Saying Goodbye To The Other Woman
I hated her with every fiber of my being
In the beginning, she was merely a symbol, a wrecking ball that invaded our family and smashed it apart. I didn’t ask what her name was at first. If I knew her name, that would make her a real person who slept with my husband without a thought for his wife or his two young sons. In my grief was a speck of doubt that this was really happening and that my husband was walking out of our front door after sixteen years to be with her.
He came back to me twice, the guilt of leaving his family behind weighing on him, but he never stopped seeing her. I sent him to a hotel to think about and decide who he really wanted so he could stop wasting everyone’s time. I prayed he would pick me and the boys, but the hotel he stayed at ended up being his new girlfriend’s apartment.
When I found out, I screamed at him for the first time in my life, my voice breaking as I called him every bad name I could come up with. I said he was a walking midlife crisis, a sad cliche and a living sexual harassment suit because she’d been the receptionist in his office when he started sleeping with her.
One of the times we were together after the initial breakup, I asked him questions about her. I was starving for information, finally needing to know every last detail about this girl who replaced me.
“What color is her hair?” I asked him.
“Pink,” my husband replied proudly, clearly still smitten. He was always so easily impressed. There was no way I could compete with this girl who made him feel cool and young again. He bragged about going to clubs, staying out all night and then hitting Denny’s at 3:00 a.m. It was clear he felt cheated by the years he spent with me and was making up for lost time.
They moved in together permanently after the second time he left me. By then, she had a name, Michaela. I looked up her full name on the Internet and found a few pictures of her. She had tattoos and the aforementioned pink hair, but her face was plain, almost homely. Still, she made my husband feel alive again, and I couldn’t compete with that.
When I filed for divorce, I drove to my husband’s office to give him the news knowing she would be there. She was sitting at a desk in the front, and when she saw me her body stiffened and her jaw dropped. When I asked to speak to my husband, she barely squeaked out “one moment, please.” I decided I liked her being scared of me.
I remember my husband appeared from his office almost instantly as if he was a fireman rushing to put out a five alarm. When we were in the elevator, I turned to him with a guilty smile.
“Sorry, had to be done.”
He nodded his head. He understood it could have been much worse. He’d gotten off easy.
There were days I had to drop off the boys to them, my new ex-husband and his mistress. His patio was visible from the street, so I got a bird’s-eye view of Michaela interacting with my sons, playing with their toys and hugging them as they laughed and squirmed. If she dared to look at me in my car as I drove away, she got the pleasure of my middle finger as I squealed out of my parking space.
She came for my husband, and now she had my boys. I wished for horrible things to happen to her. I wanted Derek to cheat on her as he did to me and break her black scummy heart.
She took my place at the weekly Sunday dinner table at his mother’s house. One night my soon to be former mother-in-law took pity on me and invited me over instead when her son and Michaela wouldn’t be there because the girl was sick.
“Good,” I said with my pain still fresh. “I hope she dies.”
He told me during a conversation about the boys. Michaela was having bad headaches, and the doctors found out there was a tumor behind her right eye. She had to have a biopsy.
“We hope it’s benign,” my ex said. “If it is, we’re going to get matching tattoos to celebrate.”
I didn’t respond. I was sure it would be benign. Michaela was in her twenties, and her luck seemed incredible in every other way. She’d lucked into my husband and my family and basically my entire life. What more did she want?
The tumor was not benign. It was malignant cancer that spread throughout her body, including into her bones. I told my ex-husband how sorry I was. I still hated the girl, but the news floored me. How could somebody face death when she had her whole life ahead of her? As much as I wanted her out of our sons’ lives, I honestly didn’t want her to actually die.
The doctors gave Michaela only weeks to live. I found out she’d also had cancer as a child, and they believed it was a resurgence from that episode. My ex kept me posted on her condition, not because I wanted to know but so he could have somebody to talk to about it. I struggled to put my feelings aside and be as supportive as I could, but listening to details about her made me feel like throwing up.
I’d carried my hate for her around like a shield for so long that I was used to the weight. During that time, I no longer wished for my husband to come back to me. He wasn’t the loving man I’d once known. In fact, he seemed like a completely different person, and I knew we were no longer compatible.
Still, with the death of that dream, my feelings about Michaela never wavered. She’d stolen my family without a second thought… period. That made her enemy number one, and that would never change even if I was getting ready to move on by myself.
