Skip to content

On Sunday Morning

Telling stories since 2005

Menu
  • Home
  • Blog
  • A Year in the Life
    • January 2025
      • January 01
      • January 02
      • January 03
      • January 04
      • January 05
      • January 06
      • January 07
      • January 08
      • January 13
      • January 10
      • January 11
  • Adventures Afoot
    • North America
      • Canada
      • Mexico
        • Uxmal and la ruta PUUC
      • Central America
        • Belize
        • Costa Rica
        • El Salvador
        • Honduras
        • Nicaragua
        • Panama
    • Caribbean
    • Europe
      • England
      • Wales
      • Scotland
      • Ireland
      • Italy
        • Finding your way back to Rome
      • France
      • Hungary
      • Austria
      • Czech Republic
      • Poland
      • Croatia
        • Museums of Broken Relationships
      • Bosnia and Herzegovnia
      • Germany
    • South America
      • Argentina
      • Colombia
      • Ecuador
        • That time I went to the Galapagos Islands
      • Peru
      • Chile
      • Boliva
      • Paraguay
      • Suriname
      • Brazil
      • French Guiana
      • Guyana
      • Venezuela
    • Africa
      • Kenya
        • International Meet-cute
      • Rwanda
      • South Africa
      • Tanzania
  • Peace Corps.
    • Pre-Service + Pre-Service Training
      • My one travel regret
      • Let’s try this again
      • Invited to Serve
      • Peace Corps Interview
      • Peace Corps Update
      • Answers to the most frequently asked questions
      • A new beginning
      • ‘Shit-hole’ countries–where exactly is that
      • Answers to the most frequently asked questions
      • 10 weeks to go
      • Answering the basic questions
      • What it costs to join the Peace Corps
      • Every.Single.Thing. I Packed for Madagascar
      • When I get to where I’m going…
      • Application, timeline, and clearance
      • Pace Corps To-Do List
      • Tick Tock
      • Saying good-byes
      • Pre-Service Training
      • Alive and Well
      • Settling in
      • Wait, you’re still not a volunteer?
      • Last Night at the Hideaway
      • Stay. Don’t go.
      • Being Lost
      • Packing for Peace Corps | Rwanda
    • Service
      • Swearing in
      • World Cup and Making Friends
      • Holidays and Exams
      • Learning a language that will never be used again
      • Home–it’s a feeling more than a place
      • Mr Wendel
      • Umuganda, you say? What the heck is that?
    • COS + Post PC Plans
      • Happy Peace Corps Day
      • Medical Separation and Worldwide Evacuation
  • The Night Shift
    • Chapter 2: Begin Again
    • Chapter 3: Call it what you want
    • Chapter 1: Dear Reader
    • Chapter 4: A Proper Introduction aka my name is…
    • Chapter 5: Message in a bottle
    • Chapter 6: Haunted
    • Chapter 7: You need to calm down
    • Chapter 8: You’ll never see this again
    • Chapter 9: It’s just a little wind and water
    • Chapter 10: Question…?
    • Chapter 11: Everything has changed
    • Chapter 12: Something’s always wrong
    • Chapter 13: Foolish one
    • Chapter 14: The moment I knew
    • Chapter 15: Closure
    • Chapter 16: A place in this world
    • Chapter 17: Hey Stephen
    • Chapter 18: I almost do
    • Chapter 19: The way that I loved you
    • Chapter 20: You’re on your on kid, and I am too
    • Chapter 21: Right where you left me
    • Chapter 22: Eliza’s falls in love with Italy
    • Chapter 23: This is me trying
    • Chapter 24: Sparks fly
    • Chapter 25: The story of us
    • Chapter 26: Snow on the beach
    • Chapter 27: Something to talk about
    • Chapter 28: Unemployed Boyfriend
    • Chapter 29: Look what you made me do
    • Chapter 30: Pale Green Stars
    • Chapter 31: Flashes of light
    • Chapter 32: Illicit affairs
    • Chapter 33: Paris
    • Chapter 34: I did something bad
    • Chapter 35–If organs had personalities
    • Chapter 37: This is why we can’t have nice things
    • Chapter 35: Should have said no
    • Chapter 39:
    • Chapter 36: This is me trying
    • Chapter 38: Clean
    • Chapter 41: The moment I knew
    • Chapter 42: Everything has changed
    • Chapter 43: Epiphany
    • Chapter 44: Someone I used to know
    • Chapter 45: All too well
    • Chapter 46: We are never getting back together
    • Chapter 47: long story short
    • Chapter 48: You’re losing me
    • Chapter 49: Breathe
    • Chapter 50: We are never getting back together
Menu

Museums of Broken Relationships

Posted on February 28, 2021December 16, 2024 by Elle

2018 Michelle here:  This museum I found in Zagreb, Croatia is perhaps one of the more interesting museums I’ve ever been in [The Sex Museum in Naples is another].  While Zagreb is no uber charming city, this museum had me enthralled.  The end of a relationship is always a trying time for everyone involved even if it’s just a ‘whew, I dodged that bullet’ thought. But I’ve never thought of putting my relationship detritus in a museum for other to look at.  Let this be a reminder that atypical museums can be some of the more educational/informative/pleasurable.


A break-up is like a broken mirror:  it’s better to leave it alone than to hurt yourself picking up the pieces.

His name was Michael. Today is his birthday. I shouldn’t remember that, but I do. When we met he was 32, and I was 24. We met at work.  I loved his sense of humour and he loved my adventurous spirit.  We were friends first.  Nearly a year, before anything more than friendly happened.  But as is often the case between men and women, something did happen.  I practically dared him to kiss me, and when he did, it was as if time stood still. July 19, 2004 …after lunch. The kiss lasted exactly 42 seconds.  I know because I had a digital atomic clock on the wall in my office. The kiss touched every neuron in my body, and for the first time in my life, I felt alive.

