Chapter 1: The Stray Lego and the Shattered Glass
The living room looked like a primary-colored, plastic warzone. I was on my hands and knees, mechanically tossing stray Lego bricks into a large plastic bin, my hair tied in a messy, haphazard knot that hadn’t seen shampoo in two days. I was wearing faded gray sweatpants with a bleach stain on the knee, an oversized college t-shirt, and an expression of profound, hollow exhaustion.
It was 3:00 PM on a Saturday.
My husband, Daniel, had left the house at dawn on Friday. I could still perfectly recall the sharp, crisp scent of his expensive cedarwood cologne and the immaculate crease of his tailored navy suit. He had sighed heavily, the sound carrying the manufactured weight of a corporate martyr, as he packed his leather overnight bag. He had kissed my forehead, a fleeting brush of lips, and whispered, “I’m sorry, babe. The quarterly merger is killing me. I’ll be tied up with work all weekend at the downtown executive suites. Hold down the fort.”
For the past thirty-six hours, I had held down the fort. I had managed the chaotic energy of our eight-year-old son, Owen, and our six-year-old daughter, Lily. I had clipped digital grocery coupons to keep our household budget meticulously balanced. I had cooked cheap, bulk meals, scrubbed the kitchen floor, and broken up three toddler fights over the television remote.
And through it all, I had felt a constant, nagging pang of guilt. Guilt that I was safe at home with our beautiful children while my hardworking husband was trapped in a sterile, fluorescent-lit boardroom, sacrificing his weekend to provide for us.
Then, the landline rang.
We rarely used the landline anymore, keeping it mostly for the alarm system and school emergency contacts. I groaned, shifting my weight, and the arch of my foot came down directly onto a rogue, sharp-edged red Lego brick hidden in the carpet. I winced, biting my lip to stifle a curse, and grabbed the receiver from the wall mount.
“Hello?” I answered, balancing the phone between my ear and shoulder as I bent down to pry the offending piece of plastic from the rug.
“Mrs. Parker? Good afternoon, this is Brian Collins speaking. I’m Daniel’s regional manager at the firm.”
“Oh, hello, Brian,” I said, my tone instantly shifting to the polite, polished cadence of the supportive corporate wife. I dropped the red Lego into the bin. “Is everything alright? Did Daniel forget some paperwork at home? I know he’s swamped with the merger this weekend.”
“Sorry to bother you on a Saturday, Sarah,” Brian said, his voice carrying a strange, hesitant edge. “But I’ve actually been trying to contact Daniel. He missed work yesterday and hasn’t shown up today, and he hasn’t answered any of my calls or emails. Is he unwell? I just wanted to make sure everything was okay at home.”
I froze.
My hand, hovering over another yellow Lego brick, stopped mid-air. The ambient noise of the house—the cartoon playing on the TV, the hum of the refrigerator—seemed to instantly evaporate, leaving behind a ringing, suffocating vacuum. The air in the room grew cold, thick, and impossible to breathe.
“Hold on,” I whispered. My voice sounded entirely foreign to my own ears; it was the voice of a ghost. “What do you mean he missed work? He left Friday morning. He told me he’d be working all weekend on the merger.”
A long, heavy silence followed on the other end of the line. It wasn’t a thoughtful silence. It was the specific, agonizing silence of a man realizing he had just inadvertently detonated a bomb inside someone else’s marriage. It was the silence that confirms a death.
“Ma’am…” Brian cleared his throat awkwardly, the sound scraping against my eardrum. “There hasn’t been any emergency project. The merger was finalized on Wednesday. Actually… everyone left the office early on Friday afternoon for the holiday weekend.”
I didn’t speak. I couldn’t. I stared blankly at the beige wall of my living room, watching a small shadow from the window pane creep across the paint. Eight years. Eight years of carefully budgeting my own life away. Eight years of wearing worn-out clothes so Daniel could buy custom suits to “look the part.” Eight years of solitary weekends, exhaustion, and blind, stupid trust.
“Sarah? Are you still there?” Brian asked gently.
“I’m here, Brian,” I replied, the ice beginning to form in my veins, freezing away the panicked tears before they could even form. “Thank you for letting me know. I’m sure it’s just a miscommunication. Have a good weekend.”
I slowly placed the phone back onto the receiver until it clicked into place. I stood there, staring at the plastic warzone of my living room. I thought about the cedarwood cologne. I thought about the overnight bag.
