A woman who divorced her husband and watched him raise a family with another woman says it only took one message to get him back.
Nora and Christopher Morris were married for two years in their twenties but divorced not long after and didn’t speak for 12 years.
Until she sent a Facebook message, which sat unopened for two months.
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When Chris, 49, finally saw it, he responded and confessed he was in an unhappy marriage.
And now, the rest is history.
“We were completely apart and somehow never once ran into each other, even though we live in a small town,” Nora, a business owner, told What’s the Jam.

“One night, I had a dream about Chris and me reconnecting.
“I reached out to him through Facebook Messenger.
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“I was very nervous when I sent the message.
“A part of me felt like I shouldn’t send it.
“All I know is that I missed him deeply.
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“I knew Chris wasn’t very active on social media, but I still felt anxious waiting.
“I kept wondering when he would see it or if he ever would.
“I’d check every so often just to see if it had at least been read.
“I didn’t consider unsending it, but I definitely felt that nervous anticipation of putting myself out there and waiting.

“And then he read it – two months later.
“He was deeply unhappy and doing life completely alone.
“We believe it was God’s timing; plain and simple.
“Chris later told me he remembers thinking, ‘If I respond to her, my life is going to change forever’.
“He was nervous, excited and of course very torn.
“When I finally saw his response, I was overwhelmed with emotion.
“He had always been the love of my life.
“I was so happy to hear from him.
“We started emailing back and forth and eventually moved to talking on the phone, which I was hesitant to do because I knew once I heard his voice, I was done.”
Nora, from Yuma, Arizona, USA, says that as soon as they met in person, old feelings came rushing back.

She said: “I was scared to see him in person.
“I knew that once I saw him, everything we had try to bury over the years would come rushing back.
“And, of course, they did.
“Seeing each other after so long brought up so many emotions – love, regret, sadness.
“We realised that reconnecting would mean difficult decisions that would impact not only us but other people in our lives.
“We were afraid of what all that would mean but, at the same time, we both knew that what we felt had never really gone away and that choosing to be together could be painful.
“We sat in his car and chatted for a little bit.
“It was so good to see him again.”
The pair’s romance rekindled and they remarried in 2015.
Now they run three businesses together, have blended a family, and say their years apart were the very thing that saved their relationship.

Nora said: “The first time around, I was still pretty wild, there’s no nicer way to say it.
“Chris was always serious about us, about marriage, about family.
“I wasn’t a good wife or partner.
“I went out, lived selfishly, and didn’t fully understand what I had.
“But those 12 years apart changed everything.
“Those years were hard for both of us.
“Painful. Life-shaping.
“I raised my son alone and struggled financially.
“Chris built his career, married, and became a father to Zander, now 20, and Zelek, 19.”

“We both went through things that matured us deeply.
“When we reunited, he came back into my life with his little kids and that adjustment was emotional and honestly overwhelming at first.
“But we were different people by then. Better people.
“I came to know and love those boys as if they were mine.
“We are very close.
“We truly believe that if we had stayed together back then, we might have ended for good.
“The separation saved the relationship we were meant to have later.”
The couple first met while working at a supermarket.
Nora, aged 29 at the time, already had a son, Matt, from a previous relationship.

Both of their families were “ecstatic” about the reunion.
Nora said: “I always stayed close to Chris’s family during the years we were apart.
“I loved them then and I love them now.
“So when Chris and I found our way back to each other, they were incredibly supportive and happy.
“My family felt the same way.
“They always loved Chris and welcomed him back without hesitation.
“Chris always loved Matt like his own.
“Seeing him again years later, now a grown man and a father himself, was emotional.
“Chris said it felt surreal because, in his heart, he still saw him as that little boy.

“There was something very tender about realising how much time had passed, but how some feelings never really change.
“We are living proof that people can change, love can mature, and second chances can be sacred.”
Nora added: “This isn’t a perfect story; it’s a real one, built through mistakes, pain, and years apart that changed us both.
“We love each other deeply, we are happy in a way that feels peaceful and secure, and this love is real.
“Knowing what we have now, every difficult season was worth it and we would choose it all again.”
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