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When the Divorce Bomb Drops…
The moment she says “I’m done,” your world shatters. One second you’re cruising down the highway with everything mapped out — career, family, future — and the next, you’re surrounded by twisted metal, smoke, and shock.
This is your triage window — the first 24 hours that can shape everything that follows. How you respond here can either stabilize your future or make the wreckage worse.
Why Triage?
Before I became “The Metaphor Man,” I was a volunteer EMT. I’ve stood at real crash scenes, twisted steel, smoke in the air, people in shock. And I learned something: those first few minutes matter more than anything else.
When your marriage jackknifes and your life flips, this is your crash scene. And just like an EMT, your job isn’t to fix everything right away — it’s to stabilize.
🚨 Step 1: Stop the Emotional Bleeding
At a crash scene, uncontrolled bleeding can kill fast. In divorce, uncontrolled emotions can destroy your custody, finances, and future.
Before you text, storm out, or blow up — breathe. I use box breathing:
- Inhale through the nose for 4 seconds 🫁
- Hold for 4 seconds
- Exhale like you’re blowing out a candle for 4 seconds 🕯️
- Hold for 4 seconds again
This gives you time to think instead of react.
🤐 Step 2: Say Less
On a crash scene, movement can make injuries worse. In divorce, words are movement. Silence is power.
Short, factual statements like:
- “I hear what you’re saying.”
- “I need time to think.”
- “Let’s talk later.”
Your first reaction is rarely your best move. Say less now so you can say the right things later.
🏡 Step 3: Stay Put (Unless It’s Unsafe)
One of the most common mistakes? Storming out. Leaving too soon can hurt your custody, finances, and legal position.
Like at a crash site — unless there’s fire, you don’t move the patient. Unless you’re in danger, don’t move out without a plan or legal counsel.
💸 Step 4: Gather Your Gear
In triage, you secure the essentials. Here, your essentials are financial records. Within 24 hours, get copies of:
- Bank statements, tax returns, pay stubs
- Mortgage or lease documents
- Debt, credit cards, retirement accounts
Store them somewhere safe. These things have a way of “disappearing” once the process begins.
📝 Step 5: Start a Journal
EMTs document everything. You should too. Record what happened, what was said, and any behavior changes.
This isn’t venting. It’s your incident report. Voice memos, written notes, video logs — whatever works. Details now can protect you later in court.
🔒 Step 6: Lock Down Your Social Media
What you post can and will be used against you. Screenshots live forever.
- Don’t post about your ex or the divorce.
- Lock down your privacy.
- Stop stalking her profile.
- Protect your peace, not your ego.
🚦 The Triage Checklist
- ✅ Breathe (box breathing)
- ✅ Say less — silence is strategy
- ✅ Stay put (unless unsafe)
- ✅ Gather your financial gear
- ✅ Start a journal
- ✅ Lock down your social media
🛣️ Final Mile
This isn’t about “winning” the first 24 hours. It’s about surviving them smart. When I rolled my big rig years ago, I didn’t just climb out and hit the road again. I had to breathe, assess, and rebuild.
Your life may look different after this wreck — but it’s still your rig to drive. And when your convoy’s got your back, you’re never driving alone.
🚛 Want more support? Join our Convoy of divorced dads who refuse to drive solo. Real talk. Real brotherhood. Real growth.

🚦 Ready to Roll Forward?
Brother, you don’t have to drive this road alone. Join the Convoy and tap into real brotherhood, or catch the full podcast for deeper dives and raw, real talk. 👊
🚨 Don’t drive solo — roll with the Convoy.

