I spent years believing that endurance was the same thing as strength, that if I kept pushing through the hard parts of my marriage long enough, they would eventually soften into something stable, something fair, something I could finally breathe inside of. My name is Melissa, and for a long time I built my entire life around that belief. I worked extra shifts when money was tight, I sold things I once considered meaningful, and I told myself every sacrifice was temporary. The biggest of those sacrifices came when I paid off my husband Aidan’s $300,000 debt.
It wasn’t a single moment of generosity—it was years of compounding effort, sleepless nights, and quiet calculations about how to stretch everything just a little further. I remember sitting at the kitchen table the day I made the final payment, staring at the confirmation email as if it didn’t belong to me. My hands shook because I thought I had finally reached the end of something heavy. I believed that once this burden was gone, our marriage would finally shift into something lighter. I believed he would see me differently. I believed we would both exhale at the same time and start again.