The Cruelest Thing My Husband Did When I Left Him

My friend just reminded me of it.

Woman crying after receiving text from husband, now former husband. dimaberlinphotos | Canva
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I met my friend tonight. She lived through my divorce with me. She loves my children. She loves me. She worried about us. She can’t speak about my ex-husband without contempt.

“Do you remember what he did when you first left him?” she asked.

“Not sure that I know what you mean,” I said.

“The night we were going out,” she said. “You came over to pick me up on the way to the party. I came out to the car, and you were crying.”

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“Oh,” I said. “I do remember.”

“He’s such a jerk,” she said.

My friend reminds me of something I did once write about — but it’s been a long time.

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I had just told my husband that I was leaving him — it’s something that he never thought I would do. 

I’ve written many times that he withheld food and school supply money. It was late August. According to research, after divorce, women experience disproportionate declines in household income and standard of living, as well as sharp increases in the risk of poverty. Women may also face a higher risk of losing homeownership and “falling down the housing ladder.” Women’s lower chances of re-partnering and responsibilities as a single parent may further impede their path to economic recovery.

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The story I’ve rarely told is his initial retribution, and there’s a reason for that. When I reflect on my frustration and anger it centers around my inability to protect or provide for my children. It was less about me, and more about them. My focus was that I didn't have food for my children.

He had control of our money. I felt helpless to protect my boys. I begged him to love them more than he hated me. He didn’t care. My family and friends brought groceries. Everything was temporarily okay. My boys had food.

On that night, my friend got into my car. “What’s wrong?” she said. I couldn’t spit out the words which upset her even more. 

RELATED: The Reason Divorce Can Be So Ugly Is Because You Waited Too Long To Leave

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ring in man's palm of hand RDNE Stock project | Pexels

I finally (and sadly) was beginning to understand the man I had married. 

I couldn’t speak. I handed her my phone. “He’s such a jerk!” she said.

My husband had texted me. It was one of the worst, and most demeaning moments of my life. Not to mention, the absolute worst as a mother. I was unprepared for what an insecure bully was throwing at me.

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“Dry your eyes,” said my friend. “He’s not worth it.”

I collected myself because we had an obligation. I keep my obligations. We were both on our way to an event where people expected us. We were not going to cancel, or no-show. She handed my phone back to me. I glanced down at it. I read his text one more time.

“I just hocked my wedding ring,” said my husband. “You now have $260 for groceries.”

The man who refused to provide food for our children was finally relenting. He was only willing to do so, if he hurt me first. My boys don’t know this story. It’s too painful. They do not need to know it.

After every bad thing my husband did, this still feels like the worst.

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RELATED: I Chose Divorce For A Simple Reason

My husband was only willing to provide for his children if it came at a cost to their mother.

Financial abuse involves controlling a victim's ability to acquire, use, and maintain financial resources. Research has suggested that 99% of domestic violence cases also involve financial abuse. However, estimates about the prevalence of economic abuse vary. Some studies indicate that the prevalence rates in the U.S. range from 52% to 98%.

It would become the theme of our divorce: I will hurt you to hurt your mother.

I’m not telling this story because my friend reminded me of it today. I’m relaying it because some people think I’ve never recovered from my ex-husband. A few individuals who follow my work have said as much.

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They think I write about him because I’m not over him. They mistakenly think I’m still bitter. I’m human. I can be angry, and I can still have momentary bitterness. But I promise you that’s not how I live my life. I write to elevate awareness of abuse. Not only as a woman. I’m a big girl, I chose that man, despite my naive youth.

But my children didn’t. They paid a price for their mother’s mistake. It wasn’t the dissolution of a marriage. Kids can recover from that. They understand two parents who no longer get along.

They can even understand two parents who no longer love each other. They can’t understand a parent who will hurt them to hurt the other parent. I rarely explain myself, or my writing anymore. You either know my heart and truth or you don’t. I’m not bashing a man. I come from a family of wonderful men. I know a lot of great men.

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I’m telling a story that should never have happened. Otherwise, good guys sat on the sidelines and watched. 

woman's head on pillow crying to friend Liza Summer | Pexels

Financial abuse isn’t relegated to the same category as physical abuse yet, for five long years my boys were without some of their basic needs. 

They intermittently lacked transportation, health insurance, electricity, food, and more. They were under the constant threat of foreclosure of their home. They were subjected to trauma. Sheriff’s deputies were showing up at their door, repo guys were in their driveway, the mortgage company knocking on their door, creditors constantly calling, and so much more. Their home was not a safe place.

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Why? Because their mother was foolish enough to give him a ring that he could one day hock.

RELATED: I Thought About Leaving My Husband A Million Times — But This Moment Finally Did It

Colleen Sheehy Orme is a national relationship columnist, journalist, and former business columnist. She writes bout love, life, relationships, family, parenting, divorce, and narcissism.