A Moment of Weakness, Then a Plea for Remarriage
That day, I was truly exhausted. It was a long, drawn-out day, my work was a mess, and my mood was inexplicably low. I had sent our child back to my parents’ home for a few days for a change of scenery. So, after work, I allowed myself to breathe, to release some of the congestion in my heart.
I walked into my usual bar, the place I occasionally visit when I need a blend of sufficient peace and noise to stop my mind from overthinking. I ordered a couple of light cocktails, planning to stay just for a while and then leave. But life is truly unpredictable, because when I looked up, I saw the person I thought I wouldn’t run into again for many years: my ex-husband.

Initially, I just intended to smile and greet him, exchange a few polite pleasantries. We divorced peacefully, without arguments or blame. We parted like two old friends, simply because our life directions diverged, and the accumulated exhaustion meant neither of us had the strength to save it anymore. So, talking to each other again wasn’t overly awkward.
But then, the alcohol flowed, and hearts opened up. Our conversation quickly shifted from casual check-ins to sharing the pressures and changes we’d experienced over the past six months. I don’t remember exactly how long we talked, only the feeling of two people reuniting after a long separation, where all natural defenses simply dropped away.
I truly didn’t expect to run into my ex-husband in a bar.
Finally, neither of us could resist finding a nearby hotel. I won’t blame the alcohol, because the truth is we were both sober at the time. Perhaps, deep down, there was still a place in our hearts for each other, but before, due to too much pressure, neither of us dared to face it.
After we were intimate, we held each other and slept as if there had been no divorce six months ago. I clearly remember the familiar warmth of lying next to him. His old scent, his old embrace, his old breath… all of it brought me a strange sense of ease.
In the middle of the night, I woke up, needing water. But just as I sat up, I was startled by a piercing scream. I turned and saw him curled up, breathing rapidly, sweating profusely as if he had just run a long distance. I was about to shake him awake when I heard him sobbing in his dream.
“Please, I beg you… give me time to figure it out… I’ll pay you back soon… principal and interest…”
Those indistinct words mixed with the sobbing sent a chill down my spine. That wasn’t the voice of someone having a frivolous nightmare; it was the voice of someone in despair.
I sat motionless for a few seconds, my heart pounding with worry. Then, as a reflex, I grabbed my phone and recorded it. Not because of prying curiosity, but because I knew his nature—no matter how heavy the burden, he would hide it. And I needed proof so he couldn’t lie to me and say, “I’m fine.”
The next morning, when he woke up, I gently asked him about it. He looked at me, paused for a second, then forced a smile and said it was just a silly dream. But I had lived with him for years; I knew just by looking into his eyes. I played the recording. He was silent for a long time, a silence that made me feel both angry and sorry for him.
Finally, he sighed and told me the truth.
In a haze of love and alcohol, my ex-husband and I rushed into each other like moths to a flame.
It turned out that about a year ago, he suffered massive investment losses. He took out a huge loan with high interest, and the interest compounded daily. He was afraid I would worry, afraid our child would suffer, afraid of dragging the whole family into the abyss with him. So, he deliberately picked fights with me, creating conflicts over the smallest things, pushing the marriage to a dead end so that I would be the one to let go. He thought this way he could “protect” me and our child.
Hearing him say that, I burst into tears. Crying because I loved him, because I was angry at him, and because I was hurt by the months we misunderstood each other without being able to speak the truth. Crying because those senseless arguments from before were just a shell to conceal his despair.
He recounted that after the divorce, he worked day and night to repay the debt. There were times he thought he would collapse, but thinking of our child and my life, he persevered.
The more I listened, the more my heart ached. The man I had been with for so many years, who was once my pillar of support, had been struggling alone in the dark to the point of sobbing in his dreams.
That night and the days that followed, his story lingered in my mind. I thought about the days we were happy, the time we spent arguing, the evening we reunited at the bar… and I realized that my feelings for him had never gone away; we were just too exhausted to recognize each other.
Finally, I met my ex-husband and proposed:
“How about… we try one more time? Let’s remarry. I want to go through this with you. And, I also want to give our child a complete family again.”
He looked at me in astonishment, his eyes red-rimmed, stammering as he asked if I was sure. But I knew I had never been clearer in my life.
Life is long, but happiness is short. Sometimes, we have to take a big detour to realize that the person by our side during sadness, anger, or despair… is still the one our heart has never truly let go of. And I only hope that this time, we will hold hands tighter, so we don’t lose each other again