At my age, I believed my life was solid. I had a happy marriage and a decent life. Then one ordinary discovery sent me across town and toward a truth about my marriage I never expected to uncover.
My name is Madison. At 55, I honestly believed the era of life-altering surprises was behind me.
I had already done the hard parts. Marriage, raising kids, building a career, and surviving losses quietly and responsibly.
I thought what remained would be predictable, maybe even dull, and I was fine with that.
I had already done the hard parts.
Then, two weeks ago, my company downsized. They called it a restructuring.
They said my position was no longer necessary. Twenty years of loyalty reduced to a severance packet and a sympathetic smile from a man young enough to be my son.
I drove home that afternoon feeling hollow, as if someone had scooped out the center of my chest and forgotten to put anything back.
They called it a restructuring.
Richard, my husband of 28 years, told me it might be a blessing.
He said, “Maybe this is your chance to rest.”
I smiled when he said it, but restful wasn’t what I felt. I felt untethered, useless, and invisible.
Just like that, I was home with nothing but time and a strange emptiness I didn’t know what to do with.
So I did what some women do when life feels out of control.
I started cleaning.
I felt untethered, useless, and invisible.
I cleaned because movement felt better than sitting still. I did it because the order gave me something I could control, and because if I stopped moving, I thought I might start thinking too much.
That was how I ended up in the attic that morning.
The attic had been ignored for years.


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