And then, a sharp, unfamiliar sound erupted from my throat. It started as a dry heave, but it morphed into a dark, unhinged laugh. The sound was so jarring, so completely devoid of joy, that Owen and Lily instantly stopped playing and turned to stare at me with wide, confused eyes.
The devoted, self-sacrificing martyr who lived in this house had just died. And the woman who remained standing in the wreckage was someone entirely different.
I marched upstairs and grabbed my credit card. The black one. The emergency card. And at that moment, my wounded pride absolutely qualified as an emergency.
Chapter 2: The Black Card Awakening
I stood in the master bedroom, staring at the heavy, metal card resting in the palm of my hand.
It was an exclusive, high-limit account tied directly to Daniel’s primary executive bonuses and his hidden investment yields. For years, he had framed it as our “untouchable safety net,” a psychological barrier he created to ensure I never touched the wealth he was accumulating. I had dutifully ignored it, clipping my two-dollar coupons while he sat on a small fortune.
My fingers closed tightly around the cool metal.
“KIDS!” I yelled.
My voice didn’t shake. It vibrated with a terrifying, prime-time drama energy that echoed down the hallway.
“OWEN! LILY! GET OVER HERE!”
I heard the frantic patter of small feet racing up the stairs. They appeared in the doorway of the bedroom, looking at me with cautious, wide eyes. They had never heard that specific tone of voice from me before.
“What’s wrong, Mom?” Owen asked cautiously, stepping in front of his little sister.
I looked at my children. They were wearing hand-me-down clothes, playing with toys we bought on clearance. I knelt down to their eye level, a brilliant, dangerous smile spreading across my face.
“Nothing is wrong, guys,” I said smoothly. “But it turns out your father has been a little dishonest with us about where he is this weekend. So, we’re about to go shopping. Extremely aggressively.”
“Really?” little Lily’s eyes lit up, immediately forgetting the tension. “Can we go to the toy store?”
“Today, sweetheart,” I said, standing back up and grabbing my keys, “we’re going everywhere.”
As we walked out to the minivan, I pulled out my phone. I didn’t want to call Daniel; I didn’t want to hear his voice, and I certainly didn’t want to give him the opportunity to spin a web of lies over the phone. I wanted to execute him digitally.
I opened our text thread and typed: “Brian Collins called looking for you. Funny how that urgent corporate merger suddenly disappeared.”
I hit send. I stood by the car door and watched the screen.
For ten seconds, nothing. Then, three little grey dots appeared at the bottom of the screen. The typing indicator.
The dots stopped. They appeared again. They stopped.
It was the exquisite, pathetic visual representation of a liar panicking in real-time, his brain desperately scrambling to invent a believable alibi. Before he could formulate a single lying syllable, I sent the kill shot.
“Don’t bother replying. You’re busy. The kids and I have our own emergency plans for the weekend.”
I put the phone on silent, tossed it into the passenger seat, and started the engine.
Thirty minutes later, the three of us were standing in the center aisle of the city’s most expensive, boutique toy emporium downtown. It wasn’t a big-box store; it was the kind of place that sold imported, hand-carved wooden rocking horses and limited-edition collectibles.
“Choose whatever makes you happy,” I told them, my voice echoing slightly in the quiet, plushly carpeted store.
Lily looked around, overwhelmed. She was so used to hearing the word ‘no,’ so conditioned to look only at the sale tags, that she seemed paralyzed. “Anything?” she asked carefully.
“Anything,” I confirmed.
It took them ten minutes to realize I was entirely serious. Owen, trembling with excitement, dragged a massive, incredibly complex, eight-hundred-dollar Death Star Lego set to the checkout counter. It was a box so big he could barely carry it. Lily hugged a sprawling, intricately carved Victorian dollhouse that came with custom, miniature silk upholstery.
I didn’t blink. I didn’t look at the price tags.
“Perfect,” I said, stepping up to the polished mahogany counter. I looked at the cashier, a young woman who was eyeing the massive pile with wide eyes. “And I’ll take that three-hundred-dollar wine and truffle basket you have displayed on the shelf behind you.”
The cashier raised a perfectly sculpted eyebrow, scanning the items. The total on the screen rapidly climbed past two thousand dollars. “Buying a gift for someone special?” she asked making polite conversation.
