One Year Of Love And Lies

Scrolling Instagram, I saw my ex post a tribute to a new partner: “One year of love and happiness.” Except… we broke up nine months ago. I decided to let it slide until someone tagged me in the comments with, “Wait, didn’t you two just break up last spring?”

The new partner messaged me directly, saying, “Hey, I just saw that comment. Can we talk? I’m confused.”
At first, I wasn’t going to respond. I mean, what was the point? But something in me stirred. Maybe it was the way she asked—polite, not defensive. So I replied, “Sure. Call me if you want.”

Ten minutes later, we were on the phone. Her name was Lina. Her voice trembled a bit, but she wasn’t emotional in the way I expected. More tired than angry.

She said, “Look… I really don’t want drama. But I feel like something’s off. He told me you two ended over a year ago. That you were clingy. That you cheated.”

I laughed. Not a bitter laugh, just one of disbelief. “That’s rich. He’s the one who begged me not to block him after we broke up. And I definitely didn’t cheat.”

There was silence on her end. Then she said, “He told me you were emotionally unstable. That you’d say anything to get attention.”

That one stung, not gonna lie. I swallowed hard. “I guess you’ll have to decide who’s telling the truth.”

“I don’t want to choose sides,” she said. “I just want the truth. Because I’ve had this weird gut feeling for a while. You just confirmed it.”

It turned out she and I had overlapping timelines. He’d been with her for a full year, which meant he started seeing her at least three months before our breakup. I didn’t cry. I didn’t scream. I just felt… hollow.

Lina apologized. “I had no idea. I swear, if I’d known, I wouldn’t have ever—”

“It’s not your fault,” I said. “It’s his. He lied to both of us.”

After the call ended, I sat on my bed, scrolling through old texts. The nights he said he was “working late.” The sudden weekends he disappeared, claiming he needed “space.” All the pieces slid into place, painfully, like jagged glass clicking together.

That night, I didn’t sleep much. But I didn’t spiral either. Something had shifted.

A few days later, I got a follow request from Lina. I accepted. She sent me a meme about being fooled by the same man and said, “Bonded by betrayal?” I laughed. We started talking. Just casually at first. Then more.

It’s funny how sharing pain with someone can make you feel less alone. We weren’t trauma bonding, exactly. Just two women comparing puzzle pieces of the same broken picture.

Turns out, she was planning to move in with him. They’d signed a lease. She hadn’t moved her stuff yet, thank God.

“I’m not doing it now,” she said. “I told him I needed time. He doesn’t know I talked to you. He just thinks I’m suddenly ‘confused.’”

“He’ll try to spin it,” I warned her.

“He already did,” she replied. “Said you’re bitter and trying to sabotage him.”

I snorted. “Classic.”

It felt weirdly empowering. Like, for once, I wasn’t the one being gaslit. I had proof. Someone else saw it too.

Weeks passed. Lina and I talked nearly every day. We weren’t best friends or anything, but we had this shared mission—to move on, to rebuild.

She eventually broke up with him. She said she did it over coffee, calm and direct. “I just told him I knew. That I wasn’t mad, just done. He didn’t even try that hard to stop me.”

That part hurt her more than the betrayal.

“You’d think someone would fight a little, right?” she told me. “But he just shrugged. Said, ‘Guess it wasn’t meant to be.’ After a year together.”

I didn’t have an answer. Only a weird sense of déjà vu. He’d said the exact same thing to me.

Lina and I joked sometimes that we should write a guide: “So You’ve Dated a Manipulator—Now What?”

We laughed more than we cried. It was healing in an unexpected way.

Then one day, she said, “You know what the worst part is? I still miss him sometimes. Even knowing what he did.”

“Yeah,” I said. “Me too.”

Because that’s the truth no one tells you. Closure doesn’t always come in clean lines. Sometimes it’s messy. Sometimes it lingers.

Months passed. I started dating again. Slowly, carefully. Met someone kind. Grounded. The kind of person who asked how my day was and actually listened.

Lina started a blog about emotional recovery and relationships. I followed it religiously.

Then something unexpected happened. One of my old friends, Jamie, messaged me out of nowhere.

“Hey… random, but did you ever date someone named Kellan?”

My heart dropped. “Yeah. Why?”

She hesitated. “I think he’s dating my cousin now. And… he told her you stalked him after he broke up with you. That you threatened his job.”

My jaw clenched. “He said what?”

She said, “I didn’t believe it. That’s why I’m messaging you. It didn’t sound like you.”

I thanked her. Then I sat there, stunned.

I had been quiet. I didn’t post about him. Didn’t drag him online. But he still made me the villain in someone else’s story.

Part of me wanted to blow up his lies. Message his new girlfriend. Expose everything.

But I didn’t. I didn’t want to be pulled back into his web.

Instead, I wrote a post. Just a general one. No names. Just truth.

“I used to think closure came from conversations. But sometimes it comes from silence. From choosing peace over revenge. From walking away when you have every right to stay and burn it all down.”

People responded. Shared it. Messaged me. Turns out, a lot of us had been there.

I sent it to Lina too.

She replied, “You just wrote exactly what I needed to hear.”

A few weeks later, she sent me a photo. She’d gotten a small tattoo on her wrist. Just the word: “Enough.”

It was a reminder, she said. That she was always enough. That she didn’t have to fight to prove her version of the story.

It inspired me. I didn’t get a tattoo, but I did finally clear out the last drawer in my room that still had some of his stuff. A watch. A hoodie. A ticket stub from some forgettable movie.

I threw it all out without ceremony. No tears. Just peace.

A year after the whole thing, Lina and I met up in person. We’d never actually met face-to-face before, which felt surreal.

We got coffee at this little café downtown. It was pouring rain, and neither of us had an umbrella, so we walked in soaked and laughing.

She hugged me and said, “We survived the same storm.”

I smiled. “And came out stronger.”

We talked for hours. About life. Work. Healing. Neither of us brought him up much. It didn’t matter anymore.

Right before we left, Lina said, “You know what’s wild? If he hadn’t lied, we never would’ve met.”

“Funny how that works,” I said. “Pain introduces you to people truth never would.”

She smiled. “That should be your next post.”

So I posted it that night. And people responded again. Shared their own stories. Some heartbreaking. Some beautiful.

It made me realize something.

Our pain wasn’t for nothing. It had connected us. Given us strength. Made us voices for others still stuck in silence.

A few weeks later, I got a message from someone I didn’t know. She said, “Hey, I saw your post. I think I’m going through the same thing. Can I ask you something?”

And just like that, the cycle continued. But this time, I was the one offering clarity instead of needing it.

It felt like full circle.

So here’s the lesson I walked away with, and maybe it’ll help you too:

When someone lies to make themselves look better, it doesn’t change the truth. The truth always finds its way out. And when it does, you realize you never needed revenge—you just needed time, distance, and someone to remind you who you really are.

If you’ve been lied to, manipulated, or made to feel like your truth doesn’t matter… I promise it does.

And someone out there will believe you. Someone will listen. Someone will say, “Me too.”

And that will be the beginning of everything good.

If this story meant something to you, share it. Someone else might need to read it today. And don’t forget to hit like if you believe that truth, no matter how delayed, always wins.