Right after our wedding, my husband and I just crashed in the hotel room, totally exhausted. It was our first night as a married couple, but I was just too tired. He seemed OK with it, so we went to sleep. Suddenly, I woke up in the middle of the night because the bed was shaking! I turned over and couldnโt believe my eyes! Jeez. He was sitting cross-legged on the bed, facing away from me, with his phone lighting up his face.
He was grinning like a kid. Texting furiously. And chuckling.
I said, โArvind? What are you doing?โ
He jumped, fumbled the phone, and tried to tuck it under the blanket. โOh, sorry! Didnโt mean to wake you. Just replying to my cousin. Heโs teasing me about something dumb.โ
I wanted to believe him. I did. It had been a whirlwind of a dayโbig wedding, so many people, both of us running on fumes. But something about the way he tried to hide the phone, the guilty smile, the silence that followedโฆ I didnโt sleep much after that.
The next morning, I brushed it off. Told myself I was being paranoid. But something had shifted. Not dramatically, justโฆ tilted. The kind of tiny shift you feel in your stomach, like when a flight has minor turbulenceโnot a crash, just a jolt.
We flew to Bali for our honeymoon the next day. On the surface, everything looked perfect. Beautiful beaches, candlelit dinners, couple massages. But he was always on his phone. Every time I looked up, there it wasโglowing in his palm.
Heโd laugh at things he didnโt explain. Say โitโs workโ or โjust the guys being idiots.โ Once, I glanced at the screen and saw a name: Naina.
When I asked who she was, he said, โOld college friend. Sheโs engaged, chill.โ
I wanted to trust him. I really did. But deep down, a little voice whispered: somethingโs off.
Back home, life picked up speed. We moved into our new flat in Pune, started building routines. I threw myself into workโmarketing for a travel companyโwhile he was setting up his fintech startup with a couple of buddies. We didnโt have much time for each other, but I figured thatโs normal early in a marriage. Everyone adjusts, right?
But the distance kept growing. Not dramatic, not hostileโjustโฆ invisible space. Iโd make dinner, and heโd say, โAlready ate.โ Iโd ask if he wanted to watch something together, and heโd shrug, โIโm beat, maybe later.โ Always something.
One night, about four months in, I came home early from work. Power outage in the office, so I figured Iโd surprise him with his favorite mutton curry from that tiny place near JM Road. His car wasnโt in the building. I texted him. No reply.
But the flat door was unlocked.
When I stepped in, I heard a womanโs voice. Laughing.
I froze.
It came from the bedroom.
I walked like my feet werenโt mine. Just drifted down the hall, holding the takeout bag like a shield.
And then I saw her.
Not in bed. Nothing dramatic like that. She was sitting on our window ledge, sipping chai. In my cup. Arvind stood nearby, leaning on the wardrobe, shirtless. Just boxers.
He turned and saw me.
First panic. Then, like a switch, a casual shrug.
โOh, hey. Youโre back early.โ
I couldnโt speak.
The womanโshe looked barely 23โstood up, flustered, and mumbled something about โheading out.โ
He didnโt stop her. Didnโt even introduce her. Just scratched his neck and said, โItโs not what you think.โ
I donโt even remember what I said. Something like, โWeโre married, Arvind. What IS it then?โ
He sighed, as if I was the one being dramatic.
โSheโs just a friend. We were catching up. You overthink stuff.โ
I walked out.
Went straight to my cousinโs place and cried until I couldnโt breathe.
The next few days were a blur. He texted. Called. Sent a voice note saying, โIf you walk out over nothing, itโs on you.โ My family kept asking questions I didnโt have answers to. His mom called me saying, โBeta, young men do silly things. Donโt throw it all away over ego.โ
Ego?
I didnโt go back.
Instead, I got a lawyer. Quietly. Nothing aggressiveโjust information. I wasnโt ready for a full-blown divorce yet. I just wanted clarity. Some ground to stand on.
A week later, I was at a cafรฉ near Koregaon Park when someone tapped my shoulder.
It was the girl.
The one from my flat.
She looked nervous. Said her name was Urja.
โI didnโt know he was married,โ she said.
I blinked. โExcuse me?โ
โHe told me he was engaged, but it wasnโt serious. Said his parents were forcing it. He said itโd be over soon.โ
I swear I felt the floor spin.
Urja bit her lip. โI only found out yesterday. A mutual friend mentioned your wedding photos.โ
She showed me her texts with him. Screenshots. One said, โSheโs just for now. Iโm working on getting out clean.โ
I didnโt cry this time.
I thanked her.
And I finally filed for divorce. No drama, no yelling. Just a clean, final cut.
Arvind didnโt fight it. Didnโt even show up for half the court dates. His parents were furiousโmore at me for making it public. I didnโt care.
I moved back in with my folks for a while. Got a transfer to Mumbai. Tried to rebuild.
The months that followed werenโt easy. There were whispers. People said I gave up too fast. That I shouldโve โadjustedโ more. But then, something happened that shifted everything.
About ten months after the divorce, I got a message on LinkedIn from an event coordinator named Prisha. She asked if Iโd speak at a small womenโs panel about โstarting over.โ I was hesitant. Who wants to hear from a girl who couldnโt make her marriage last a year?
But I said yes.
That evening changed everything.
I spoke honestlyโabout confusion, shame, trust broken in layers. About how sometimes, the betrayal isnโt violent or obviousโitโs soft, slow, and disguised as normal.
After the talk, a woman in her forties came up to me. Said, โThank you. Iโve been married twenty years and only now realized what you put into words. I thought I was just being โtoo sensitive.โโ
I went home that night and criedโbut this time, it felt like a release.
I started writing. Short pieces. Personal essays. Just reflections on life, love, marriage, disappointment. I didnโt expect anything from it. But people started reading. Sharing.
Somewhere in that healing, something beautiful began.
I wasnโt just survivingโI was creating.
A year later, I was invited to contribute to a book. Then another. I started giving talks. Workshops for women navigating transitions. And slowly, the shame melted. Not overnightโbut gradually, like ice thawing in sunlight.
Then came the unexpected twist.
Two years post-divorce, I was invited to speak at a fintech leadership summitโironically, because of a viral essay Iโd written on emotional resilience. I accepted, not knowing who else would be there.
Arvind was on the panel before mine.
I saw him from backstage. He looked older, sharper in a suit, but oddly tired. A womanโprobably his assistantโhovered nearby. I didnโt avoid him. Didnโt hide. Just waited for my turn.
He saw me. Blinked like he wasnโt sure I was real.
We didnโt speak.
I took the stage, gave my talk, and walked off to applause. I didnโt glance back.
Later, I found a note slipped into my conference kit. No name. Just:
โYou became everything I pretended to be. I hope youโre well.โ
I never replied. Not because I was angry. But because I was free.
Now, three years out, I live in Bandra with my rescue dog, Miso. I run a small community for women navigating new beginnings. We meet monthlyโsometimes for chai, sometimes for grief, sometimes just to laugh.
I still get messages from strangers saying, โYour story helped me leave,โ or โYou said what I never could.โ And every time, I feel that knot in my chest loosen a little more.
Sometimes people ask if Iโll marry again. Maybe. Maybe not. Love isnโt off the table. But itโll have to be realโmessy, honest, mutual. Iโve learned Iโd rather be alone than lonely with someone else.
If youโre reading this and wondering whether to trust your gutโplease do.
Sometimes the scariest step away from someone is the first one. But it can lead to everything you didnโt know you deserved.
Please share this if it hit home. You never know who needs to hear it. โค๏ธ