“Yes,” I replied, my eyes dark, cold, and entirely unreadable. “A present from the universe to me.”
I pulled out the black card and handed it to her. She swiped it.
As the receipt printed, my phone, resting on the counter, buzzed violently. A text message banner flashed across the locked screen. It was an automated alert from the bank’s fraud department, requesting authorization for the unusually massive charge at a toy boutique.
I smiled, authorized the charge with a single tap, and realized that wherever Daniel was hiding, his phone was currently lighting up with the exact same notification. The financial hemorrhage had officially begun.
Chapter 3: Shedding the Skin of the Martyr
The sliding glass doors of the luxury department store parted before me like the pearly gates of heaven. The air conditioning rushed over us, carrying the scent of expensive perfume and leather.
“Mom, why are you trying on so many dresses?” Owen asked. He was sitting on a plush, tufted velvet couch inside the VIP fitting room, kicking his legs. He and Lily were surrounded by glossy, thick-paper shopping bags filled with toys, electronics, and imported chocolates.
I stood in front of the three-way, floor-to-ceiling mirror. I had stripped off the faded sweatpants and the oversized t-shirt. I was currently zipped into a stunning, emerald-green silk dress. The fabric draped flawlessly, hugging curves I had genuinely forgotten I possessed. I looked at my reflection, seeing the ghost of the vibrant woman I had been before eight years of budgeting had ground me into dust.
“Because, Owen,” I said quietly, turning to examine the drape of the silk, “for eight years I’ve put everyone else first. Do you see this dress? It costs about the same as one of your father’s ‘business lunches’ at the downtown steakhouse.”
I turned to the personal shopper who was hovering nervously by the door. “I’ll take it. In this green, the crimson, and the black. And bring me the matching heels.”
My phone, resting on the marble counter of the fitting room, was vibrating so violently and continuously that it threatened to rattle off the edge and shatter on the floor.
I picked it up. Fourteen missed calls. Twenty-two text messages.
Daniel: HONEY PLEASE. WHERE ARE YOU?
Daniel: THE BANK JUST FLAGGED A $4,000 CHARGE AT NORDSTROM. CALL ME BACK!!!
Daniel: SARAH THIS ISN’T FUNNY. MY CARDS ARE GETTING DECLINED BECAUSE OF SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY. CALL ME NOW.
I leaned against the marble counter, admiring the crimson designer heels the attendant had just brought me, and calmly typed a response.
“So you’re working Saturday nights too? That’s an incredible level of corporate commitment, Daniel. Brian Collins must be so proud.”
He answered immediately, the typing bubbles appearing in a frantic rush.
Daniel: HONEY, PLEASE LET ME EXPLAIN. BRIAN HAS IT WRONG. I WAS AT A PRIVATE OFF-SITE MEETING.
“You can explain later,” I replied, not breaking eye contact with my own reflection in the mirror. “Right now, I’m heavily occupied spending the nest egg.”
I turned my phone on Do Not Disturb.
Our third stop was the city’s most exclusive, ridiculously overpriced salon and spa. I walked through the glass doors, trailing two happy children and a small mountain of glossy bags.
“I want everything,” I told the wide-eyed stylist at the front desk, slapping the heavy black card onto the granite counter. “Cut, color, manicure, pedicure, a facial, and whatever deep tissue treatment you have available. I don’t care what it costs. Just fix it.”
“Celebrating something?” the stylist asked, her eyes darting to the black card. She immediately signaled an assistant to pour me a crystal flute of champagne.
“Yes,” I smiled, taking a slow, glorious sip of the cold champagne. “My sudden, miraculous discovery that I can spend my own money on myself.”
For two hours, I sat in leather chairs while professionals scrubbed, painted, and styled away the exhaustion of a dead marriage. Lily sat nearby, eating complimentary macarons, watching in absolute fascination as the foils were finally removed from my hair. The dull, unwashed knot was gone, replaced by a flawless, voluminous blowout with rich, vibrant caramel highlights.
“You look different, Mom,” Lily observed softly.
“No, sweetheart,” I said, running a perfectly manicured hand through my hair, feeling the heavy, satisfying weight of the silk dress against my skin. “I look expensive.”
The final stop of the evening was a high-end French lingerie boutique.
