Modern Love – "My Husband’s Breakdown Was My Breakthrough"
Host: Anna Martin
Guest: Stephanie Gunning
Date: April 8, 2026
Episode Overview
This deeply personal episode explores what it means to love—and be loved through—the darkest moments of mental illness. Anna Martin speaks with Stephanie Gunning about her marriage to Jonathan, whose battle with major depression and a mental health crisis forced her to confront her own limits, needs, and capacity for vulnerability. Through raw storytelling and vivid imagery, the episode addresses secrecy, resilience, and redefining what it means to be a family in the aftermath of pain.
Meet-Cute and Early Relationship
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Stephanie’s Divorce and Reinvention
After divorcing young, Stephanie pursued a period of “reinvention,” trying on new identities and experiences—symbolized by a never-ridden Brooklyn bicycle.- "[After my divorce] I bought a bicycle. Never rode that bicycle. It hung in my house. I thought it looked so cute on my wall. I'm a Brooklyn girl with a bicycle." (03:00)
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Meeting Jonathan: The Boot Guy
Stephanie meets Jonathan in an outdoors store (EMS), where he helps her shop for camping supplies. She is instantly drawn to his calmness—which she likens to "being near a tree"—and spends $1,000 on gear just to keep talking to him.- "From the back… comes a young Gary Sinise, in golden light. And I heard the Pixies singing ‘Here Comes Your Man’." (04:10)
- “The thing that drew me to him like a magnet, is the calmness that he emanates. Like being near a tree.” (05:09)
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The Tent Anecdote
Stephanie boldly invites Jonathan into a tent at the store and asks him to go camping—he declines, explaining he has a girlfriend, but she leaves him her business card.- “You're gonna think this sounds crazy, but could you come in here with me?... You seem like someone who it would be really fun to go camping with, are you free this weekend?” (06:11)
- “He got all flustered, and he was like, I have a girlfriend.” (06:46)
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Reunion After 9/11
Over a year later, after 9/11, Jonathan calls. He’s broken up with his girlfriend, has kept Stephanie’s business card, and wants to see her.- “The voicemail essentially said, I don’t know if you’re gonna remember me, I sold you boots... I carry your business card with me. I think about you every day. I broke up with my girlfriend.” (07:54)
Learning to Be Chosen
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Not Being Chosen
Stephanie opens up about her history of feeling unchosen and insecurities rooted in her childhood:- "One of the themes of my own life is never being chosen… when [Jonathan] called, I thought, is this beautiful man choosing me, really me?" (09:15)
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Self-Doubt and The “Bandana as a Shirt” Complex
Despite Jonathan’s obvious interest, Stephanie worries she’s not his type—convinced he’d prefer women who are “shiny, confident, who can wear a bandana as a shirt.”- “I just think he dates the kind of women who can wear a bandana as a shirt. You know what I mean? Those women.” (10:19)
Early Relationship Vulnerability
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The Big Reveal: Jonathan’s Depression
On their fourth date, Jonathan opens up about his mental health struggles, including lifelong depression, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts. Stephanie insists on “seeing” this part of him, refusing to shy away.- "If you and I are gonna do this, you're gonna have to show me. So I'm coming... and you're gonna show me." (13:10)
- “I said, do you ever—have you ever thought about suicide? …He said…he had contemplated getting a gun and shooting himself, but it seemed like quite a hassle.” (15:24–15:33)
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Unusually Deep Early Conversation
The two share their darkest secrets at a Chinese restaurant, both end up in tears and drinking tea until closing—securing a powerful intimacy early on.- "It was the kind of conversation you have with someone after years or your therapist. I mean, but we just went for broke." (15:31)
Marriage, Parenthood & Keeping Secrets
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Building a Family Amid Depression
As newlyweds, Stephanie and Jonathan navigate his depression:- “It looked like sleeping in. It looked like quiet. It looked like difficulty socializing with others… and then other times, things were great.” (20:54)
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Stephanie’s Coping Mechanisms
Stephanie compensates for Jonathan’s absence, telling friends he’s “just shy” to protect him, but admits to feeling anger about his emotional distance, visualized by him being “out on the dock."- “I have all these pictures of him facing away from me… and I would say to him, the depression is like the dock, and how far you are away on the dock is how bad things are... sometimes I’d get scared and I would say, I would call for him, like, come back. Come back to me.” (22:33)
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Unexpected Pregnancy: Major Turning Point
Stephanie’s reaction to learning she's pregnant is panic—triggered by her belief that “girls like me don’t get lives like this”—and she announces she wants a divorce and an abortion out of fear of abandonment:- “I woke him up from a sound sleep and said, I want a divorce and I want an abortion.... because I will have this baby and it'll turn you into a father. And fathers leave. And I can't do it.” (25:22)
- Jonathan’s unwavering devotion: “...if you want an abortion, I will take you... if you want a divorce, I will give you a divorce. But... I am the man who’s never gonna leave you.” (26:02)
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Openness with Their Daughter Emmy
Determined to avoid secrets, Stephanie and Jonathan explain Jonathan’s mental illness to their daughter in an age-appropriate way, calling it “the Big Blue.”- “We called it the Big Blue. We drew pictures of it... and talked about how sometimes dad has a kind of sadness called the Big Blue.” (28:15)
Crisis, Caretaking, and Breaking Down
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Stephanie as the “Competent One”