It was a Saturday night when my little boys came to me. They stood next to each other at the foot of my bed looking sad and confused.
“Did you know Michaela is going to die?” my older son, Brandon, asked me.
“Yes I do,” I answered quietly.
The boys looked at each other, then back at me. It was the first time I’d thought of the effect Michaela’s death would have on them. She was there on weekends when the boys were with their father. She played with them and cuddled them and gently teased them. Now she was about to disappear from their lives while they were too little to understand.
My younger son, Shawn, piped up. “Is she going to be a beautiful angel in heaven? That’s what dad told us.”
I swallowed my anger and sarcasm, and it tasted bitter on my tongue.
“Yes she is,” I told my son as he wriggled his way into my lap.
The boys were full of questions. Does Michaela have to die? Can’t a doctor save her? What if we wished really hard? Can we pray to Jesus?
In their world, people didn’t just go away forever. In their innocent eyes, there was always hope. Except this time there was no hope to comfort them. My heart broke to see their confusion and helplessness.
I scooped up both boys in my arms. “What if we made something to help her feel better?”
Their faces lit up, excited to help. The boys followed me into the kitchen. I pulled a basket from the top shelf of the pantry and lined it with bright red tissue paper.
“What do you guys think would make Michaela happy?”
“I know,” Shawn shouted. He ran off in the direction of his room and came back with a small stuffed monkey. It was one of his favorites. He knelt down and set it into the basket tenderly. Then he stood up and turned back to me.
“What else?”
Brendan and Shayne each drew her pictures we stuffed into colorful envelopes and put in the basket. I put in some Clinique moisturizer I hadn’t opened yet along with a small African Violet plant I’d been looking after. A few more stuffed animals made the basket nearly overflow. The boys eagerly chatted about when they would give it to her and how surprised she would be.
Before we knew it, we were finished.
“Doesn’t it need a card?” Brandon asked me.
I grabbed an index card and a Sharpie from my desk. The boys hovered over me around the dining room table.
“What should we write?” I asked them.
“How about get well soon?” Shawn offered.
I hugged my boy. Neither of them really understood how final this was.
“How about…we love you, Michaela?”
“Yeah!” both boys shouted in unison. Brandon wrote it because he was the oldest and knew how to spell. Shawn added a smiley face and some X’s and O’s. We stood over the basket looking at our handiwork, not saying anything. There would be time to have a real talk with them, but they were caught up in that moment because they were helping Michaela feel better.
That was all that mattered, for all three of us.
Michaela died about a month later at her father’s house out of state. She told my ex to thank us for the basket, which the boys told me she loved. My ex had a feeling it wasn’t the stuffed animals and pictures she loved as much as the idea of a truce between us. He may have been right, but either way I was okay with it.
I realized how much of my anger was misdirected. I blamed Michaela for blowing up my marriage when there were already leaks in the ship between me and my husband. She didn’t owe me her loyalty when she met him. He’s the one who made the promises on our wedding day, and in the end he was the one who broke them.
It hurts when somebody dies so young. Sometimes life seems so unfair, and I don’t understand it just as much as my children didn’t. In the end, though, putting aside my grievances doesn’t make me a hero. It just makes me human.
About the Creator
Glenna Gill
Former victim and CPTSD sufferer, current badass!
I'll tell you the honest truth about living with mental illness, addiction, being part of a dysfunctional family and surviving it all with a smile.
Wife to one, mom to three, friend to all.
Reader insights
Outstanding
Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!
Top insights
Heartfelt and relatable
The story invoked strong personal emotions
Eye opening
Niche topic & fresh perspectives
Excellent storytelling
Original narrative & well developed characters
Easy to read and follow
Well-structured & engaging content
Compelling and original writing
Creative use of language & vocab
Masterful proofreading
Zero grammar & spelling mistakes
On-point and relevant
Writing reflected the title & theme



Comments (28)
I don't know what words to write to express how I felt after reading your story. It was sad, emotional, and powerful, and yes, looking back, as you say, what you did was 'just being human', but it takes time to work through betrayal, and time to see how we project our hurt. I hope you and your boys are in a good place now in Aug 2025.
