My most recent post was a bit out of character for me. It was less philosophical and more "real world". I was asked to post it on the website of life coach - Ann Daly. If you have an on going career issue check out Ann's website for some good "real world" advice regarding such issues. http://www.anndaly.com. I will be back to my philosophical self -with a smattering of real world advice- tomorrow.
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
What about God? (Part Three)
“If you put me here I will block the aisle,” Brian said angrily. I looked around for another place but there wasn’t any better place to put the wheelchair. It wasn’t that people would get upset with us that we were blocking the aisle. The issue was that Brian felt totally exposed and conspicuous sitting out there alone in the aisle. People definitely stared at Brian from the moment we entered the church to the time we left. Brian and I got something out of the church service so it was worth the embarrassment.
The time church offered a respite from the demands of our daily lives. It was a quiet time to mediate and contemplate. We could forget, well almost, that Brian was dying. Brian and I never talked about God but something about the service and being in church touched us and brought us closer together. I can’t explain it any better than that. That feeling would last for a few hours after we left until the demands of the terminal illness ravaged the feeling of comfort.
Time passed. The chronic illness group meetings ended. Brian’s condition worsened. The memory of the nourishment of the group faded. Oh I stayed in touch with the leaders of the group but it didn’t help. Nothing helped ease the suffering, pain and anger. Generally I was too tired to be angry. Every day was an incredible struggle physically and emotionally. I felt like a lone oxen pulling the wagon, loaded with Brian, the children, pain, sadness, anger up the steepest mountain known to mankind.
I was just surviving and I felt lucky to be doing that. My old unhealthy self, despite my best intentions, had taken control. With all of my resources being tapped to manage my daily life I did not have the strength to do anything but engage in survival mode. The abyss was looming darker, colder and blacker than ever.
Eventually it was too difficult to get Brian to church. We stopped attending. No one seemed to miss us.
Brian would move from his bed to his special chair in the corner of the TV room to the bathroom and back. If I had to leave the room, I would turn on the baby monitor which sat on the table next to him taking the other monitor with me. He was awake asking for things constantly during night. Occasionally I would try to take a nap during the day. Just as I dropped my head onto the pillow and started dreaming of my escape I would hear a noise over the intercom.
Anxiety, anger, hostility, fears, resentment ravaged our days and our lives. Trying to shelter the children from the anxiety, anger and hostility and take caring of Brian’s physical needs was my job along with the typical daily chores. Brian’s job was to get through each day. As each day passed his anger grew and my resentment grew proportionally. If only we could talk about it! But that never happened. Who knows if that would have even made any difference.
The number and frequency of visitors decreased in direct proportion to the increase in the symptoms of the disease. At the end Brian’s only personal contacts were the children, me, an occasional visit from his sister and her husband and the weekly visit from the hospice nurse. Even the children started to avoid coming home although I would not realize that until much later.
I really didn’t want to interact with Brian at all that day. For weeks now I so wished I could avoid him but I couldn’t. As I entered the family room that morning, Brian looked at me with such hatred. I looked back at him with an equal or greater amount of hatred. I literally had to force myself to be in the same room with him that day. I wanted to scream at the top of my lungs, run away, and yell that I hated Brian, God, life and everyone else who is not going through what I am going through. “God I hate you,” I remember saying to myself. I screamed inside my head, “How long is He going to torture us?” and “I can’t take this anymore!” My well of coping mechanisms had run dry. Brian couldn’t’ talk but I could read his eyes and feel the hatred that was spilling out of them. After our initial interaction, I tried to avoid meeting his eyes as I was afraid that he could read the hatred in my eyes as well. I used to cope by closing my eyes and imagining that I had ran away and was living alone in a cottage on the beach in some South Pacific island. That fantasy couldn’t even give me any relief by this time.
“I can’t make it through even one more day. I don’t deserve this! I hate my life! I hate God!” were some of the things I screamed to myself that day and for many weeks before. Every pore of my body oozed hatred. Brian and I were trapped in a tomb out of which the air and light were being slowly drained until the time would come that we would suffocate in total darkness.
