My boyfriend proposed to me last weekend. It wasn’t a fancy setup—no rose petals, no crowd—but it was sincere, and his voice trembled as he asked, “Will you marry me?” I didn’t hesitate for a second. I said yes. My heart felt light, my eyes were wet, and I thought that moment would be etched in my memory forever.
The next morning, everything changed.
He showed up at my apartment, his face pale, his hands restless. “I’m sorry,” he said quietly. “I think I’ve made a hasty decision. I’m not ready for marriage yet.”
For a moment, I just stared at him, trying to process what I was hearing. Yesterday, I was his future. Today, I was his mistake.
Then came the final blow. “Can you give me back the ring?”
That request shattered whatever pride I had left. I didn’t argue. I didn’t cry. I just took it off, placed it in his hand, and said, “You don’t have to worry. I won’t make things hard for you.”
Then I packed my things and left his house without looking back.
The next day, I realized I had left one of my favorite scarves behind. It wasn’t valuable, but it meant something to me—it was the first gift he ever gave me. So, I drove to his place, intending to grab it and leave quietly.
When I opened the door, my heart froze. He was sitting in the living room, laughing with his ex. Their hands brushed as they spoke, and the kind of ease between them said everything words didn’t need to.
He saw me before I could turn away. His expression changed instantly—guilt, shock, panic. “It’s not what it looks like,” he stammered, standing up.
But it was exactly what it looked like.
I picked up my scarf from the armchair, my hands trembling, and walked past him without a word. He followed me to the door, trying to explain, to justify, to reach for my arm—but I couldn’t let him touch me again.
“I hope she’s worth what you threw away,” I said finally, before leaving for good.
I still love him. And that’s the cruelest part. Because love doesn’t disappear the moment trust does—it just hurts deeper every day until it finally fades.