need to travel to a town about an hour away, bunk down overnight, then come back the next day. Hardly the stuff of wild adventure.

I arrived home, giddy with news, imagining my husband Richard would do a little victory jig in the kitchen.

Reader, he did not.

That evening he plonked himself opposite me at the table, face as gloomy as a rain-soaked Tuesday, and announced my promotion was a terrible idea. He started banging on about the children, the house, the supposed chaos Id unleash by gallivanting all over the place. Apparently, family women shouldnt be living out of overnight bags. Money isnt everything, he kept repeatingas though I was preparing to run off and join a hedge fund in the city. Home stability is pricelesshis new catchphrase.

Patiently, I explained there was no big move looming. It was only two days a week and with the extra pounds, we could clear those debts hanging over our heads. Still, he wouldnt budge: absolutely not. He insisted it would destroy the family.

We had this argument for weeks. My unsigned contract for the promotion lived a secret life at the bottom of my handbag, while my boss kept firing off emails asking for an answer. At home, the tension grew thick enough to slice with a butter knife. Any mention of work, hed get huffy, raise his voice, call me selfish.

In the end, I caved.

I marched into HR and politely declined the promotion on family grounds. Back to my old role I wentsame hours, same modest salary, same office kettle.

Over the next months, Richard’s behaviour took a mysterious turn. He started rolling in late, glued to his phone, changing his passwords more often than his socks. Work pressure, he claimed. I genuinely thought my grand sacrifice had solved everything.

Then, one day, a colleague messaged me on Facebook out of the blue, asking point-blank if Richard and I were still together. I replied yes, a bit baffled. She promptly sent me photos.

There he wasmy husbandwrapped around one of my colleagues in a cozy little bistro, looking very much like a couple and not, say, two people discussing the finer points of financial strategy.

That evening, I confronted him. No denial, no dramajust a flat admission. He told me hed been drawn to her for ages, felt understood, and that our marriage simply wasnt working. He didnt want to be married anymore and was moving out.

Within a week, he packed his clothes, dropped off his keys, and moved in with her. No grand gestures, no weepy conversations. Justgone.

Meanwhile, there I was, same house, same job, same uninspiring wagenow featuring singlehood. The promotion? Long gone. Someone else filled the spot before I could even utter second chance. When I asked if another opportunity might pop up in future, HR gave me that classic British “I’m afraid not” smile. The moment had bolted.

Looking back now, the facts couldnt be plainer: I turned down a genuine career leap for the sake of a marriage that, as it turns out, was already on its last legs. I lost both the so-called guardian of the home and the stable job that couldve made my life, well, a bit easier.

He merrily got on with someone else.
And me? I started from scratch, building myself up again after making a choice I believed would save a family that, in reality, was already lost.

So my advice? Dont ever set your dreams aside for a man. Brew a strong cup of tea and remember youre the one who should come first.

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