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My wife Donna walked into her sister’s house last Thanksgiving, and when her sister started in about how Donna should really consider coloring her gray hair, my wife just smiled and changed the subject. No defending her choice. No explaining why she liked it natural. No justifying anything.
That’s when it hit me—something had changed.
For thirty years, I watched this woman explain every decision she made. Why she worked part-time when the kids were young. Why she went back full-time when they were older. Why she didn’t want to join the PTA. Why she did want to take that art class. Always explaining, always justifying, always making sure everyone understood her reasons.
Then she turned fifty, and it all stopped.
She stopped defending her choices to her family
The hair thing was just the start. Her mother called one day, going on about how Donna should really think about losing weight for her health. Old Donna would’ve spent twenty minutes explaining her recent doctor visit, her blood work results, her exercise routine.
New Donna? She said “I’m good, Ma” and asked about her mother’s garden.
When her brother suggested she was “wasting her degree” by not going back to corporate work, she didn’t launch into the whole story about burnout and priorities and finding meaning. She just said “I like what I’m doing now” and passed the potatoes.
I sat there at these family dinners, watching her not engage, and it was like watching someone discover they had a superpower. She’d found the off switch for arguments that weren’t worth having.
Her sister kept pushing about the hair for weeks. Donna never took the bait. Eventually, her sister stopped bringing it up. That simple.
Her friendships got more real
Here’s something I didn’t expect—when Donna stopped explaining herself, she also stopped hanging around people who demanded explanations.
There was this group of women she’d known since the kids were in elementary school. Every coffee date turned into a justification session. Why aren’t you volunteering more? Why didn’t you go to Carol’s party? Why are you taking a pottery class instead of something practical?
One day, Donna came home from coffee and said “I’m done with that group.” Just like that. Thirty years of weekly morning coffee, done.
Instead, she started spending time with women who didn’t need her to justify wanting to read romance novels or explain why she didn’t care about her car having a dent. Women who just accepted that Donna likes what she likes.
The funny thing? These new friendships were deeper. When you’re not spending all your time defending your choices, you can actually talk about things that matter.
She started saying no without a reason
This one really threw me.
Someone would ask Donna to bake three dozen cookies for the church sale, and she’d just say “I can’t do that.” Period. End of sentence.
No “I would but I have a doctor’s appointment.” No “I’m so swamped with work right now.” No elaborate excuse that everyone knows is partly made up anyway.
Just “no, I can’t.”
The first time I heard her do this, I actually looked up from my newspaper. Who was this woman?
People would stand there, waiting for the explanation that always used to come. When it didn’t, they’d kind of sputter and move on. And you know what? The world didn’t end. The church still had their bake sale. Nobody died because Donna didn’t provide cookies or explanations.
She told me later that she realized she’d been treating “no” like it needed a permission slip. Like she needed to provide enough reasons to make her “no” acceptable to whoever was asking.
Turns out, “no” is a complete sentence. Who knew?
The mental energy she got back was incredible
You want to know the biggest change? Donna had energy again.
Not physical energy—though that improved too. Mental energy. Space in her head that wasn’t taken up by crafting explanations and justifications and defenses.
She started painting again. Hadn’t touched a brush in fifteen years, but suddenly she had the mental space for it. Started reading books she actually wanted to read, not the ones she thought she should read. Started saying yes to things she wanted to do and no to things she didn’t, without a whole mental committee meeting about each decision.
She told me one night that she used to lie in bed rehearsing explanations. Running through what she’d say if someone questioned her choices. Preparing defenses for decisions she hadn’t even made yet.
Thirty years of that. Thirty years of mental energy spent justifying her existence to people who probably weren’t thinking about her choices nearly as much as she thought they were.
It changed our marriage too
I’m not going to lie—it took some adjusting.
For years, when Donna wanted something, she’d build a whole case for it. Why we should replace the couch, complete with research and reasoning. Why she wanted to visit her college friend, with a full breakdown of logistics and budget impact.
Now she just says what she wants. “I want to replace this couch.” “I’m going to visit Sarah next month.”
At first, I kept waiting for the rest. The explanation, the justification, the careful argument. When it didn’t come, I realized something uncomfortable—I’d gotten used to her having to prove her wants were valid.
Why should my wife have to build a case for wanting a new couch after twenty years? Why does visiting a friend require a PowerPoint presentation?
She shouldn’t, and it doesn’t. But that’s how we’d been operating, without even realizing it.
Bottom line
Watching Donna stop explaining herself taught me something I should’ve known already—women spend an incredible amount of energy justifying their existence, their choices, their preferences.
My wife is the same person she was at forty-nine. Same values, same personality, same terrible taste in reality TV. The only thing that changed is she stopped feeling like she owed everyone an explanation for being who she is.
And that changed everything.
















