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I Married to Escape Poverty, and Now I Live in a Beautiful Cage at 35 – At 20, I Wasn’t Destitute, B…

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I got married to escape the constant stress of worrying about money, and now I find myself living in a really beautiful cage. Im thirty-five. When I was twenty, I wasnt destitute, exactly, but life was tightevery pound was counted. I was a student, taking night classes at university and working in a bakery during the day. Id come home exhausted, my feet aching, wondering whether Id have enough for my bus fare, printing costs, food, and tuition that month. I dreamed of a calmer lifenot something extravagant, just stable.

Thats when I met him. He was forty, a university lecturer, always impeccably dressed, with his own car, talking about holidays, investments, security. I didnt fall head over heels for him. Yes, I liked him, but truthfully, what drew me in wasnt his looks or his conversationit was what he represented: a break from survival mode, peace, a life where I didnt have to scrimp all the time.

We started dating, and right from the beginning the difference in our worlds was easy to spot. While I stared at prices in the restaurant, he ordered without even checking the cost. I talked about picking up extra shifts, he talked about buying another flat as an investment. Hed say things like, You dont need to live so tightly, I can give you a better life, I dont want you to struggle on your own. Those words stuck with me.

I knew my situation would improve if I finished my degree, but I also knew it would take years. With him, everything changed instantly. He proposed after six months. I didnt cry with happinessI just went quiet. That night, I barely slept. I thought about my mum, about all those tired mornings, about never having to count pennies again, about a nice home.

Mum was against it at first. She said I was too young, that he was too old, and she didnt see me in love. I told her love doesnt pay the bills, Im tired of missing out, and I want something better. We cried a lot. In the end, she accepted it because she didnt want to lose me.

We got married a year and a half after we met. Everything happened fast: a big house, new furniture, holidays in the early months. I posted photos with a smile, but inside I felt like an actress playing a partnot chosen for love, but for comfort.

I cant say hes a bad person. Hes reliable, responsible, an excellent father to our kids, helps financially with both his mum and mine, is involved in our lives, doesnt cheat, isnt aggressive. He isnt the problem. I am. I dont love him the way you love someone deeply. I respect him, I admire him, Im grateful for everything, but I dont feel that kind of love that makes your heart race.

His rhythm in life is different. He goes to bed early, isnt keen on going out much, prefers quiet plans, doesnt want change. I still want to travel, laugh out loud, be spontaneous, feel butterflies. But I adapt. I always adapt.

Some nights, I lie in a massive bed, with air conditioning, peace and comfort, and I feel a strange emptiness. Its not sadnessmore that Im living the right sort of life, just not the life that makes me happy. I cook in a gorgeous kitchen, take my kids to good schools, nothing material is missingbut I often miss excitement, desire, dreams. He says, I love you, and I reply, Me too, but deep down, my voice sounds different.

Sometimes I wonder what would have happened if Id stayed single, if Id finished my degree without shortcuts, if Id waited for another kind of love. I feel guilty even for thinking it, because I know there are women who would give anything for this stability. Thats where the guilt comes in: I have no right to complain, but I cant lie to myself either.

What would you tell me to do, to actually feel happy?

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