11/08/2024
August 10, 2018, I'll never forget because that is the date I chose freedom for myself. Yesterday, while on the road, I celebrated my sixth anniversary of liberating myself from living under someone else's shadow.
The last day on that hot and humid August day was the hardest. I had already told him I was leaving him and taking my son back to California with me. I counted the days and hours until our flight when I could finally breathe.
We remained under one roof for most of that summer in 2018. By then he had already moved across the country to take a job. Living apart was already breath of fresh air for me. I had told him I would give him one last chance before making my final decision.
It soon became apparent that there was only one way forward - divorce.
On that fateful day, I packed the bags for my then four-year-old son and myself and waited with anticipation to see if my soon-to-be ex-husband would drive us to the airport for our flight. We weren't speaking much, and the tension was so high that it buzzed everywhere in his cramped basement apartment in Georgetown.
When it was time, he brought the car around, and we got in. I had no idea what would happen or how he would be, so I was anxious and scared. I don't remember why I didn't just take a taxi, but I guess I wanted to let him say goodbye to his son.
During the short drive to the airport in Virginia, he didn't say much except when he suggested multiple times that I speak to his "shaykh" on the phone to hear him out. By then, I had already seen through the lies and deception of the "shaykh" and refused to speak to or "hear him out" ever again. He had hurt me enough; I had heard enough of his placations and lies. I stood my ground and refused to speak to that man.
When we arrived at the airport, he hesitated momentarily. I got out of the car, holding my son's hand. I let him say goodbye and walked towards the entrance for departures.
I never looked back once. It was over. I passed through the most challenging threshold. I regained my freedom.
Those early years of being alone after leaving my ex were some of the hardest in my life. But my taste of freedom was too delicious ever to give it up. The taste became more refined with each passing year, and I began to expand my palate with more various flavors and spices.
It has been six long years, although it might as well be a lifetime ago. I've shaken him out of my system and went through a pretty intensive detox process to rid myself of his energy.
Am I healed? I might be nearly there, although many scars remain. They are scattered over my body, but they're only surface-deep. I know that I've gone through an intense internal alchemical process since that time, and I am not the same person as when I was with him.
Never again will I allow a man or anyone else to control me or violate my boundaries. Never again.
I met my ex-husband when I was an undergraduate student. I was so young and vulnerable. During the years I knew and married him, I handed over my entire autonomy and agency to him. He controlled many of my thoughts, my movements, and my freedom.
I've never publicly spoken about the details of my marriage (except for a recent interview several days ago with "And She Thrived," I'll share the link). Much of it is too painful to share and doesn't make logical sense.
Explaining the unexplainable would require me to indulge readers in vast amounts of labor, so I'll leave that for another time, if at all.
How can I even begin to explain how a young and naive American woman, thousands of miles away from her home, was able to be brainwashed, groomed, and then manipulated into marriage with a man who was quite a bit older with the help of his "Sufi shaykh." Someone from the other side of the world, with nothing in common with me at all?
How did it happen? It isn't straightforward, and I don't have the capacity to explain it here.
But did it happen? Yes, it did. It happened to me, a woman raised in a liberal, feminist home in San Francisco. It happened to a girl who wanted to get married in her 30s, if at all, and who never stopped pursuing her dreams despite everything.
What happened to me can happen to any woman, regardless of her environment, education level, or other factors.
Who is more likely to end up in an abusive marriage? A woman who doesn't have much family support, who doesn't have enough close friends to look out for her, one who is looking for her way and whose imagination is full of legends of the old that she hopes to find in the modern world, and of course one who has experienced abuse in her childhood and experienced living in an unsafe home.
One or more women you know are likely in this sort of relationship. They might say alarming things about their husband or situation, but you don't know what to say. You also know that it would be hard to convince her to leave the marriage because of the codependent nature of the marriage.
Having grown up primarily in a single-mother home that was unsafe and volatile, I always knew that I felt safer with my dad, but I didn't get to see him as much as I would have liked.
I didn't have models of what healthy relationships looked like. I figured that being treated like s**t by the person who was supposed to love and protect me the most was normal.
So when I entered into a marriage with someone who treated me the same way I experienced growing up, I ended up staying for a very long time because I didn't know there were better options. I really didn't.
I don't know how to explain it except that when I met him, we didn't talk about mental health, self-care, and abuse in the same ways we do now. It was the early 2000s; there was no social media, Google was in its infancy, and we were simpler back then.
If I had had social media back then as I do now, it could have helped me identify red flags in this man so I could have walked away. It's very possible. In my discussions with Gen Z, raised on this approach, I see unprecedented awareness about these issues.
Anyway, all of this is to say that since that day six years ago, I've remained grateful for the expansive sense of liberation I've been given.
Six long years that included countless dark nights of the soul, soul-wrecking panic and anxiety, a lot of mess and crying. Six long years that have given me more expansion than I could ever imagine in my life. Alhamdullilah.
If you've read this far, thank you for reading. If you're a woman in this sort of marriage or relationship, remember you do have options, and you don't have to put up with a life that drains you and makes you feel shut off from the rest of the world.
