Redacted: What Divorced Women Aren't Telling You

I Didn't Want to Be a Nag: The Quiet Ways a Marriage Falls Apart

29 min · 14 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio I Didn't Want to Be a Nag: The Quiet Ways a Marriage Falls Apart

Descripción

This episode begins with two anonymous essays and unfolds into a conversation about marriage, divorce, patriarchy, emotional labor, and the things women learn to normalize. Using the lens of a neglected house, today’s writer explores what it means to spend years trying to be “respectful,” “patient,” and “not a nag” while slowly disappearing inside your own life. Together, we talk about: * the emotional labor of walking on eggshells * the stories women inherit about being “good wives” * why so many women stay longer than they want to * how writing helps us untangle complex experiences * the freedom of no longer managing someone else’s emotions * the small domestic details that reveal deeper truths This conversation is tender, funny, insightful, and deeply validating for anyone who has ever mistaken survival for peace. Standout Quotes * “Things became so normal and routine that you honestly forget they’re not normal.” * “You don’t understand how much work it is until you don’t do it anymore.” * “The house and I, we both moved on.” * "If there's only one question to ask your potential next partner: is me putting up a facade a requirement for you to feel good in this relationship? Because if it is, I'll take the check please." You can read “The House” on Substack here [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/p/i-had-to-get-out-of-that-house], and “Summer Meadows” here [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/p/the-weight-of-a-small-moment].

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8 episodios

episode The "Now What?" Era: Unbecoming a Wife artwork

The "Now What?" Era: Unbecoming a Wife

SHOW NOTES: In this episode, we cover: * How Cindy went from ghostwriter and editor to finding her own voice — and launching The Mother Lode on Substack * The role Maggie Smith's You Could Make This Place Beautiful played as a lantern for both of us during our divorces * MDMA therapy, IFS therapy, and the "good girl" conditioning that keeps women trapped in marriages long past their expiration date * Why couples therapy can actually harm women — particularly when covert abuse or personality disorders are involved * The Divorce Diary series: the financial reality of divorce no one talks about, including legal fees, spousal support, and child support * How divorce laws protect women in theory but rarely in practice * Post-separation abuse and why sharing children means you can never truly divorce some people * The real cost of stepping back from your career during marriage — and who pays for it after divorce * The case for rethinking marriage entirely: communal living, separate households, and what partnership could look like outside the traditional script * Esther Perel, Emily Nagoski, and whether domesticity is simply the death of desire * Where we both are, three years out — and embracing "now what?" when the gauntlet is finally behind you Resources mentioned: * You Could Make This Place Beautiful by Maggie Smith * This American Ex-Wife by Lyz Lenz * Fair Play by Eve Rodsky * The Ambition Penalty by Stephanie O'Connell Rodriguez * Come As You Are and Come Together by Emily Nagoski * Esther Perel's work on desire and domesticity * Mad Wife by Kate Hamilton (pseudonym) * The Mother Lode on Substack: cindyditiberio.substack.com

4 de jun de 202639 min
episode Waiting for Permission: The Intersection of Grief and Divorce artwork

Waiting for Permission: The Intersection of Grief and Divorce

Show Notes: * A writer reads her original flash nonfiction piece about grief, permission, and the marriage she knew she needed to leave * On the particular cruelty of losing your mother while also losing your marriage—and what happens when there is no space to grieve both at once * The moment she told the sky before she told anyone else, and how her mother's voice found her on a morning run * Why so many women feel they need to justify leaving a marriage, that wanting out isn't enough, that intuition doesn't count, that we need external evidence before we can trust ourselves * On the cultural training that teaches women to discount their own inner knowing, and the quiet devastation of a partner whose response to grief is "now you know what it feels like." * What the hospital room felt like in the minutes after her mother passed—and why that experience remains one of the clearest pieces of evidence she has that love continues * On modeling something better for our daughters—and how that clarity made the next step easier to take Read this piece and subscribe to the Redacted Substack column here [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/p/divorce-dispatches].

