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LoginTweet Share Share Comment. Every week, Dear Prudence answers additional questions from readers, just for Slate Plus members. Submit questions here. Dear Prudence, My ex and I were married for a decade and divorced last year. We have an 8-year-old son together. We were friends but never quite in the right state to try for a relationship.
Remember: You'll be okay. Even if the breakup or divorce was your idea, that doesn't mean you'll automatically feel fine when your ex starts dating someone else. After all, you were in a committed relationship with this person—maybe even married them and assumed you'd spend your life together—so the realization that they've moved on with someone else, whether it's serious or just a fling, isn't exactly an easy pill to swallow.
I try to be sly about it but I know my slyness has worn away over time. What do I have to lose now? I met Monica one sweaty August night more than a decade ago and married her like a freight train six weeks later. She was a western girl, born into the madness of a land called Utah. We spotted each other as the sun went down on a crazy desert town and we started firing at each other right away. I know that now, because I was lucky enough to live through, to survive, our marriage — and divorce 10 years later — to come riding back up over the mesa of our years together with one badass sunset sinking down behind me.
What will make you happy? Months since the split , de Blasio — who served as mayor of New York City from to — is already exuding divorced dad energy. Do arrangements like the one McCray and de Blasio are attempting work, and if so, for how long? And certainly if money is an issue, as it was with every one of them.
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