She spent years believing that shrinking herself was love, that being agreeable was safety. The realization that her compliance was wounding her spirit cut deeper than any headline. Leaving his orbit was not a triumphant movie ending, but a trembling first step into a life she didn’t yet know how to live. Without his last name as armor, she met herself as a stranger and chose, one small decision at a time, to stay.
The rebuilding was not glamorous. It looked like saying no without apologizing, like laughing from her belly instead of for the cameras, like praying not for a different past but for a truer future. Faith became less a performance and more a lifeline, teaching her to hold her pain without being owned by it. Serving others softened what resentment had hardened. By 88, her legacy was no longer borrowed from his fame; it was written in the quiet courage of a woman who finally believed she was enough on her own.