21 de may de 202613 min
episode I Didn't Want to Be a Nag: The Quiet Ways a Marriage Falls Apart artwork

I Didn't Want to Be a Nag: The Quiet Ways a Marriage Falls Apart

This episode begins with two anonymous essays and unfolds into a conversation about marriage, divorce, patriarchy, emotional labor, and the things women learn to normalize. Using the lens of a neglected house, today’s writer explores what it means to spend years trying to be “respectful,” “patient,” and “not a nag” while slowly disappearing inside your own life. Together, we talk about: * the emotional labor of walking on eggshells * the stories women inherit about being “good wives” * why so many women stay longer than they want to * how writing helps us untangle complex experiences * the freedom of no longer managing someone else’s emotions * the small domestic details that reveal deeper truths This conversation is tender, funny, insightful, and deeply validating for anyone who has ever mistaken survival for peace. Standout Quotes * “Things became so normal and routine that you honestly forget they’re not normal.” * “You don’t understand how much work it is until you don’t do it anymore.” * “The house and I, we both moved on.” * "If there's only one question to ask your potential next partner: is me putting up a facade a requirement for you to feel good in this relationship? Because if it is, I'll take the check please." You can read “The House” on Substack here [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/p/i-had-to-get-out-of-that-house], and “Summer Meadows” here [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/p/the-weight-of-a-small-moment].

14 de may de 202629 min
episode I'd F*cking Date Me artwork

I'd F*cking Date Me

Topics covered: * Parachute relationships — what they are and why they matter (and why they sometimes crash-land hard) * “Divorce doulas” — passing the torch, bearing the lantern, and why women are the safety net nobody talks about * Unhealed men, therapy, and the resignation that keeps people stuck * The “sorry about us” part — apologizing for your own existence in relationships * Going from shame about your circumstances to “I’d fucking date me” * Why the lessons keep coming until you actually learn them Quotes: * “I’d fucking date me.” * “I just keep thinking of a line of women passing buckets of water down — that’s what we do for each other.” * “I want us to celebrate men leaving unhappy marriages, much like I want them to go to therapy and figure out their shit. Because the result of them not doing that work is that here we go, into more relationships with yet another unhealed man.” * “One of these days you’re just gonna be like — I’d like a clementine.” * “You are not here to be a poster woman for the right way to feminist. You are a human being in pain.” **The Writing Divorce 12-prompt series is accessible for paid subscribers here [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/p/writing-divorce?r=azjvh]. Dana Schwartz’s piece, “Support Group for Broken Hearts, Middle Aged Version,” [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/p/support-group-for-broken-hearts] on the Redacted Substack column.

7 de abr de 202623 min
episode I feel shame that I'm still grieving artwork

I feel shame that I'm still grieving

Today’s episode of the limited podcast series features one of last year’s anonymous authors reading her piece, Definitely not a phoenix [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/p/definitely-not-a-phoenix?r=azjvh]. It received so much support ran it ran on the Substack column—many divorced women related to the pressure to “rise from the ashes” as some sort of before/after success story. This piece is a much more honest look at what healing really looks like. I loved the conversation we had after she read her piece, and I think you will too.  Show Notes * A writer reads her original personal essay about the summer she took her children to a lake house in Wisconsin — retreating from a small town that knew too much, and sitting with a truth she wasn’t yet ready to name * Why thirteen years later, she still doesn’t have a phoenix story to tell — and why that honesty struck a nerve with thousands of readers * The cultural pressure to “rise from the ashes” after divorce, and what gets lost when we only share the tidy, finished version of our healing * The difference between being a lantern bearer and being a self-help formula — and why sometimes what people need most is someone bleeding alongside them, not someone who solved it a decade ago * On trusting the woman inside you who already got through the worst of it — and why that track record matters more than reaching any mountaintop * You can be grieving and uncertain, and celebrate your own resilience. Quotes: “I feel shame that I am still grieving and unsure of my place in the world after all this time.” “I think we’re taught to look for the transformation, but sometimes the truth is… you’re still living inside the question.” "A lack of mountaintop experience does not mean that you have failed in the story of your own perseverance." "No matter where you are on the spectrum, someone's ahead of you and someone's behind you in terms of healing." Follow the Substack here [https://redactedwomen.substack.com/].

27 de mar de 202615 min