Yesterday marked our three-year anniversary. My boyfriend booked a reservation at a restaurant far nicer than anywhere we’d ever gone before. He told me to dress up and hinted at a “special surprise.” I got my nails done, picked out my best dress, and spent the entire afternoon imagining what was coming. I was sure this was it — the proposal I’d secretly hoped for. He seemed nervous at dinner, barely touching his food and constantly checking his phone.
Then dessert arrived. A single slice of cake with writing across the top in careful icing. My heart started pounding before I even read it. I smiled at him, expecting something romantic, something life-changing. But when my eyes focused on the words, my stomach dropped. It didn’t say “Will you marry me?” It didn’t even mention us.
It said, “Congrats on your new job!”
For a second, I thought it was a joke. I hadn’t applied for anything new. I hadn’t mentioned changing careers. I looked at him, confused, waiting for him to laugh and pull out a ring. Instead, he cleared his throat and said, “I thought you’d be excited. The position in Chicago. It’s a huge opportunity.” That’s when it hit me — the job offer wasn’t mine. It was his.
He had accepted a job in another state. He hadn’t asked me about moving. He hadn’t discussed long distance. He had simply decided — and planned to tell me over cake. The “surprise” wasn’t a future together. It was a future he’d already chosen without me.
I stood up calmly. I told him I was done. I paid for my half of dinner and walked out with more clarity than heartbreak. Three years taught me something important: if someone is planning their next chapter without you in it, believe them. I don’t regret leaving that table. I regret almost settling for less than partnership.
