For a long time, I convinced myself survival meant pretending she no longer existed. I told myself the only way to move forward was to erase her completely from my life, to reduce her to nothing more than the woman who betrayed me.
Hatred felt simpler that way.
Cleaner.
But grief changes people in ways they never expect. It strips away pride, certainty, and the comforting stories we tell ourselves just to survive painful truths.
And eventually, standing beside her hospital bed, watching her sleep with swollen eyes and empty arms, I finally understood something devastating:
He hadn’t just betrayed us.
He had divided us.
While we blamed each other, he walked away untouched, leaving behind two women carrying different versions of the same heartbreak. He had isolated us emotionally, carefully turning pain into resentment so neither of us would notice how deeply manipulated we both were.
Looking at her then, she no longer felt like my enemy.
She looked exhausted.
Broken.
Human.
Taking her home afterward wasn’t some dramatic act of forgiveness or instant healing. There were no speeches. No magical moment where the pain disappeared.
It was simply a choice.
A choice to stop letting hatred define what remained of our lives.
At first, everything between us felt fragile. Conversations stayed short and cautious, crowded with words we both avoided saying out loud. Some wounds were still too fresh to touch directly.
But healing rarely arrives dramatically.
Instead, it appeared quietly through ordinary moments.
Shared coffee early in the morning.
Long silences that no longer felt hostile.
Her hand reaching for mine during difficult memories.
Unexpected laughter returning in tiny bursts before either of us realized we were smiling again.
Slowly, we stopped seeing each other only through the damage he caused.
Instead, we began recognizing the survival inside one another.
Neither of us could undo the past.
Neither of us could erase what happened.
But together, we started building something entirely new from the ruins left behind.
Not perfect.
Not easy.
Not untouched by pain.
But honest.
And maybe that matters more.
Because sometimes healing does not mean forgetting betrayal ever happened.
Sometimes it simply means refusing to let it destroy every part of you forever.