Okay, let’s talk about something heavy. Telling my wife I wanted a separation. It wasn’t easy, wasn’t something I decided overnight. It brewed for a long, long time.

First thing, I spent months, maybe even a year, just wrestling with it in my own head. Going back and forth. You know, you try to make things work, you remember the good times, you think about the kids if you have them, the house, everything you built. It’s a massive weight.
Getting Clear in My Head
I had to get really honest with myself. Was this fixable? Had we tried? We had, kind of. Talks that went nowhere. Promises made and broken, on both sides probably. I realized I was just… done. Not angry anymore, just empty about it. That’s when I knew I had to actually do something, not just think about it.
So, the next step was figuring out the ‘how’. This was the scariest bit. How do you drop that bomb? I didn’t want a screaming match. I didn’t want to crush her, even though I knew it would hurt. My main goal was just to be clear and firm, but not cruel.
- I thought about writing a letter. Seemed cowardly.
- I thought about doing it in therapy. We weren’t in therapy.
- I decided it had to be face-to-face. At home. In a quiet moment.
The Actual Conversation
I picked a time. It was a weeknight, actually. After dinner, things were settled. No distractions. My heart was pounding like crazy. I just took a deep breath and started. Didn’t rehearse a big speech. Just kept it simple.
I said something like, “Look, we need to talk. I’ve been thinking about this for a long time, and it’s really hard to say, but I don’t think this is working anymore. For me. I think… I think we need to separate.”

Man, it was rough. There were tears. Questions. Anger. Disbelief. All the things you’d expect. It wasn’t a clean break conversation. It was messy. I tried my best to just listen, to not get defensive, and to gently repeat my decision. I focused on saying “I feel” and “I need” rather than “You did this” or “You are…”. Didn’t want to play the blame game. It wasn’t about finding fault at that point.
I didn’t have all the answers right then. Like where I’d go, or what the next steps were exactly. I just said we needed to start the process, figure things out one step at a time. The main thing was getting the core message out: the marriage, as it was, was over for me.
Aftermath and Moving Forward
The immediate aftermath was awful. Tense silence. Sleeping in separate rooms. It felt like walking on eggshells. But weirdly, there was also a tiny bit of relief that the truth was finally out. The pretending was over.
From there, it was slow. Lots more difficult conversations about practical stuff – house, money, telling family. Each one was hard. But we got through it, eventually. It wasn’t a magic fix to happiness, separation brings its own challenges. But it was the necessary step for me.
There’s no perfect script for this. Every situation is different. For me, it came down to being sure in my own mind, choosing a calm moment, being direct but not cruel, and sticking to my decision gently. It’s one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do.