This was how I was feeling about my ex and the younger girl he cheated on me with. An older woman at my job told me exactly what you said don't be mad at her it was him I should have been ,ad with. I wished death and somethings worse than death. But thankfully I grew through that I am better now. Thank you for sharing this as I know it was not easy.
good
This is so amazing and such a needed read. To be so raw and honest about your feelings and pain throughout the time. And then to watch your amazing ability to think of others when the darkness falls all around. The place you were able to come to: to not blame her totally and to direct blame to your husband as well is a hard way to find. I have been through that and I blamed everyone but him for awhile. To be honest, what finally started my healing in my situation was when my husband finally sat down and confessed all he had done. I saw the true regret in his pain. I did divorce, but because he gave to me the opportunity to hear it from him; it helped me to start over and heal. Later, I met with three of the women who had betrayed me with my husband and it really set me free. They told me how sorry they were and I forgive them to their face. When a man only lies and never admits (confesses) there really isn't a closure at all. Well, since I am once again facing this kind of a situation, your story came along at the right time. Bless you!
Dear Glenna! Your profile line "Wife to one, mom to three, friend to all." impressed me a lot. ✨A beautiful and inspiring role. Your dedication to family and friendship is truly admirable. ✨
you wrote a beautiful tale of resolution- the other woman who slips in is not innocent-- but more importantly- neither is the husband. You handled a challenging situation with dignity and grace. bravo for writing such a moving tale- on so many levels
So Fantastic Oh My God❤️Brilliant & Mind Blowing Your Story, Please Read My Stories and Subscribe Me
As a divorced woman, I related to this story very well indeed. Of course it didn't happen to me, as soon as it did me. After my two boys grew up, and we buried one from murder, their step mother put a bullet in her head. She wasn't very nice to my children, but somehow I did feel badly, that life with the special one, was that bad. You deserved top story. I was wondering if you could possibly tell me, I just came a vocal plus member today, and I was wondering how you get the tips put on your articles??? You should keep writing, you have the talent.
well done
"Saying Goodbye To The Other Woman" is a poignant and relatable piece that captures the complexity of human emotions as we navigate the challenges of relationships. The author masterfully conveys the pain and vulnerability that comes with acknowledging the end of a significant chapter, and the resilience required to move forward.
Thanks for this wonderful story.
wow I'm at a loss for words, beautifully written, yet ravaging the senses. What a story!
Hi we are featuring your excellent Top Story in our Community Adventure Thread in The Vocal Social Society on Facebook and would love for you to join us there
What a powerful read Glenna. I have a similar journey, except married 28 years and my boys were grown the 2nd time he left me for the same woman (only she didn't die). He moved her into our home within 2 weeks of me leaving, they broke up a couple years later. Your process was very powerful. May I ask you something? I'm new on here, and can't figure out how to get / or enable the subscribe and tip box you have on your article. I've asked support twice, but still haven't heard back. I do have my stripe connected.
Wow. Thanks for sharing this. Incredible story. I’m sorry you had to go through so much. ❤️
Congratulations on your TS.
HOLY SHIT
I totally understand the conflicting emotions. My first husband left me and my young son for another woman. I felt those same feelings-anger, sadness, wanting but not wanting to find out more about the Other Woman, and then finally, acceptance. I moved on, found the love of my life and made my peace with it. She treats my son well, which I am thankful for. My ex is still with her almost 35 years later, and I believe it was meant to be. Excellent piece~congratulations on earning the Top Stories category! 🥰
Well on my part I will see is unbelivable you try to stomach all the crazies things your husband has to offer but at the end of it all you over come his lost your gain
There are so many emotions that you packed into this! Conflicted to accepted. So very well done!
Wow, courageous to share this - congrats on a well deserved Top Story!
This is so vulnerable and raw. Congrats on the Top Story!
This is a wonderful, painful, insightful,sad, traumatic story. Thank you for sharing. I'm so sorry you had to endure so much and your sons.
Glenna, I loved how open and honest this was. You didn’t shy away from the ugly feelings you had, for good reason, towards this woman, and it made your conclusion here all the more powerful. Death so young is always a hard pill to swallow, even when it is someone we may dislike or even resent. You are beyond the bigger woman. Congrats on a phenomenal TS!
What a beautiful story about healing and the power of letting go or forgiveness. It is the most catalytic force in the universe. Your piece brought me to tears. Congratulations on the Top Story - it's so well-deserved.