When Jake suggested we move to Alaska to save money and build our future, I said yes without hesitation. I never imagined that one decision would unravel everything I thought I knew about love, trust, and the man I planned to marry.
At 25, I thought I had it figured out. Living in my mom’s cozy old house in South Carolina, freelancing as a graphic designer, and sharing life with my boyfriend of two years felt like a dream. At first, Jake moving in was bliss—movie nights, morning coffee, shared chores. But slowly, I began carrying more and more of the load.
Jake had quit his job, claiming he needed time to find his passion. Months passed. I paid for everything while he lounged around, gaming and talking about crypto with equally unemployed friends. Still, I believed in him. In us. So when he proposed one evening—no ring, just a heartfelt plea for a future together—I said yes. Love made it easy.
When my mom visited from Alaska, Jake opened up about feeling like a failure. She didn’t scold him. She offered a solution: move up north, work hard, live rent-free with her, and save enough in two years to afford a wedding, a house, a ring—our dream. Jake seemed excited, and so was I. We made plans. We set a date. This was our fresh start.
Two days before we were supposed to leave, my girlfriends took me on a farewell trip. I returned early, eager to surprise Jake. But I was the one shocked. My things were packed and waiting by the door—mine only. Jake’s stuff was untouched. I walked in to find him watching TV, calm as ever.
“I’m not going,” he said flatly. “Alaska’s not for me.”
Confused, I pressed him. That’s when Maddie walked out of the bathroom—wearing his shirt. His new girlfriend. He’d used the entire plan to get me out of the house. His audacity left me speechless.
I left without a fight. Booked a hotel near the airport. Called my mom. Told her everything.
She didn’t hesitate: “Come home. We’ll figure this out together.”
So I flew to Alaska alone. Hurt, humiliated—but somehow lighter. I got a job within a week, working on the docks. Hard work. Honest work. And slowly, I found my strength again.
Jake and Maddie didn’t last long in my house. My friends back home made sure of that. With a few firm words and a changed lock, they were out. Justice served.
Months passed. I kept working, learning, healing. One day, I met Nate—a kind, thoughtful man with calloused hands and a steady heart. Coffee led to hikes, hikes led to Sunday breakfasts. Two years later, we bought a house near the mountains. A life Jake never could have built with me.
Jake once said he wasn’t built for Alaska. He was right.
But I was.
Alaska gave me more than a second chance. It gave me back to myself. And this time, I’m not building someone else’s dream. I’m living my own.