“Wait out here on the bench with the bags,” I instructed the kids, handing Owen my phone so he could play games.
“What are you buying in there?” Owen asked, peering through the frosted glass.
I looked back over my shoulder. My hair was perfect, my makeup was flawless, and my eyes flashed with lethal, absolute intent. “Something your father won’t ever get to enjoy.”
I walked inside and spent three thousand dollars on imported lace and silk robes. It wasn’t for another man. It wasn’t to win Daniel back. It was a deeply personal, psychological purchase. It was a symbol of reclaiming my own sexuality, my own body, from a man who had casually rejected and neglected it. It was a purchase purely designed to mock his absolute loss.
I walked out of the boutique, feeling like an untouchable goddess of vengeance. I reached for my phone, taking it back from Owen.
Just as I grabbed the device, the screen lit up. It wasn’t a text from Daniel. It was an iMessage from an unknown, blocked number.
I opened it.
There was no text. There was only a single, high-resolution photograph.
My breath hitched in my throat.
The image showed Daniel, wearing a linen shirt I had ironed for him, standing on the sun-drenched balcony of a luxury resort. He was holding a glass of champagne, and he was passionately, deeply kissing a beautiful, tanned blonde woman.
I stared at the photo. I looked closely at the background. I recognized the distinct ironwork of the balcony and the logo on the champagne flute. It was the Grand Azure Resort.
A sickening, hysterical laugh bubbled up in my chest.
He hadn’t just lied. He had taken his mistress to the exact luxury resort that I had just, unwittingly, paid for using the black emergency card.
The shopping spree was over. It was time to go home. It was time for the execution.
Chapter 4: The Confrontation of the Void
The front door of our house violently burst open, the heavy wood slamming forcefully against the drywall of the entryway.
Daniel stood in the threshold, panting like a hunted animal. He was disheveled, sweating profusely through his expensive dress shirt, his tie loosened and askew. His eyes were wild, darting around the room in a blind panic.
He stopped dead in his tracks, his jaw dropping.
The living room had been entirely transformed. The plastic warzone of Legos was gone. In their place, scattered across the rug, the armchairs, and the coffee table, were dozens of glossy black, white, and gold designer shopping bags.
And sitting casually in the exact center of the leather sofa, wearing a two-thousand-dollar emerald silk dress, her hair impeccably styled, her crimson-heeled feet resting on a stack of toy boxes, was his wife.
I took a slow, deliberate sip from my glass of three-hundred-dollar Cabernet. I looked at him with the polite, mild curiosity of a stranger watching a terrible actor perform a monologue.
“Are you insane?!” Daniel finally screamed, the silence shattering. His face turned a deep, mottled purple. He kicked the door shut behind him. “I just got off the phone with the Amex concierge! You spent twenty-two thousand dollars in four hours! You maxed out the emergency account! Do you have any idea what you’ve done?!”
I didn’t flinch. I didn’t raise my voice.
“I consider discovering my husband’s infidelity an emergency, Daniel,” I said softly, swirling the dark red wine in my glass. “I told you that.”
“I can explain the missed work!” he shouted, stepping forward, pointing a shaking finger at me. He was still trying to run the playbook. He was trying to frame me as the hysterical, irrational villain. “It was a misunderstanding! I was at an off-site retreat! But you’ve lost your damn mind! I’m canceling those cards right now, and you are returning every single piece of this garbage tomorrow morning!”
I smiled. A slow, genuinely amused smile.
I reached into my new designer handbag resting beside me. I pulled out a single, glossy piece of printer paper. I had stopped at a local print shop on the way home.
I slid the paper across the smooth glass of the coffee table.
It was the high-resolution photograph of Daniel and the blonde kissing on the balcony of the Grand Azure Resort.
Daniel’s voice caught in his throat, choking off a scream. His pointing finger slowly lowered, trembling violently. The mottled purple anger drained entirely from his face, replaced by a sickly, chalky white.
“While you were busy hyperventilating over Nordstrom charges, desperately trying to get your bank on the phone, and begging your mistress to pack her bags early,” I said, my voice slicing through the heavy air of the room like a perfectly sharpened scalpel, “I wasn’t just shopping for dresses.”
He stared at the photo, paralyzed.
“The twenty-two grand on the credit card?” I continued, standing up. I towered over his shattered, pathetic ego in my crimson heels. “That’s just marital debt, sweetheart. We will split that evenly in the divorce.”