I named him “Nobody” and he called me “Girl. ”  If people asked me who I was dating, and they did because people love to meddle in the affairs of others, I’d say “Nobody.” If people asked him who he was seeing, he’d say “Just some girl.”  It was our secret, and it was exciting.

We carried on our secret affair for 18 months –until I moved away… co-workers weren’t supposed to date. And even after moving to a different state, the thought of him was like a drug.  We were like addicts addicted to each other; couldn’t stay away, yet couldn’t get enough.

broken relationship 4

The first step in recovering from an addiction is admitting that there is a problem, and oh boy, there was.  Michael was as strong as any drug I’d ever encountered, and willpower alone wasn’t enough to make me quit him.  Over time I came to rely on a power greater than myself and contact with Michael became more and more sparse.  Withdrawal is a painful master. There was physical pain. There was emotional pain. There were tears.

broken relationship 5
There were no stuffed worms. No legs were broken in this break-up.


The last conversation I had with him was right before I left for Moscow.  He said “you always did want to go places.” and I said “I will always love you, but this will be the last time I tell you that.”  And I haven’t had contact with him since.  After returning from Moscow, I wanted to call him.  I wanted to tell him all the amazing adventures I had.  Instead, I got a cat. I named her Lily. She was a sweet cat.

Lily helped me heal.

I still have a post card he gave me. And ticket stubs for various events. And a necklace. And various little notes.  What can I say, I’m a sentimental soul.

broken relationships 1

I knew before I went to Zagreb that I wanted to go to the museum of broken relationships. I find it  fascinating to see what people keep as mementos from relationships.  Not every relationship ends on a sour note.  Some have other obstacles that time just could not overcome.  Some just aren’t meant to be.  Some exist solely to prepare you for the future.  Michael was not my first boyfriend, but he was my first love, and without that relationship, I wouldn’t be where I am today.

I’ve held on to the mementos of the relationship with Michael for 15 years, and karma, good energy, and such being what it is, it’s time to release that energy into the universe. Good bye Michael.


PS...I have a slight confession to make.  One time I was dating this guy.  His name was James. Now I knew that the relationship with James was never going to be long-term, but he was ummm, fun, and I had recently broken up with a cheating bastard I caught with another woman.  I made James brownies for his birthday. I left them on the kitchen table with a ‘Happy Birthday’ note. I came over the next day to find everything in the trash. I was pissed to say the least. Livid. Irate. Incensed. A seething cauldron of raging fumes; you get the idea. He was being such an ass. I went to the local World Market, bought a bottle of cheap $7 Il Bastardo wine, and switched it out for his fancy $200 bottle of French Bordeaux.  My friend and I drank the rich, velvet wine while sitting in her hot tub cursing all the shallow men in the world.  I still feel no shame in taking Il Bastardo’s prized bottle of red wine.

In retrospect, the Il Bastardo was still probably pretty good.  After all it comes from Tuscany and is a Sangiovese so probably still good. I really would have like to have smashed Il Bastardo over the bastard’s head, but I got my revenge in other ways that even though the statute of limitations has passed, I’ll still keep my mouth shut because some things are just better left unsaid [or in this case… things are better left un-typed].

at least no axes were ever involved in any of my break-ups

PPS…Names and dates have been changed to protect the innocent…Except Il Bastardo.

PPPS...If I dated women, I’d totally give every.single.one I ever broke up with this bar of chocolate.

broken relationship 6

6 thoughts on “Museums of Broken Relationships”

  1. Connie Reed says:
    February 9, 2018 at 22:36

    Beautiful, heart-wrenching story, and what an unusual museum.

  2. Vedante says:
    February 9, 2018 at 23:30

    I am actually amazed to see that there exists a museum like this. I would want to go there someday 😀 Looks interesting! And what you did with the wine – bravo! haha

    1. Michelle says:
      February 10, 2018 at 09:20

      I was so excited to find this museum. It was awesome, and I’ve heard at times, pretty crowded.

  3. kami says:
    February 12, 2018 at 16:13

    such a beautiful pOst, I really enjoyed reading it! but how come he threw away all the brownies?!?!?!

    I was in zagreb last autumn and i really wanted to go to museum of broken relationships, i was passing it by twice but first it was crowded with three big tour groups and then they closed earlier on that very day :/ looks like i need to go back to Zagreb!

    1. Michelle says:
      February 12, 2018 at 16:22

      because he was an ass! We broke up the next day. If a guy can’t handle me doing something nice, then I don’t need him in my life!

  4. Carol Colborn says:
    February 26, 2018 at 12:30

    Wow I didn’t know there was such a museum! Would have come in handy when I needed it! Hope I won’t anymore (I am on my third marriage). But thanks for setting me down memory lane.

Comments are closed.

Blast from the past

Welcome to On Sunday Morning. I’m the voice behind the blog and the person behind the camera. I’m an eager explorer, wannabe writer, capable chef, creative conversationalist, aging athlete, and proficient photographer. Queer in its original meaning is an apt adjective to describe me. I even have a day job working in healthcare. Social media is making us sad; let’s go for a walk somewhere together or trade tales around a campfire.

"I'm a big believer in winging it. I'm a big believer that you're never going to find perfect city travel experience or the perfect meal without a constant willingness to experience a bad one. Letting the happy accident happen is what a lot of vacation itineraries miss, I think, and I'm always trying to push people to allow those things to happen rather than stick to some rigid itinerary."

ANTHONY BOURDAIN

©2025 On Sunday Morning | Design by Superb