That wasn’t all rose For these two.
Less than three months after being released from prison, Gypsy Rose Blanchard and her husband Ryan Scott Anderson are calling it quits.
Blanchard, 32, announced the breakup on Thursday in a post on her private Facebook account. people.
“People have been asking me what’s going on in my life. Unfortunately, my husband and I are separated and have moved in with my parents. [sic] Go home across the bayou,” she wrote in a post obtained by the outlet.
“I have the support of my family and friends to get through this situation. I am learning to listen to my heart. Right now I need time to find myself. …Who am I?”
Anderson, 37, has been with Blanchard since they met in 2020 while she was serving a 10-year sentence for the second-degree murder of her mother, Claudine “Dee Dee” Blanchard. We started dating.
The relationship between a Louisiana middle school special education teacher and a convicted murderer blossomed after they began sending each other letters regularly while Blanchard was in prison.
The two married in July 2022 in a prison ceremony at the Chillicothe Correctional Center in Missouri.
She was granted parole in September and was released on December 28, nearly three years ahead of schedule.
A few days after his release, Blanchard said: people Now that she’s out of prison, she’s excited about married life and was planning a new ceremony with her husband outside of prison.
“We’re going to have a reception and a redo wedding with all our family and friends, dresses and cake and everything, because we deserve it. I deserve it. He I deserve it,” she told the media.
She explained that her “prison wedding” with Anderson was just to say their vows to each other, as it “meant” to them to have a wedding before their release.
“I think the party is in some ways for other people and us, but mostly it’s for other people,” she added about having a separate ceremony.
However, Blanchard’s journey wasn’t all smooth sailing. During her interview, she said that she feels anxious about what their future holds.
“I’ve never lived with a man,” Blanchard explained. “I grew up with my mom, so I didn’t grow up with a dad in the house either. So I’m like, ‘I don’t even know what it’s like to live with a man.’ ”
“I think the only fear I have, to be honest, is just making sure we have a good collision.” [resolution],” she added.
“I’m a very ‘in the moment’ type of person, so if I get into an argument I want to resolve it right then and there. He…is the opposite, he has to sit and think about things and come back a few hours later and figure it out. ”
Earlier this month, Blanchard I deleted my public Instagram account Although he had over 7.8 million followers, he decided to step back from the spotlight.
The decision came after sources told the Post that parole officials persuaded her to stay out of the public eye and stay off social media “to avoid getting in trouble and going back to prison.”
Since then, she uses social media only on her private account.
As a child, Blanchard’s mother forced her to pretend to be suffering from various illnesses, which left her confined to a wheelchair for more than 20 years.
Her mother is believed to have suffered from Munchausen syndrome by proxy. This is a mental illness in which her parents fabricate illnesses for their children and subject them to unnecessary treatment in order to get attention for themselves.
Blanchard’s childhood stories were aired in the HBO documentary “Mommy Dead and Dearest” and the Hulu scripted series “The Act.”