“Sarah… please,” he whispered, the reality of the apocalypse finally breaching his arrogance.
“But the one hundred and fifty thousand dollars in our joint, high-yield savings account?” I tilted my head, studying him like a bug pinned to a board. “While you were staring at fraud alerts for lingerie, I was on the phone with the most vicious divorce attorney in the city. I legally transferred my entire half of those liquid assets into an untouchable, private trust at 1:00 PM today. You are entirely locked out.”
“You… you took the savings?” he gasped, his knees buckling slightly.
“I took my severance package,” I corrected him coldly. “You don’t get to explain, Daniel. You don’t get to gaslight me. You don’t get to cancel the cards.”
I pointed toward the front window.
“Because as of an hour ago, the locks on the back and side doors of this house have been changed. Your packed suitcases are currently sitting on the front porch. And you have exactly three minutes to get off my property before the police arrive to escort you away.”
“The police?” Daniel stammered, tears of genuine, cowardly panic finally welling in his eyes. He fell to his knees on the carpet, reaching out toward me. “Sarah, please! I’m so sorry! It meant nothing! Don’t do this to our family!”
I looked down at the man I had worshipped for eight years, feeling absolutely nothing but profound disgust.
“You destroyed the family, Daniel,” I said quietly. “I just audited the wreckage.”
Right on cue, the living room window was suddenly illuminated by the harsh, sweeping flashes of red and blue lights. A police cruiser pulled into the driveway. They weren’t here for a domestic dispute; they were arriving to formally serve and enforce the emergency, temporary exclusivity-of-residence order my lawyer had flawlessly executed that very afternoon.
Checkmate.
Chapter 5: The Autopsy of a Marriage
Six months later.
The winter chill had settled over the city, but the cold outside was nothing compared to the absolute, freezing ruin of Daniel’s life.
I had heard through the grapevine of mutual acquaintances exactly where he had landed. Daniel was currently sitting on a stained, sagging mattress in a cramped, poorly insulated one-bedroom apartment on the industrial side of town. He was drowning in legal fees.
The blonde from the resort—who had apparently been under the impression that Daniel was a massive, wealthy executive who was going to leave his wife for her—had instantly blocked his number the day the divorce papers went public and his primary assets were frozen by the court.
But the true, fatal blow hadn’t even come from me.
Two weeks after the incident, Brian Collins, Daniel’s regional manager, had fired him. Brian had discovered that Daniel had been illegally expensing his illicit romantic getaways, dinners, and hotel rooms to the corporate expense account, burying them under “client acquisition” codes. That anonymous tip, complete with an itemized ledger of discrepancies, had mysteriously found its way to the corporate HR department via an untraceable email address.
Daniel was utterly, entirely ruined. Stripped of his family, his money, his mistress, and his pristine corporate reputation.
Across town, my reality was vastly, beautifully different.
The Parker house—which was now legally, solely in my name after a ruthless negotiation by my attorney—was filled with the warm scent of baking chocolate chip cookies and the sound of a cartoon blaring happily from the television.
I sat at the massive kitchen island. I was wearing the casual, ridiculously soft cashmere sweater I had bought during my spree. Spread out before me were not grocery coupons, but the glossy blueprints and financial projections for a boutique interior design firm I was launching, entirely funded by my protected half of the savings.
I looked in the mirror hanging in the hallway. The dark, purple circles of exhaustion under my eyes were permanently gone. My caramel-highlighted hair fell perfectly around my shoulders. I looked five years younger, radiating a quiet, unbreakable peace.
In the living room, Owen and Lily were sitting on the rug, meticulously snapping together the final gray and black pieces of the massive Death Star Lego set.
“Mom! We finished it!” Owen yelled, beaming with pride, carefully placing the final laser dish onto the structure.
I walked into the living room, my heels clicking softly, rhythmically against the hardwood floor. I knelt down beside them, pulling them both into a tight hug, admiring the massive plastic structure.
It wasn’t just a toy. It was a monument to the day I woke up. It was the physical manifestation of the exact moment I realized my worth.
I looked around the quiet, safe living room. I felt a fleeting, phantom ache in my chest for the marriage I thought I had possessed, the illusion of the happy family. I acknowledged the pain, respected it for the lesson it taught me, and let it pass like a cloud over the sun. I had lost a chronic liar, a parasite who fed on my energy, but in the process, I had found myself.
