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One of my favorite songs includes the lyrics:

I know it’s time for letting go
We can’t hide what we both know
But ooh, the hurt grows
Every time I think it’s over
It’s time to realize
That we’re both just living lies
And way down deep inside
The time is telling me it’s time for letting go

I initiated my divorce from my ex-wife – I chose to leave our home and our children and start anew. It wasn’t really planned – I had nowhere to stay on the day that I left, I just knew that I needed to break it off with her, for my health and ultimately, for the sake of our children.

I stayed in a loveless marriage for way too long because of ‘the children.’ Those two words became a catchall phrase for my ex-wife to justify anything related to our sad existence. It’s almost comical to think that we were modeling anything close to a healthy marriage – we were not an affectionate couple for at least 10-12 years and every month we spent all of the money that we had earned – buying things that we almost certainly didn’t need.. Constant financial mismanagement is not adulting, plus in many ways we were demonstrating all of the wrong ways to be a good partner and treat your other partner with respect and love.

When I left I knew I would be the ‘villain’ – I broke up the marriage, I upset our life. It’s been over ten years and I still wear that label with my children. I have resigned that my children will never see our separation as an act of love. I did this FOR them, it was not something that was AGAINST them. It’s easy to paint my divorce and coming out as a selfish endeavor. I did it to improve my life (Spoiler Alert: it worked!) but importantly, I also did it for my children. I was wrong to stay with their mother for as long as I did. Settling for an unhappy relationship and unfulfilled life is not honorable.

The question I keep coming back to is, “if either of my children were in the same relationship, what would I want them to do?” The answer is so obvious when it’s them – get out, leave that horrible relationship, take care of yourself, find someone who brings out the best in you, create balance in your life and just be happy. I wouldn’t want them to suffer needlessly like I did.

So that’s what I did. My previous life was full of lies and exposing all of those untruths and restarting a simple truth-based life is so much easier and healthier.

Peter Leahey

A self-proclaimed “ideas guy,” I’ve worked in marketing for over twenty-five years. After years of sadness, emptiness and self-loathing, I finally came out of the closet in 2013 and reinvented myself. Now happily married to my husband for over two years, we live in California with our Chihuahua Felicia, the queen of our household.

Peter Leahey - Author of Glowing Up Gay