No matter how either of us felt or what we wanted to do the matters of daily living had to be taken care of and so it was with this particular day. I had just settled Brian into his lift chair in the TV room when the phone rang. I was surprised to hear it ring since no one ever called our house anymore. I answered it. “Hello” I said into the receiver. The voice on the other end was unfamiliar and cheerful. It had to be a wrong number. “This is Deborah from the church. I am new the new associate pastor and I realized that we have been remiss in visiting our sick church members. Would it be all right if I came to visit you right now?” she said. I automatically said, “OK.” I regretted it as soon as I had uttered it but I had already heard the receiver on the other end click. I was definitely not up to having a visitor. I had no energy to talk to anyone especially not a complete stranger and especially not a minister. Brian couldn’t speak at all.
About 30 minutes later the doorbell rang. I groaned. This woman literally burst into the room. She was vibrant, alive, upbeat, full of energy and smiling from ear to ear. I was offended. Doesn’t she know Brian is dying I wondered to myself. Brian and I immediately exchanged a look but not one of anger or hatred. That was at least refreshing.
She introduced herself to Brian and tried to shake his hand. Good Lord I thought this woman is an idiot! Why would she try to shake hands with him? She obviously didn’t know anything about us or our situation. Why was she here then? If she sensed my hostility she didn’t show it. She seated herself on the sofa between Brian and me. I didn’t listen to what she was saying. I was just waiting a polite amount of time before I could ask her to leave with the excuse that Brian was tired. I was determined to get her out of the house as soon as possible.
Was she actually doing that? I can’t believe she would do that! I didn’t notice she had it with her when she came into the house! She was actually reading to us from the Bible. I don’t remember how long she had been doing this before it kicked in – my awareness of the words she was actually speaking. “I hate God,” I blurted out. I looked at Brian and he had a look of shock on his face – to put it mildly. Brian chastised me with his eyes.
Deborah didn’t skip a beat, “That’s OK. Don’t be afraid to tell God you are angry at Him. He can handle your anger. He won’t punish you. He loves you,” Deborah said. I think secretly I had been afraid to say that out loud for fear that God would punish me. But wasn’t I already being punished? Could it get any worse? The obvious retorts to Deborah’s statement popped into my head – He has some way of showing love and Maybe He could love me a little less. But I didn’t say any of this out loud.
Deborah turned the pages of the Bible. She started reading some of the Psalms – the ones where the authors are calling out to God in anger because they are suffering or feel abandoned by God. I don’t remember the exact Psalms. I have never been much of a Bible reader – then or now. The words of those Psalmists struck a chord with Brian and I. I connected with them and their anger over their suffering and at God. They knew or had known the depths of despair that Brian and I were experiencing and worse. As Deborah read, I felt a huge surge of relief and gratitude. We are not terrible people because we were filled with anger and hatred toward everyone and everything including or especially God. She read to us for a little while. Those Psalmists expressed my anger and despair better than I ever could. They survived their trials. Deborah showed us that it was OK to be angry even at God. God understood. He didn’t abandon the psalmists. He was with them in their darkest hours.
Deborah left. Brian and I looked at each other in amazement and relief. Deborah reached into the depths of our despair and lifted us up. We were both so desperate – so pushed beyond our limits. I honestly don’t know what would have happened if she had not come when she did. When she left she left behind some of the solace and peace she had brought with her. I felt it when I first met her at the door. Of course the anger and suffering would go on but it never again reached the depths of despair it had that morning. As write this I am acutely reminded that I have known the depths of despair. Words are truly so inadequate to describe it. The blackness surrounds you. It clings to you like saran wrap. Eventually there is no air. You slowly suffocate. On that day I think we were both close to taking our last breath. Deborah tore an opening in the wrapping. You will laugh. I want to laugh at myself. I hesitate to say this lest I be labeled a nut case. I have to say it. An angel visited us that day and rescued us from the depths of despair.
Friday, September 2, 2011
What If Again!
