Divorced Angler Memories Of A Big Catch -2024- ... Access
The next three minutes were agony. The bass ran under the boat. I thought I lost it. Then it jumped again. I fumbled the net.
For the next seven minutes, I fought that fish like it owed me alimony. It ran deep, wrapped around the log twice, and jumped once—a glorious, scale-flashing arc that caught the early light. I remember laughing. Actually laughing. A divorced angler alone on a reservoir, laughing at a fish. Divorced Angler Memories of a Big Catch -2024- ...
The fish paused. For a full second, the line went slack. I thought I lost it. But no—it was regrouping. Just like I was. The next three minutes were agony
This is where the story diverges from the typical angler's tale. Then it jumped again
The sun begins to set, casting a golden glow over the lake. I pack up my gear, feeling a sense of peace settle over me. The divorce may have changed my life, but it has also given me a newfound appreciation for the simple things – a beautiful sunset, a big catch, and the solitude of the lake.
To understand the weight of that memory, you have to understand the winter of 2023. Divorce, finalized in the bleakness of late January, is a lot like ice fishing. You sit in the cold, staring at a dark hole, wondering why you bothered drilling it in the first place. The assets were divided like a stringer of perch—fair, but gutting. The house was sold. The dog, a golden retriever named "Reel," stayed with her.