This is a quiet reflection on a difficult season — the sudden end of a marriage, layered losses, and the long path back to solid ground. I’m sharing it not to revisit old pain, but because writing it helped me make sense of everything, and I hope it might offer some comfort or clarity to anyone else walking through their own storm. Sometimes life rearranges itself in ways you never see coming.
What begins as a steady chapter can suddenly shift, leaving you carrying multiple kinds of grief at once — the end of a marriage, the loss of a beloved companion, and the quiet ache of being shut out from mourning someone you truly cared about. This is my story of navigating that upheaval, the heavy layers it brought, and the slow, honest work of reclaiming my own ground.
It happened on the evening of my grandson’s birthday. The ground beneath me simply opened. My wife ended the relationship without warning. She was out of the house that same night. Two weeks later, the movers arrived to take her belongings. Two months after she moved out, my dog Charlie passed. His health had already started to decline in the months before she left, but it worsened fairly rapidly once she was gone. When his health declined, I was in day-to-day caretaker mode looking after him. Then, only two weeks later, I lost a young woman I had come to love deeply as a stepdaughter.
She was a talented musician, full of fire and creativity. As a musician myself, that was what bonded us early on, going back to 2018. We had a real adult-to-adult connection built on music and mutual respect. I had jammed with her, sent her gear, encouraged her, and I had promised to collaborate with her on her unreleased demos. Her loss hit me hard. What made it even harder was feeling quietly shut out from mourning someone I truly cared about — only an Instagram post discovered by chance announced her death. It left me grieving someone I truly cared about while feeling shut out from any shared sorrow.