Photo taken on August 11, 2018, the day after returning back to California. I was still in shock that I was āfreeā and sought the support of a dear friend and her family.
The last day on that hot and humid August day was the hardest. I had already told him I was leaving him and taking my son back to California with me. I counted the days and hours until our flight when I could finally breathe.
We remained under one roof for most of that summer in 2018. By then he had already moved across the country to take a job. Living apart was already breath of fresh air for me. I had told him I would give him one last chance before making my final decision.
It soon became apparent that there was only one way forward - divorce.
On that fateful day, I packed the bags for my then four-year-old son and myself and waited with anticipation to see if my soon-to-be ex-husband would drive us to the airport for our flight. We weren't speaking much, and the tension was so high that it buzzed everywhere in his cramped basement apartment in Georgetown.
When it was time, he brought the car around, and we got in. I had no idea what would happen or how he would be, so I was anxious and scared. I don't remember why I didn't just take a taxi, but I guess I wanted to let him say goodbye to his son.
During the short drive to the airport in Virginia, he didn't say much except when he suggested multiple times that I speak to his "shaykh" on the phone to hear him out. By then, I had already seen through the lies and deception of the "shaykh" and refused to speak to or "hear him out" ever again. He had hurt me enough; I had heard enough of his placations and lies. I stood my ground and refused to speak to that man.
When we arrived at the airport, he hesitated momentarily. I got out of the car, holding my son's hand. I let him say goodbye and walked towards the entrance for departures.
I never looked back once. It was over. I passed through the most challenging threshold. I regained my freedom.
Those early years of being alone after leaving my ex were some of the hardest in my life. But my taste of freedom was too delicious ever to give it up. The taste became more refined with each passing year, and I began to expand my palate with more various flavors and spices.
It has been six long years, although it might as well be a lifetime ago. I've shaken him out of my system and went through a pretty intensive detox process to rid myself of his energy.
Am I healed? I might be nearly there, although many scars remain. They are scattered over my body, but they're only surface-deep. I know that I've gone through an intense internal alchemical process since that time, and I am not the same person as when I was with him.
Never again will I allow a man or anyone else to control me or violate my boundaries. Never again.
I met my ex-husband when I was an undergraduate student. I was so young and vulnerable. During the years I knew and married him, I handed over my entire autonomy and agency to him. He controlled many of my thoughts, my movements, and my freedom.
I've never publicly spoken about the details of my marriage (except for a recent interview several days ago with "And She Thrived," I'll share the link). Much of it is too painful to share and doesn't make logical sense.
Explaining the unexplainable would require me to indulge readers in vast amounts of labor, so I'll leave that for another time, if at all.
How can I even begin to explain how a young and naive American woman, thousands of miles away from her home, was able to be brainwashed, groomed, and then manipulated into marriage with a man who was quite a bit older with the help of his "Sufi shaykh." Someone from the other side of the world, with nothing in common with me at all?
How did it happen? It isn't straightforward, and I don't have the capacity to explain it here.
But did it happen? Yes, it did. It happened to me, a woman raised in a liberal, feminist home in San Francisco. It happened to a girl who wanted to get married in her 30s, if at all, and who never stopped pursuing her dreams despite everything.
What happened to me can happen to any woman, regardless of her environment, education level, or other factors.
Who is more likely to end up in an abusive marriage? A woman who doesn't have much family support, who doesn't have enough close friends to look out for her, one who is looking for her way and whose imagination is full of legends of the old that she hopes to find in the modern world, and of course one who has experienced abuse in her childhood and experienced living in an unsafe home.
One or more women you know are likely in this sort of relationship. They might say alarming things about their husband or situation, but you don't know what to say. You also know that it would be hard to convince her to leave the marriage because of the codependent nature of the marriage.
Having grown up primarily in a single-mother home that was unsafe and volatile, I always knew that I felt safer with my dad, but I didn't get to see him as much as I would have liked.
I didn't have models of what healthy relationships looked like. I figured that being treated like s**t by the person who was supposed to love and protect me the most was normal.
So when I entered into a marriage with someone who treated me the same way I experienced growing up, I ended up staying for a very long time because I didn't know there were better options. I really didn't.
I don't know how to explain it except that when I met him, we didn't talk about mental health, self-care, and abuse in the same ways we do now. It was the early 2000s; there was no social media, Google was in its infancy, and we were simpler back then.
If I had had social media back then as I do now, it could have helped me identify red flags in this man so I could have walked away. It's very possible. In my discussions with Gen Z, raised on this approach, I see unprecedented awareness about these issues.
Anyway, all of this is to say that since that day six years ago, I've remained grateful for the expansive sense of liberation I've been given.
Six long years that included countless dark nights of the soul, soul-wrecking panic and anxiety, a lot of mess and crying. Six long years that have given me more expansion than I could ever imagine in my life. Alhamdullilah.
If you've read this far, thank you for reading. If you're a woman in this sort of marriage or relationship, remember you do have options, and you don't have to put up with a life that drains you and makes you feel shut off from the rest of the world.