Redacted: What Divorced Women Aren't Telling You

Steph Sprenger

A limited series podcast where divorced women share their stories—sometimes anonymously—and talk honestly about their experiences before, during, and after divorce. 

Episodes

  1. 4d ago

    The "Now What?" Era: Unbecoming a Wife

    SHOW NOTES: In this episode, we cover: How Cindy went from ghostwriter and editor to finding her own voice — and launching The Mother Lode on SubstackThe role Maggie Smith's You Could Make This Place Beautiful played as a lantern for both of us during our divorcesMDMA therapy, IFS therapy, and the "good girl" conditioning that keeps women trapped in marriages long past their expiration dateWhy couples therapy can actually harm women — particularly when covert abuse or personality disorders are involvedThe Divorce Diary series: the financial reality of divorce no one talks about, including legal fees, spousal support, and child supportHow divorce laws protect women in theory but rarely in practicePost-separation abuse and why sharing children means you can never truly divorce some peopleThe real cost of stepping back from your career during marriage — and who pays for it after divorceThe case for rethinking marriage entirely: communal living, separate households, and what partnership could look like outside the traditional scriptEsther Perel, Emily Nagoski, and whether domesticity is simply the death of desireWhere we both are, three years out — and embracing "now what?" when the gauntlet is finally behind youResources mentioned: You Could Make This Place Beautiful by Maggie SmithThis American Ex-Wife by Lyz LenzFair Play by Eve RodskyThe Ambition Penalty by Stephanie O'Connell RodriguezCome As You Are and Come Together by Emily NagoskiEsther Perel's work on desire and domesticityMad Wife by Kate Hamilton (pseudonym)The Mother Lode on Substack: cindyditiberio.substack.com

    40 min
  2. Mar 27

    I feel shame that I'm still grieving

    Today’s episode of the limited podcast series features one of last year’s anonymous authors reading her piece, Definitely not a phoenix. It received so much support ran it ran on the Substack column—many divorced women related to the pressure to “rise from the ashes” as some sort of before/after success story. This piece is a much more honest look at what healing really looks like. I loved the conversation we had after she read her piece, and I think you will too.  Show Notes A writer reads her original personal essay about the summer she took her children to a lake house in Wisconsin — retreating from a small town that knew too much, and sitting with a truth she wasn’t yet ready to nameWhy thirteen years later, she still doesn’t have a phoenix story to tell — and why that honesty struck a nerve with thousands of readersThe cultural pressure to “rise from the ashes” after divorce, and what gets lost when we only share the tidy, finished version of our healingThe difference between being a lantern bearer and being a self-help formula — and why sometimes what people need most is someone bleeding alongside them, not someone who solved it a decade agoOn trusting the woman inside you who already got through the worst of it — and why that track record matters more than reaching any mountaintopYou can be grieving and uncertain, and celebrate your own resilience.Quotes: “I feel shame that I am still grieving and unsure of my place in the world after all this time.” “I think we’re taught to look for the transformation, but sometimes the truth is… you’re still living inside the question.” "A lack of mountaintop experience does not mean that you have failed in the story of your own perseverance." "No matter where you are on the spectrum, someone's ahead of you and someone's behind you in terms of healing." Follow the Substack here.

    16 min
  3. Mar 6

    Protecting men with our silence

    Content warning: This episode contains a personal essay that references infidelity and the discovery of illegal pornography involving minors. Please listen with that in mind. Show Notes A writer reads her original personal essay about discovering her husband’s infidelities, disturbing online activity, and a Craigslist ad — and the quiet, calculated way she chose to end her marriageSteph and her anonymous guest reflect on the painful decision to protect a spouse’s image from their adult children, and the hidden cost of carrying that silence aloneThey discuss the generational programming that kept so many women “playing small”—and the moment it finally became impossible to continueThe unexpected freedom and joy of building a life entirely on your own terms — pink bedrooms, yellow walls, and all. How do you know when it’s time to go? And what role does parenting play in the decision to leave a marriage?Quotable Moments “I’d rather be alone than lonely with someone.”“We owe ourselves something and we owe our children being able to see their parent living their best life.”“How do my children learn to take chances and bet on themselves if their own mother can’t do the same?”“The most important thing was making a life that I wanted to live. . . I have built a life that I love.” “I worried about all of the dark things that we do when we’re radically changing our lives.”“ Surrendering control over the situation is when I finally found the space to be me.”“Alone is beautiful, too.”**This episode references this piece on couples’ counseling with a narcissist on The Mother Lode by Cindy DiTiberio We are halfway through the Writing Divorce prompt series—paid subscribers can find the prompts as they drop here on the Redacted Substack column.

    24 min

About

A limited series podcast where divorced women share their stories—sometimes anonymously—and talk honestly about their experiences before, during, and after divorce. 

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