Daily Mail

The agony of living alone after 23 years of marriage

Happy to be single at 58, JANE ALEXANDER couldn’t wait to move into a house of her own. Then she discovered . . .

- by Jane Alexander

As I close the door behind me my heart starts thudding. My hands shake as I turn the key, carefully double- checking the front door is locked. The bare floorboard­s creak as I walk down the narrow hallway, but otherwise the house is silent, almost eerily quiet.

It’s the first night in my new home and I am surprised and shocked at how wobbly I feel.

I’d been desperate to have my own place for years. However, like one in six estranged couples in the UK, my husband Adrian and I had been forced to stay living together after our split due to financial constraint­s.

Now, finally, three years after we decided to separate, following 25 years of living as a couple (23 of them married), I had a place to call my own — a terraced house in exeter.

I should have been overjoyed but, as my moving-in date approached, I found myself increasing­ly anxious about the thought of living alone.

My son James, 19, had left for university last october, so I was not only a middle-aged singleton, but an empty-nester, too.

Adrian travelled a lot for his work as a journalist, so I was used to being without his company, but I hadn’t officially lived on my own for nearly 30 years.

The last time I had my own home, my life was wildly different. I was in my 20s, working in a busy newspaper office in london, with a wide and supportive network of friends and family close by.

Now I’m in my late 50s, freelancin­g from home in exeter. My parents died several years ago, and my friends and remaining family are scattered all over the world. I’m far more isolated — and far, far older.

I’m not the only one launching into mid-life aloneness, not by a long shot. Figures from the office for National statistics show nearly a third of households of people aged 45 to 64 are living solo.

Divorce in general is increasing, but it’s the over-50s who are leading the separation stakes. Almost a quarter of the 107,000 divorces recorded in 2016 involved women over 50 — the ‘silver splitters’.

That first night, I lie in bed — any notion of sleep dancing a million miles away. little noises make me jump: the grumble in the radiator as the boiler switches off; the wheeze of a floorboard as it eases back into place; a motorbike revving in the street. I don’t nod off until dawn.

When it isn’t outside distractio­ns, it’s my thoughts playing hooligans in my head. Will I be able to pay the bills? Will the ancient boiler last another year? How can I fix the damp in the kitchen? Is my son oK at university?

All those worries that are shared in a marriage shout louder when you’re facing them on your own.

I also feel vulnerable for the first time. I’m not the type who scares easily — I’ve lived in big old spooky houses, in extremely isolated rural spots, in tough london neighbourh­oods — none of them worried me.

Yet one night I’m woken by a thud from downstairs. Then sounds of movement. My heart pounds as I edge my way downstairs, turning on all the lights.

‘Who’s there?’ I yell, hoping any would-be burglars would scarper. I hear scrabbling and then another crashing thud. Realisatio­n dawns. A cat had obviously muscled its way in through the old cat flap and then panicked its way out. I heave a sigh of relief.

Adrian and I share custody of our dog, Dan, and I immediatel­y decide I need him as a sidekick for back-up on a more regular basis. A barking dog is a good deterrent — for cats and burglars.

changing lightbulbs, putting out the rubbish, taking the dog to the vet. There are so many things that don’t even cross your mind when you’re a couple.

You fall into the habit of sharing tasks; you let someone else take charge of chunks of your life. I realise that, over the years of our marriage, Adrian had taken over most of the practical side of our shared life — paying bills, sorting out insurance, getting cars serviced.

I look at my pristine new cooker and opt for plonking a piece of toast in the toaster. Doubtless I’ll plump for another ready-made salad from the supermarke­t for lunch.

Adrian did all the cooking in our home (he’s passionate about it) and I’ve lost my cooking mojo entirely.

Now, as I try — and fail — to twist off the lid from the marmalade jar, I suddenly feel deeply pathetic.

When it comes to the house itself, I realise I’m even more helpless.

The Victorian terrace I fell in love with hadn’t been touched since the seventies and, while I was game for stripping wallpaper and sanding floors, I couldn’t turn my hand to plastering and replacing pipes.

Fortunatel­y, I lucked out with my builder. He not only pulled off a pretty extensive renovation on an extremely tight budget, he has also given me the confidence to do things for myself.

‘There’s a video for everything on YouTube, you know,’ he says. I sit on the floor staring at a tube of caulk (the stuff you use to fill gaps; something I didn’t know until recently) and an applicatio­n gun. How on earth do you even get the tube in the gun? I check on YouTube and, sure enough, there’s a ‘how to . ..’ video.

I hire a big sander for the floors and, yes, there are any number of videos for that, too.

It’s easy to become lazy in a relationsh­ip, I realise. And it’s easy to fall into the ridiculous idea that there are ‘ man’ jobs and ‘ woman’ jobs. I’m ashamed of my old self.

Nonetheles­s, my physical shortcomin­gs still frustrate me. I pinch a nerve sanding the floors. I nearly pitch off a ladder as I try to fix a light. I actually sob with frustratio­n as I battle to move furniture on my own. I even manage to trap myself in my own bedroom when the door jams.

WHeN I last lived alone, I lugged mattresses and even sofas up and down stairs on my own. Now, aged 58, and with a dodgy shoulder, I can barely wrangle a duvet.

It’s not just physical, of course. My friend Denise, who was widowed a few years back, warns me about the loneliness. ‘ You need to throw yourself into things,’ she says. ‘Join everything. Don’t turn down a single invitation,’ she says.

I don’t feel ready for that. Not yet. I need some time and space to adjust to being on my own.

I go to bed earlier and earlier. every time I try to sit and read a book, I find I can’t relax — I keep jumping up to fix something. My home has never been cleaner.

I’m aware of silence, too, in a way that’s new. When I lived with Adrian,

everything seemed so noisy. His music crashed through the space and, bless him, he kept up a running commentary, a pretty much non- stop stream of consciousn­ess, whether in front of the TV, driving the car or pottering around the kitchen. I was longing for peace.

Now, however, I can see why my mother used to play the radio when my father died — the house sometimes seems too quiet, as if it’s listening to me. My own thoughts are way too loud. It’s a period of readjustme­nt, I realise. When you live with someone for 25 years, you can lose track of your identity.

All relationsh­ips involve compromise and I wonder if I compromise­d too much, if I lost sight of who I am. To be honest, I’m not even entirely sure what I like any more. I start questionin­g everything — from the food I buy, through the work I do, to the way I spend my weekends.

I paint my entire house white — a blank canvas that I hope will give me the clarity I need. I clear out books I no longer read, the furniture and knick-knacks that no longer feel right. I cancel my gym membership (I haven’t been for months).

Maybe I need to find a new hobby? Volunteer for a local charity? Check out adult learning classes? My son calls to talk about the societies he’s joined at university, the people he’s met, and I feel like a Fresher myself.

There’s a whole new world out there and I need to figure out what I’m going to do with it; who I’m going to be in it.

Right now I’m taking things slowly, testing the water. I have joined my local Meetup group (that puts you in touch with local activities) and Nextdoor (that connects you with your neighbourh­ood), but I’m holding fire on committing to anything.

I’m not racing into filling my life with new people, just as I’m not hurtling into filling my home with new stuff.

I sit in my living room, sipping a glass of wine (do I even like wine?), wondering what happens next. My new home is a work in progress and so, it seems, am I.

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