The Marriage I Was Never Given
Guest post from N's wife
You keep saying you are finally living “the truth.”
I want to understand that word the way you use it. Truly.
Because from where I’m sitting, alone at the Shabbos table, “truth” looks a lot like leaving your wife and children while you head off to drink beer with your friends, flirt with women who don’t know—or don’t care—that you have a family, and eat pepperoni pizza like it’s a philosophical statement instead of indulgence.
But please, enlighten me.
This is authenticity.
This is courage.
This is existing.What you never seem to remember is that you were already living your truth when you married me. You just didn’t tell me. You stood under the chuppah knowing you didn’t believe, knowing you didn’t intend to live the life you promised, knowing that if I had the actual facts I might have walked away.
So instead, you made sure I couldn’t.
That was your first act of truth.
I married a man who was presented as religious, committed, aligned with me in values. I married a vision. A performance. A carefully managed version of you that existed just long enough to secure a wife, a home, children, legitimacy.
And now you want applause for ripping off the costume.
You write about how lonely you feel, how numb, how trapped by expectations. You write about how I “won’t let you” leave for Shabbos, as if I am a tyrant guarding the gates of pleasure instead of a woman trying to keep her family from dissolving one weekend at a time.
You frame it as oppression.
I experience it as abandonment.Because when you leave, I’m still here. Lighting candles alone. Explaining to our children why Abba isn’t home. Holding a structure together that you dismantle and then blame me for mourning.
But of course, your absence is noble. It’s about truth. About being real. About not pretending anymore.
Funny how your truth always seems to involve disappearing into places where no one asks you to be accountable.
And yes—I wonder. I wonder what else is happening when you vanish into that world I’m not allowed to question. I wonder what other truths you’re discovering when you’re surrounded by women who don’t carry the weight of your deception, who don’t know the vows you broke before they were even spoken.
If that makes me suspicious, so be it. Betrayal rewires the brain. That’s not insecurity—that’s pattern recognition.
You talk about my pain like it’s irrational. Like it’s fear of change. Like it’s denial. You even mourn that I won’t form a support group, as if what I need is communal processing rather than a time machine and informed consent.
I don’t need a group to help me accept that my husband reinvented himself at my expense.
I need you to stop pretending this is a shared tragedy.
You want credit for staying. For not walking away entirely. As if staying after lying is a favor. As if partial presence is generosity.
But I am not grateful.
Because I never had the husband I chose. I never had the loving, religious partner I was promised. I never had the opportunity to decide whether I could live with an atheist husband—because by the time I knew the truth, leaving meant losing everything I was taught to build my life around.
You didn’t just change the terms.
You waited until escape was nearly impossible.And now you stand in your freedom—beer in hand, truth on your lips—and ask why I’m not more understanding.
Here is my truth:
Your authenticity costs me every day.
Your liberation is built on my confinement.
And your self-discovery looks an awful lot like indulgence wrapped in moral language.If you want to live honestly, start by telling the story without making yourself the hero.
Stop calling your appetite “authenticity.”
Stop calling my boundaries “control.” Stop calling your betrayal “truth”.And stop asking me to disappear quietly so you can feel better about how you got here.
This is not a story about courage.
It’s a story about what happens when one person decides their truth matters more than another person’s consent—and then demands to be admired for saying it out loud.

3 comments:
Thank you for sharing.
Back in the heyday of the Jewish blogsphere, there was a blog written by an anonymous Orthodox rabbi who was actually OTD. However, he continued to fake the Torah lifestyle because he needed to for his job. He documented how he felt contempt for Judaism and how he thought his congregants were suckers for still believing but a paycheque is a paycheque. And when people like me asked him how he could do this and why not just quit, he replied that he liked the job, he knew it was all a joke but his congregants enjoyed it so why give it up?
There's a certain arrogance to radical lifestyle changes (and BT's do this too, don't kid yourself). You have to have a certain disdain for your former lifestyle to support your justification for your new one. So yes, this woman's OTD husband is acting like a complete menuval and shows no respect to her but he needs to feel confident in what he knows deep down is a bad decision
Garnel, in case you missed it, the menuval described here by this courageous lady is not an OTD... he is nothing else than an immature, irresponsible, overgrown teenager, and a narcistic pervert manipulator on top of that. At this point, these psychotic profiles have very little to do with being in or off the Derech.
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