At 56, I found myself completely alone. My children have had their own lives for a long time. And my husband? He recently announced he was leaving me for another woman. My whole life I woke up at five in the morning, prepared breakfast, took the children to school, rushed to work, and in the evening, barely on my feet, I washed, tidied, and ironed. And in the end, what do I have left?
“I’ve thought about it a lot,” my husband said as he carefully packed his things into his suitcase. “All these years I lacked love… Now I understand I have to make up for lost time.”
Instead of tears and scandals, I acted in a way that not only shocked my husband but made him beg for my forgiveness. But I am no longer that naive.

Our story began like so many others: marriage, children, everyday worries. I woke at five, made breakfast, dropped the children at school, ran to work; then picked them up, accompanied them to activities, and helped with homework. At night, barely upright, I washed, tidied, and ironed. Each day repeated endlessly.
Then came my husband: first late arrivals at work, then “business trips,” and finally nights away. And now he was packing his bag.
“Can I help?” I asked, smiling.
He froze, looking bewildered.
“What? No tears? No scandal? Are you really going to let me leave without a word?”
I smiled.
“Why would you stay? We’ve lived like neighbors for a long time: without respect, without tenderness.”

He sighed:
“You offer me no support? I’m leaving everything I’ve acquired to you!”
I shrugged:
“Of course. The apartment is mine, the car too. So please, say your goodbyes and go.”
As soon as the door shut, I felt a strong emotion—not nostalgia, but the realization of so many years spent living for others.
I refused to sink into sadness. I bought dresses I once deemed “improper for a married woman,” went to the hairdresser for the first time in years, changed my hairstyle, got a manicure, applied bright lipstick, and looked at myself with a smile.
“Madam, you look radiant!” the neighbor said. “You must be in love!”
“Oh no, it’s quite the opposite!” I laughed.
Barely had I begun to enjoy this new life when someone knocked on the door.
“Open up! My key no longer works!”
“Of course not,” I replied without opening; “I changed the locks.”
“Please open. I’ve realized my mistake. You are the only one I love.”
I pressed my forehead against the door, smiling:
“Perhaps you have nowhere left to go?”
Silence behind the door, then footsteps receding down the stairs.
It was naïve to think I would wait: no, my dear, now I have my own life, and I’m very happy with it.