Mismatched towels I didn’t care if anyone liked. My grant program launched six weeks later.
Community-driven, women-led, already changing lives.
And Matt? He texted me once. A photo of the new kitchen rug he got.
Said it “finally brought balance to the room.” I never answered.
Here’s the kicker though—the twist I didn’t see coming? A year later, at a nonprofit gala, I ran into the woman he’d once called “gossipy”—his friend’s wife, Sima.
We got talking over wine. She laughed and said, “I always knew he was a controlling jerk.
You dodged it, girl.”
Then she paused and said, “Oh, and just so you know?
His ‘big tech job’? He lost it three weeks after you moved in. He was using severance and credit cards.
That’s why he didn’t want you to pay rent.
He needed to look generous while he floundered.”
I blinked. He’d lied.
The whole time, he made me feel like I owed him, like I was being taken care of—when really, I was the backup plan for his ego. I walked home from that gala feeling strangely… free.
Not just from him.
From the lie I’d swallowed about what love is supposed to look like. It’s not someone telling you “don’t worry” with one hand and rearranging your soul with the other. It’s someone who sees how you fold your towels and says, “That’s beautiful.
Don’t change a thing.”
Now?
I’m building something real—with work, with people, and eventually, with love. A kind that doesn’t shrink me.
If you’ve ever felt like you were slowly disappearing in someone else’s version of “home,” trust your gut. You’re not too much.
You’re just in the wrong place.
Share this if you’ve ever rebuilt yourself after being broken down. Someone out there needs the reminder. And hey—like this post if you believe love should feel like freedom, not correction.
