“I Need To Date Other Men To Know If You’re My Forever. If Not, No Wedding,” My Fiancée Declared…
The Arrogant Prick
“You arrogant prick!” she spat the words.
I could almost see her face, flushed with rage, alone in that apartment we used to share. “You think you’re too good for me now? You think you won some kind of moral victory?”
“You were lucky to have me! I was trying to make us stronger and you just quit! You’re a coward!” “You couldn’t handle a strong woman knowing her own mind. You needed me to be a meek wife who never questioned anything, didn’t you?”
“Well, guess what? I’m not her! I was doing the brave thing, the hard thing, and you ran away because your fragile ego couldn’t take it!” She was screaming now, her voice cracking.
“You’ll die alone, Jake! You hear me? Alone! And I’ll be fine. I have options! You were always the safe choice, and safe is boring!”
“I hope you enjoy your boring, self-righteous little life! I’m done! I’m fucking done!” There was a final, shuddering breath, and the call ended.
In the dark of my apartment, I felt nothing but a profound, settling finality. The mask had not just slipped; it had been hurled against the wall and shattered.
Bookmark of a Final Page
This was the true product of her experiment: not certainty, but corrosive resentment. She wasn’t angry because she missed me; she was angry because I had revoked my consent to be her safety net, her control subject.
I had taken her “safe and boring” option off the table and, in doing so, revealed her terrifying freedom. She hated me for it.
I saved that voicemail, not to torment myself, but as a bookmark—the final page of that particular chapter. The next morning, I blocked her number again.
This time, permanently. The gallery opening was Mark’s idea.
His girlfriend, Chloe, was a talented ceramicist, and one of her pieces had been selected for a small downtown collective show. “It’ll be wine, weird little crackers, and people pretending to understand abstract art,” he’d said.
“A perfect low-stakes night out. You’ve been a hermit long enough.” He was right.
The hermit phase had evolved into a rich, full solitude, but it was time to re-enter the stream of life. Not as a wounded creature, but as a curious observer.
Re-entering the Stream
I wore a simple navy button-down, no tie—clothes that felt like me. I felt good. Light.
The gallery was a converted warehouse space, all white walls and concrete floors, humming with the low chatter of a weekend crowd. I found Mark and Chloe by a plinth holding a stunning twisted vase that looked both fragile and indestructible.
After congratulating her, I wandered, a glass of passable Cabernet in my hand, appreciating the art without needing to articulate why. That’s when I saw her.
Sarah was standing near a large, splattered canvas, looking at it but not seeing it. She was with a friend I vaguely recognized, and she looked diminished.
The vibrant, demanding energy she’d always carried was muted. Her shoulders were slightly hunched, and even from across the room, I could see a tired tension around her eyes.
The “experiences” hadn’t filled her; they’d sanded her down. She was staring into her wine glass as if it held the answers.
Pure Electric Recognition
Our eyes met. Hers widened, a jolt of pure electric recognition flashing through them, followed immediately by a flood of confusion, hope, and sheer panic.
She whispered something to her friend, who glanced over at me with a judgmental frown. Sarah smoothed her dress—a little too dressy for the venue—and started walking toward me.
There was no avoiding it without causing a scene, and I had no desire to flee. My peace was portable now.
She stopped a few feet away, her eyes drinking me in. I knew what she saw: a man standing easily, his face relaxed, his eyes clear.
I had gained a little muscle from running, lost the subtle, constant stress line between my brows. I looked simply like I was okay.
“Hi,” she said. Her voice was softer than I remembered.
“Wow. You look really good.” “Hello, Sarah,” I said, a polite, neutral tone—the tone you’d use with a former colleague you hadn’t seen in years.
Externalized Toxicity
She flinched, just barely, at the coolness. She took a half-step closer.
“Can we talk for just a minute? I’ve been doing a lot of thinking. A lot of therapy, actually.” She said the last part like it was a credential, a badge of work done.
I didn’t move. “Sure.”
She took a shaky breath, her words tumbling out in a rehearsed rush. “I was an idiot. What I asked for was monstrous. I see that now. I was scared and insecure, and I externalized it in the most toxic way possible.”
*”I treated you like an option, and you were never that. You were my choice. I just didn’t know how to know it.” I listened, my expression unchanging.
She was saying the right words, the words I might have once sold my soul to hear. Now they were just sounds.
“It’s okay,” I said when she paused. “You don’t need to explain.”