For years, Stephanie compensates for Jonathan’s illness by holding every aspect of their lives together, never contemplating her own mental health or needs:- “I was a pretzel, turning myself in and out. Everybody had health insurance because I worked...” (29:45)
- “If I made a misstep, the whole thing fell down.” (31:36)
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The Breaking Point — Jonathan’s Breakdown
In 2023, Jonathan suffers a health crisis (pulmonary embolisms) and falls into a deeper depression, culminating in a suicidal crisis where he tells Stephanie, “I have to go or I’m going to hurt myself. I have to go, I’m gonna hurt you, I’m gonna hurt Emmy.” (36:45)- Stephanie’s fear and clarity:
- “Come for me, all right, Maybe we go down together, you and me... You come for my daughter. If there's a choice to be made, my friend, I choose her.” (37:06)
- "He doesn’t even look like himself... all hollowed in… seems like a shadow of himself." (38:58)
- Stephanie’s fear and clarity:
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Hospitalization and Treatment
Jonathan is hospitalized, receives ECT (electroconvulsive therapy), and recovers considerably after 13 sessions, with Stephanie and their daughter supporting him.- “Emerson referred to it as, ‘oh, they unplugged dad and plugged him back in.’... It was that effective.” (43:04)
Stephanie’s Own Breakdown and Recovery
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Delayed Reckoning
After holding things together through crisis, Stephanie’s emotional reckoning hits later, brought on by feedback at work and a wave of physical grief.- “I started crying and I couldn’t stop... it just hit me. Like, it all... It was almost as if I wasn't actually living it when I lived it. And it all showed up in that moment.” (44:28)
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Allowing Herself to Be Cared For — Role Reversal
For the first time, Stephanie lets Jonathan care for her as she takes Family Medical Leave and starts trauma therapy:- “Jonathan stepped in with love, with support... This is the miracle at the heart of all of it, that someone kept their promise. And even when I fell apart, you know... he had to remind me to eat. He had to remind me to drink.” (50:00)
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Rebuilding Together
In their time healing together at home, Stephanie learns to let herself be vulnerable and cared for, marking a pivotal change in their relationship.
Family, Truth, and Gratitude After Crisis
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Living in Truth as a Family
Both Jonathan and Stephanie embrace absolute honesty about mental health and their struggles.- “I had made such a point my whole life of, like, Emerson will live in truth. But she wasn’t, because I was pretending to be okay when I wasn’t, and Jonathan was pretending to be better than he was. And now we live in absolute truth.” (53:34)
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A Messy, Real Thanksgiving
- “You are welcome here in our real lives with us, where there is nothing but love. It is not perfect. We are not a Norman Rockwell family... Everyone is on some kind of antidepressants or anti–…But having fallen apart, both of us, there is now—I no longer worry he will someday disappear, because I know for a fact, without fail, this man will always come home to me. He’s not going to leave me. He always comes back.” (54:03)
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The Dock Metaphor Endures
Stephanie’s imagery of the dock (for depression’s distance) remains, but its meaning shifts.- “No, it's still a dock. But I feel him beside me now. In a way, I have never felt him beside me. And the dock is there... but for now, today, we're on the ground together.” (54:40)
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Final Reflection on Surviving Worst-Case Scenarios
- “There's something so liberating about when the worst thing happens and you get up and make the coffee, you take the dog for a walk... If you are lucky, the ones you love come back.” (55:25)
Standout Quotes & Moments
- On Mental Health Disclosure:
- “If you and I are gonna do this, you're gonna have to show me. …Show me what you mean. …You gotta let me in. Show it to me.” (13:10)
- Jonathan’s Promise:
- "If you live to be a hundred, I'm gonna live to be 100 plus one day so that you never have to be without me, because I am the man who's never gonna leave you." (26:02)
- On Caretaking:
- “I have been in meetings, like in London, and someone will send me a note. What is my password? …But I know is the thing. It's like, hold on. I have it.” (30:58)
- On Living in Truth:
- "Now we live in absolute truth... you are welcome here in our real lives with us, where there is nothing but love." (53:34)
- Metaphor of the Dock:
- “The depression is like the dock, and how far you are away on the dock is how bad things are... sometimes he would be really far and I couldn’t even touch him.” (22:33)
Notable Timestamps
| Segment | Timestamp | |-----------------------------------|-------------| | Meet-cute: Camping store | 03:31–05:30 | | 9/11/Vulnerable voicemail | 07:25–09:15 | | Fourth date: Depression revealed | 12:52–16:03 | | The dock metaphor explained | 22:24–24:11 | | Pregnancy, abandonment fears | 24:18–27:18 | | How they talk about depression | 27:39–29:29 | | Stephanie’s over-functioning | 29:45–32:36 | | Jonathan’s health crash (2023) | 32:48–34:09 | | Breakdown and psych hospitalization | 36:10–43:55 | | Stephanie’s breakdown/role reversal | 44:13–52:18 | | Thanksgiving, returning to truth | 52:16–53:53 | | Final reflection ("the dock") | 54:40–55:43 |
Tone & Style
Conversational, raw, and self-deprecatingly humorous. Stephanie Gunning’s openness—ranging from her “cute Brooklyn girl with a bicycle” era to panic in a shower—infuses the episode with New York wit and tenderness. Both women approach the darkness of depression and suicidal thoughts with necessary seriousness, balancing vulnerability with resilience and hope.
For Listeners
The episode offers an honest look at a marriage weathering not just one partner’s mental illness but also the secondary trauma and growth of the other. It’s a powerful conversation about the cost—and the deep rewards—of loving someone through the hardest moments, and what it means when a family stops pretending and chooses truth.
If you or someone you love needs help:
Call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK or visit speakingofsuicide.com/resources for more information.
