Mad Men star Elisabeth Moss opened up about her short marriage to comedian Fred Armisen in her New York Magazine cover story this week.
In her extensive interview for the March 10 issue, the 31-year-old actress called her union with the SNL vet "traumatic."
"Looking back, I feel like I was really young, and at the time I didn't think that I was that young," Moss told NY Magazine. "It was extremely traumatic and awful and horrible."
Moss, who married Armisen in 2009 and filed for divorce one year later, said she is now ready to speak on their relationship.
"At the same time, it turned out for the best," she continued. "I'm glad that I'm not there. I'm glad that it didn't happen when I was 50. I'm glad I didn't have kids. And I got that out of the way. Hopefully. Like, that's probably not going to happen again."
The Golden Globe winner also said immediately after the split, she had to face the storm of media attention head-on.
"I always knew that the stuff that you read is not true, but when I was in the situation and you really, actually read things that you apparently said or did that are 100 percent made up...It's just the strange, simple thing of, that's your heart they're talking about, and it just...it sucks," Moss told NY Mag.
Moss and Armisen first met when Mad Men's Jon Hamm hosted a 2009 episode of Saturday Night Live.
The Portlandia star has admitted in the past that he was to blame for the relationship's ultimate demise.
During a past interview with Howard Stern, Armisen said he got "freaked out."
"She must f****** hate you," Stern said to Armisen, in reference to Moss.
"I imagine so," Armisen replied. "I think I was a terrible husband, I think I'm a terrible boyfriend. I feel bad for everyone I've ever gone out with. I want it all - fast. I want to be married...the amount of girls I've lived with right away...and then somewhere around a year, two years, I get freaked out."
Armisen apparently tried to get Moss to end things with him, he said.
"You sort of withdraw and you sort of get into all the things you think make you weird, like, 'I'm really into play XBOX...[or my] record collection," he said. "You sort of disappear into the things that you think are just your hobbies."