Happiness Adrift: He Heaped Insults, I Endured for the Children
This story weighs down my chest like a coat sodden by English rain, and though the urge is to keep it folded away, I find myself compelled to let it drift out in odd, dream-soaked fragments. Perhaps Ive convinced myself others weather worse storms, but tonight, as streetlamps blur into puddles outside, I must murmur the truth: I am not happy. Deep down, happiness always seemed to pass me by, as invisible and fleeting as breath on a frosty morning.
I married Edward thirty years agonot for love, but for what seemed safe, accepting my parents wisdom that hes steady, darling, youll want for nothing. So I did as I was told. At the time, it seemed love was mere decoration, unnecessary beside the stone heft of stability.
What a foolish notion that turned out to be.
Humiliations, the daily tea
Even in our youth, Edward saw no reason to restrain his mockery, letting it flow as freely as ale at the Kings Arms. She cant even boil an egg! hed declare with a wink to his mates, laughter bubbling over their Sunday roasts.
In bed, shes as wooden as that old elm at the end of the garden, he scoffed, oblivious to the way shame stung my cheeks, wilted beside him.
I held my tongue. I endured.
I triedoh, I tried, baking his favourite shepherds pie, smoothing away his worries, hoping to earn the love I thought must be hidden somewhere. But what I received in return was a chill colder than a November wind: disdain, silence, a look that sliced through my efforts.
Then, our children arrived.
For them, I thought, Ill weather it all.
Under one roof, in parallel worlds
When our sons grew up, their schoolbags hung up and gone, Edward dropped even the pretence of needing me. He had a conservatory builta space just for himself, filled with his own air. Outwardly, to neighbours and gossipers at the Post Office, we looked the perfect English family, all neat hedges and shared front door. We dwelled beneath the same roof, shared Sunday lunch for appearances sake.
But no one knew even our fridge was partitioned.
He scribbled E.S. on every tub of cheese and pickle, decreeing I not touch a crumb from his section.
I survived as I couldporridge, a potato, sometimes bean soup for supper.
The kitchen was his fiefdom. I slipped in when he was out, hurried meals on a tray balanced in my lap upstairs. If I crossed his path at the wrong hour, his glare was sharp as a thunderclap over the Downs.
Hed take his seat with Blackstick Blue, Dorset salami, a bottle of claret, and not so much as a crust was offered to me.
I wandered the house, weightless as a wisp of fog.
Indifference tinged with loathing
Occasionally, we ventured to Tesco togethereach filling a basket, neither glancing at the others. Even the water, gas and council tax bills were split, down to the penny.
Still, to outsiders, to our sons (who rarely visitedbusy, distant), we were simply mum and dad. No one sensed the frostbitten silence.
And I, like a statue in the churchyard, endured.
His silent scorn, the iciness in his eyes, the weekends that twisted our house into battleground. Those were worst of all.
Youre nothing
He stalked every room as if they were his kingdom. An errant mug left on his half of the table inspired thunderous rage.
Useless cow! he would roar, voice shaking the glass.
Dull as a stone in the lane! Thick as two short planks!
I balled my fists, bit back retorts again and again.
Then, one day, something inside me fractured.
He was bellowing againI no longer recall the cause. I watched him bluster across the kitchen, red-faced. A vision flickeredsmashing a vase, letting him taste even a splinter of my pain.
But I didnt.
I left the room instead, quietly, retreating upstairs.
No shouts, no tears. Simply a quiet where I realised: he was already nothing to me.
Fear and frost, yet still I stay
So here I remain, in this draughty house, under the same roof.
Will I ever have the nerve to leave? Im not sure.
I am afraid.
But even more, I am afraid of dying here, never having brushed the edge of joy.
I pray for one thing onlythat my sons choose another path, that they live amongst warmth, real love and soft respect.
And me
For now, I merely drift onward, a shadow at the edge of a dream.