My phone, resting on the kitchen counter, began to ring.
I stood up and answered it.
“Sarah? It’s Brian Collins.”
I paused. “Hello, Brian. How can I help you?”
“Well,” Brian started, sounding incredibly impressed. “I know this is highly unusual. But during the subpoena process of the divorce, our corporate legal team had to review the financial untangling you executed to protect your assets. The precision, the speed, and the sheer strategic brilliance of how you locked down those accounts… frankly, it was terrifyingly impressive.”
I smiled, leaning against the granite counter. “Thank you, Brian. Survival is a great motivator.”
“Listen,” he continued. “We have an opening for a senior financial risk consultant. We need someone who can spot corporate bleed, someone who doesn’t miss a single detail. I want to offer you a highly lucrative consulting contract. Are you interested?”
I looked at the blueprints for my new life. “Brian,” I said, a genuine laugh escaping my lips, “I would be absolutely delighted.”
Chapter 6: The Priceless Horizon
Three years later.
The afternoon sun reflected blindingly off the towering glass facades of the downtown financial district. The air was crisp, vibrating with the energy of commerce and ambition.
I stepped out of the back of a sleek, black luxury sedan. It wasn’t leased. I had purchased it outright with the quarterly profits from my now-booming consulting firm. I was wearing a sharply tailored, flawless white designer suit, carrying a leather briefcase. I was no longer a martyr. I was the undisputed architect of my own destiny.
As I walked toward the grand revolving doors of my corporate office building, I paused at the crosswalk, waiting for the light to change.
Standing on the opposite corner, holding a cheap, paper cup of deli coffee, was Daniel.
I barely recognized him. He looked a decade older than his actual age. His once-thick hair was thinning drastically. The bespoke, tailored navy suits were gone, replaced by a cheap, off-the-rack jacket that was frayed at the cuffs. But the most striking change was in his posture. The arrogant spark, the absolute sense of entitlement that used to radiate from his eyes, had been permanently, violently extinguished.
He looked up from his coffee. He saw me.
He froze. His jaw went completely slack as he took in the radiant, powerful, untouchable woman standing across the asphalt from him. The woman who used to fold his laundry, scrub his floors, and wait silently for his permission to exist.
The walk sign illuminated with a sharp chirp.
I stepped confidently into the crosswalk.
As we passed each other in the exact center of the street, Daniel took a hesitant step toward me. He opened his mouth, his eyes filled with a suffocating mixture of profound regret and pathetic awe.
“Sarah…” he breathed, his voice barely audible over the traffic. “My god… you look…”
I didn’t stop. I didn’t break my stride. My heart rate didn’t elevate a single, solitary beat.
I turned my head slightly, offering him a brief, polite, and utterly empty smile—the exact kind of hollow, dismissive smile one gives a confused tourist asking for directions to a place you’ve never heard of.
“Excuse me,” I said smoothly, my voice carrying the chilling, absolute apathy of a stranger.
I stepped around him without a second glance. I didn’t yell. I didn’t gloat. I simply treated him like the irrelevant ghost he had become.
I pushed through the heavy glass of the revolving doors and walked into the grand, marble lobby of my building, leaving him standing alone in the exhaust fumes of the street, drowning in the reality of what he had thrown away.
Self-worth is not a savings account. It is not something you lock away for a rainy day while someone else spends your sunshine. It is something you wear like armor, every single day.
As I stepped into the private, glass-walled elevator that would take me up to my penthouse office, I opened my designer clutch. I reached into the zippered pocket and pulled out the metal, black emergency credit card. The account was long closed, the balances settled, but I had kept the physical card as a souvenir.
I looked at it. It was no longer a symbol of my husband’s financial abuse or my own vengeance. It was simply the master key that I had used to unlock my cage.
With a quiet, triumphant laugh, I gripped the card with both hands and snapped the heavy plastic clean in half. I dropped the broken pieces into the small trash receptacle in the corner of the elevator as the doors closed.
I didn’t need an emergency card anymore. Because I was no longer afraid of the storm. I was the storm.
If you want more stories like this, or if you’d like to share your thoughts about what you would have done in my situation, I’d love to hear from you. Your perspective helps these stories reach more people, so don’t be shy about commenting or sharing.
