Linda Chung is married with children and not happy
Linda Chung used to be on TV every other week. Now she’s on the 6:30 p.m. bus to pick up her three kids from school in Montreal, wearing the same grey hoodie she’s had since 2020.
She’s 41. Her husband Jeremy is 54. He’s a chiropractor, not the kind who cracks backs in a fancy clinic.
More the kind who does massage therapy at a strip-mall office with a sign that says Pain Relief & Posture Care.
He makes about CAD 180k/yr. Not bad, but just a fraction of the USD1m+ she was raking in as a HK star and crucially not enough to cover three kids, a mortgage, and the fact that Linda hasn’t worked full-time in a decade.
She gave up her acting career after they got married. Not because she didn’t love it; she did. But she thought, Maybe this is what love looks like. You settle. You build a life. She moved to Canada. Cooked dinners. Took the kids to soccer. Forgot how to say action out loud.
This year, she started working again. Not for fame. Not for a comeback. Just because bills don’t pay themselves. She took a small role in a Hong Kong web drama. Did a charity concert. Even agreed to appear at a fan meet-up in Tsim Sha Tsui, even though she had to fly economy, sleep on her sister’s couch, and get up at 4 a.m. to catch the flight back so she could be home for breakfast.
People noticed. Some said, She’s desperate. Others said, She’s just trying to survive. Turns out, she might be both.
Last month, she posted a screenshot of her prenup online, not to be dramatic, but because she was tired of being told she was overreacting.
She didn’t read it all. She trusted him. She thought it was just paperwork. Now she’s in court trying to get it overturned.
Jeremy says she’s violating the agreement by talking about it.
She’s not rich. She’s not poor. She’s just stuck.
She still loves her kids. She still loves the quiet of their house. She still makes their lunches with the exact amount of cheese they like, not too much, not too little.
But she doesn’t love her husband anymore. Not the way she used to.
And now she’s working two jobs, flying across the world for a few thousand dollars, and sleeping on couches just to afford a lawyer who doesn’t charge by the hour in Canadian dollars.
Her friends say she’s changed. She used to laugh loud. Now she just smiles and says, I’m fine. Her kids think she’s tired. They don’t know why. And honestly? Neither does she.
She didn’t sign up for this. She didn’t think marriage meant becoming a paycheck with a mom hat. She just wanted to be someone’s wife. Now she’s just trying to be someone’s mother. And maybe, one day, someone’s self again.
No one’s sure what’s going to happen next. But if you’ve ever been married, you know: Sometimes the biggest drama isn’t the fight. It’s the silence after.