I have been contemplating a career move for quite some time. (Who isn’t these days?) In what I have always thought to be a responsible way of dealing with such a huge change I started envisioning and evaluating the consequences of such a change. It is good to evaluate the pros and cons. However because I have recently been working on being more self aware regarding the way I deal with things and the messages I send myself I realized that I only evaluate the cons. My internal dialogue is peppered with “What Ifs”. For example: What if I don’t like the change. What if I fail at the new venture? What if I am doing right now what is best for me? What if……
I have really started to dislike those two words. For me they seem to be the embodiment of negativity. I rarely say, What If I am really happy at my new venture or What if I am a huge success. The words seem to naturally be followed by a negative statement.
As I contemplate this huge change in my life I have decided to banish those two words from my vocabulary and my mind. When I use them I am lamenting some long past choice that I made and wondering if it was the “right” choice or imaging a negative future. I don’t want to devote my time and energy to either of those ventures. Traveling down the road of “what if” is a dead end. Is it the same for you?
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Are We Lost? (Part Two)
Thirty years ago divorce was not what it is today. Oh I am not talking about the legal system or its ramifications. That has developed with the changing times. I am referring to the social attitudes regarding divorce. Back then, divorce was humiliating and shameful. You were a failure. It was all your fault because you didn’t try hard enough blah, blah, blah. That “social status” of “divorce” meant the woman and her children were treated with veiled contempt. You were not required, as Hester Prynne was, to have a bright red “A” emblazoned on your chest but the treatment was somewhat similar. We were outcasts and pariahs. Irene’s comment, made less than 10 years ago, is a reminder that, in some sections of our society, that attitude still exists.
“Jessica your grades have dropped. What is going on?” I asked her. She was in fourth grade at the time. She looked at me strangely and shrugged her shoulders. I could tell I wasn’t going to find out what was going on from Jessica. I called her teacher and scheduled a conference. The teacher was kind enough to come to school early to meet me so that I could get to the office on time. I arrived at school around 7:45 a.m. The teacher was in the classroom. We chatted a little bit about Jessica’s school work. I detected a little hostility but I was awfully tired and stressed out in those days so I thought I was imagining it.
“Jessica is not doing as well as she did last year or even earlier this year and she doesn’t want to come to school lately. Is there something going on with the other kids that I should know about?” I asked. “No” was the response. “Do you have any idea what may be causing this change?” I continued to probe the teacher. “No,” she responded again. I asked, “Where does Jessica sit?” I have no idea why I asked that question. The teacher pointed out the location of Jessica’s desk. It was located in the very last row in the far corner of the classroom. It was the desk that was furthest away from the teacher and the chalkboard. My facial expression must have reflected my surprise. Somewhat sheepishly the teacher explained, “I moved her there a few weeks ago. “Why is she sitting there if she is having problems?” I asked. “Shouldn’t she be in the front of the room?” The teacher had stopped looking at me at this point in the conversation. I pressed the issue. “Why isn’t Jessica sitting in the front of the classroom?” I really can’t remember exactly what the teacher said. I just remember that it made no sense and seemed to be a perfectly ridiculous explanation. I trusted my instincts, for once, and said in a firm voice, “I will expect her to be moved to the front of the room right away.” There was no verbal response although I did receive a brief look of contempt. “I hope I don’t have to go to the principal about this,” I said as I got up and left.
Jessica was moved to the front of the room. She started to enjoy going to school again and her grades improved. Was I imagining the teacher’s hostility and contempt? Was I imagining that the poor treatment was a result of my status as a divorced woman? Maybe. I tended to doubt myself and my perceptions in those days. I still do. Things certainly changed for the better for Jessica after my talk with her teacher. Maybe by confronting the teacher regarding her treatment of Jessica she realized what she was doing. Like Irene maybe she just wasn’t aware of what she was doing. I hope that was the case.
The school Jessica attended was located in a wealthy suburban area which was primarily populated by married couples in traditional households. Fortunately for us, and unfortunately for them, it encompassed more than just those types of families. There were other similar incidents after this one. Eventually I learned to intercede before the situation got really bad or maybe I just stopped giving the teachers the benefit of the doubt. I am a slow learner. My children say I am bit naive. Maybe so. I wish I had learned that lesson sooner. My children may have been spared some pain and humiliation. Must everyone who is different pay a price? Children of divorce may not any longer be considered “different” and subjected to such treatment but others are.
