Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Hyatt Bets on Growth of All-Inclusives With $2.6B Playa Hotels Acquisition

    February 10, 2025

    Inside Coors Light’s Super Bowl campaign: CMO explains its formula to stand out

    February 10, 2025

    LinkedIn’s CISO and other executives break down how to get into the lucrative field of cybersecurity

    February 10, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    The Void Click
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • World News
    • Business News
    • Finanical News
    • Contact
    The Void Click
    Home»Business News»I wasn’t prepared for the loneliness I felt when my ex and I separated. When my son isn’t here, the silence in my house is overwhelming.
    Business News

    I wasn’t prepared for the loneliness I felt when my ex and I separated. When my son isn’t here, the silence in my house is overwhelming.

    VoidBy VoidFebruary 9, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    The author (not pictured) finds the silence in her house overwhelming after her separation.

    Getty Images

    • My soon-to-be ex-husband and I separated last year, and adjusting to an empty house has been hard.
    • When my son isn’t with me, the silence in the house is nearly unbearable.
    • I’m learning to cope with the silence and the loneliness that comes along with it.

    No one warns you about the silence. The kind that seeps into the spaces you didn’t expect — between the couch cushions, in the scattered toys left on the floor, in the glass of wine you poured because it felt like something you should do. The one that’s still there the next morning, stale and untouched — a quiet reminder that you don’t even know what you want, what you need.

    It’s there because your 3-year-old is at his dad’s, his half-empty juice still sitting on the table like he’ll be right back for it. But it’s not just the absence of noise — it’s the unbearable weight of it. A relentless, invisible kind of torture that makes you hear things you’d rather ignore — doubts, regrets, and the debilitating ache of wondering who the hell you are now.

    I didn’t know what to expect when my ex and I separated

    When my soon-to-be ex-husband and I separated in June of last year, I expected challenges, of course, but nothing prepared me for the deafening quiet of a half-empty home. In the beginning, I tried to avoid it. I made plans on the nights I didn’t have Joey, surrounding myself with the friends who stuck around — the ones who didn’t scatter when my life got messy. The others? They didn’t just disappear — they turned my painful reality into a high school drama, piecing together their version of my situation without ever asking me for mine. Their absence had a weight of its own.

    When no one was around, likely busy with their spouses or less-depressing lives, I’d ask my best friend, who lives in Maine, for binge-worthy show recommendations. Whether it was Yellowjackets or a true-crime documentary, I appreciated the opportunity to get lost in someone else’s misery because mine was too much to bear.

    When Joey is with his dad, his things become both a source of comfort and a sharp reminder of his absence. I say the names of his monster trucks aloud as I tidy up — Boneshaker, Mega Wrex, Gravedigger, El Toro Loco, Tiger Shark — hearing Joey’s voice in my mind, the way he announces each one with wild enthusiasm.

    I pick up his Batman cape, crusted with who-knows-what, and toss it in the laundry so it’ll be clean when he comes back. I throw out hardened Play-Doh blobs, disassemble the Magna Tiles castle he built for me, fold his Paw Patrol underwear, make his bed. But these tasks — they aren’t chores. They’re how I hold onto him when he’s not here.

    The silence is difficult to deal with, but it’s getting easier

    Sometimes, the silence feels like my worst enemy. I run the dishwasher with barely a few plates inside, just to fill the quiet. I do laundry, not because it’s piling up, but because the sound offers a strange comfort. Or, I write — pouring my pain onto the page because it feels like the only productive thing I can possibly do. I write about regret, about the choices that led me here, about loneliness and its many forms. But I also write about hope — for Joey, for myself.

    In therapy, I once confessed that I didn’t know what to do with myself when I was alone. My therapist, Meaghan, said, “No one ever taught you how to be sad.” And she was right. My life was filled with distractions, solutions to sadness rather than space for it. If I felt pain, I fled. If discomfort crept in, I’d find a way to replace it. But now, avoidance isn’t an option. I know I must learn to sit with my sadness — not as an enemy to defeat, but as a reality to accept.

    And I seem to be getting closer.

    One night recently, I was alone in the kitchen when Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams” came on, and before I knew it, I was twirling. I spun in circles, arms outstretched, belting, “But listen carefully to the sound of your loneliness… in the stillness of remembering what you had…and what you lost…” And there I was — singing, swaying, smiling — in a space of my own. A space I could fill with whatever the hell I wanted. And I wasn’t scared.

    The silence isn’t nearly as suffocating as it was. It feels different now — less like an empty void and more like a new territory I’m slowly learning to fill with my own voice — a voice I’m finally listening to — without someone telling me it’s too dramatic, too needy, too much. And in this quiet, I’m discovering not just how to be alone, but how to be me. And maybe, for the first time in my life, I’m starting to understand who that really is.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Void

    Related Posts

    Inside Coors Light’s Super Bowl campaign: CMO explains its formula to stand out

    February 10, 2025

    LinkedIn’s CISO and other executives break down how to get into the lucrative field of cybersecurity

    February 10, 2025

    I moved from Miami to a small town in Central Florida to save money. I love it so much that I’m still here 15 years later.

    February 10, 2025

    Comments are closed.

    Search the Void
    Recent News
    • Hyatt Bets on Growth of All-Inclusives With $2.6B Playa Hotels Acquisition February 10, 2025
    • Inside Coors Light’s Super Bowl campaign: CMO explains its formula to stand out
      February 10, 2025
    • LinkedIn’s CISO and other executives break down how to get into the lucrative field of cybersecurity
      February 10, 2025
    Our Picks
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Don't Miss

    Hyatt Bets on Growth of All-Inclusives With $2.6B Playa Hotels Acquisition

    Finanical News February 10, 20252 Mins Read

    Anna Rose Layden / Getty ImagesKey TakeawaysHyatt is continuing to bet on the all-inclusive industry…

    Inside Coors Light’s Super Bowl campaign: CMO explains its formula to stand out

    February 10, 2025

    LinkedIn’s CISO and other executives break down how to get into the lucrative field of cybersecurity

    February 10, 2025

    Trump birthright citizenship executive order blocked by third federal judge

    February 10, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from Void!

    Click the Void

    News, beautifully simple.

    Stay informed with the stories that matter. Void Click brings you the latest updates with clarity and ease, so you can explore the world without the clutter. From global events to tech innovations, our news is designed for a seamless reading experience—one click at a time.

    Discover news that feels effortless with Void Click.

    Our Picks

    Hyatt Bets on Growth of All-Inclusives With $2.6B Playa Hotels Acquisition

    February 10, 2025

    Nokia Names Intel’s AI, Data Center Head as New CEO

    February 10, 2025

    Steel, Aluminum Company Stocks Jump as Trump Plans 25% Tariffs on Imports

    February 10, 2025
    1 2 3 … 38 Next
    Search the Void
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • World News
    • Business News
    • Finanical News
    • Privacy Policy
    • For Advertisers
    © Copyright Prices.com 2021 - 2024. All Rights Reserved!

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.