When you first meet Jenny, it doesn’t occur to you that this woman could have been in an abusive marriage for years. She’s friendly and pleasant to talk with, and she seems to have a lot of confidence in herself. I had known her for a month or so before she mentioned her past abuse to me. As the story came out, it was disturbing to me.
Jenny is about 60. She’s been divorced for two years, after a decades-long marriage to the man she still calls her soulmate. But her husband was emotionally abusive in ways that left her feeling like a shell of herself. After years of falling apart in ways that I won’t describe, she finally divorced him. She feels emotionally safer now, but she misses the man she considers her soulmate.
I found out Saturday that she talks to her former husband three times each day now. They didn’t talk for awhile, but the divorce hit him hard and forced him to start re-evaluating himself. She said he’s changing. They’re talking seriously about getting back together again.
Do people really change? Or are we just fooling ourselves when we believe we’re changing for the better? And when we trust people who have hurt us before, are we just fooling ourselves?

We live in Reverse World, where black is white and good is evil
Identity politics is the cancer behind Elizabeth Warren’s lie about ancestry
Industrial age relic: Do companies pay for your time or your brain?
Do they allow dogs at the hotel? Question is why they allow people
I’m exhausted and numb from placing trust in the wrong people
Coming economic hardship may help me understand Aunt Bessie
Police mistakenly attack innocent man while hunting graffiti tagger
Widow: ‘Things that mattered yesterday do not matter today’
Goodbye, Daddy