ADDENDUM AND CAVEAT: I don't feel comfortable expressing myself other than through my stories. However several of my readers have asked repeatedly that I do so. So I ask that you indulge me as I humbly offer up some of my feelings and opinions. My life experiences have affirmed to me that we should cultivate an attitude of compassion for everyone. How do we do that? I believe one way is to start living with an attitude of gratitude for all we have and for all that we are. Gratitude fosters an attitude of compassion because when we are grateful we recognize that we did not or could not achieve all we have or all we are without the help of others. (For some of us others include God). We didn't do it all by ourselves. We lose the arrogance of entitlement. I believe, regardless of your religion or politics or belief system, that an attitude of compassion toward our family, our neighbors, our fellow Americans, our fellow world citizens unites us and evokes a softness in all of us which fosters a sense of caring and harmony. It doesn't solve all the world's problems or even our own personal problems but it is a good place to start.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Saying Goodbye
“You want to move into the dorm tonight?” I asked with tears in my eyes. “What is the big deal?” Gary asks. “It is only a day early”. “I am not prepared to say goodbye to you today”, I reply. “Are you saying you will be better prepared tomorrow?” Gary quips back. “You are acting very irrationally right now”, Gary complains. “So what”, I retort back. Gary walks away shaking his head. “Ok I will move just a few things in tonight and move in permanently tomorrow”, Gary says exasperated. “Great”, I say with a big smile. Gary is totally bewildered. He wonders where his rational, independent Mom has disappeared to. I wonder the same thing.
My heart is breaking today! Gary has been my mainstay since his father died of Lou Gehrig’s disease some 15 years ago. Taking care of Gary sustained me through some very dark days.
For the past year I have tried to prepare myself for this day. Contrary to all my experience, I still think I can prepare myself and mitigate the emotional fallout. I am only deluding myself. Still that illusion offered me some comfort until the storm hit. The feelings of loss and despair wash over me like the unstoppable and relentless tides of the ocean. Perhaps that is because the mind is no longer in control – only the heart is. Perhaps the best preparation is to be found in enjoying our relationship with them to the fullest when we are able. I am comforted somewhat because I think I have done that.
“All packed”, Gary shouts to me. I haven’t been able to help Gary pack. I started to cry every time I try. In my defense he really isn’t taking much stuff with him. I look into his room. “I have never seen it so clean”, I say to Gary. “It’s not that clean”, Gary replies. “Well I have never seen it without some clothing laying on the floor”, I retort. As I look around I start to cry. I close the door to Gary’s bedroom quickly. I don’t think I will be entering that room much I say to myself. The emptiness and the way it echoes reminds me too much of the hollowness I feel inside.
“I loved being a mother. It was always what I wanted to be more than anything else in life”, I say to Gary in the car on the way to his dorm. “You still are a mother”, Gary replies shaking his head incredulously. “I guess you wouldn’t understand”, I say to him. “I am not sure I understand it” I say to myself.
I watch my son, Gary, walk away from me weighted down with stuff for his dorm room. He’ll be back in a minute to get more stuff from the car. I am glad there is no parking and I have to wait in the car. Gary returns and gathers up the last bit of his stuff from the car. He turns and waves to me as he opens the door to the building. I wave back. He is saying good bye to me and I am saying good bye to a way of life that has fulfilled and sustained me for the past 33 years. I feel empty and useless. How do I even begin to fill that void? Is it even possible?
This is very anti-feminist attitude I say to myself. I don’t know why I care about this but it popped into my head. I think I imagined sharing these feelings with some of my feminist friends. Are a devotion to motherhood or even motherhood itself and feminism incompatible? I don’t believe they are but that is perhaps counter to main stream thinking. Still I am not going to deny that my primary calling in life was to be a mother. I feel so alone because I don’t know anyone who I could share these feeling with and who would understand how I am feeling right now or perhaps more accurately admit they understand. This is one of those times in life when I really, really miss Brian, Gary’s Dad. He would understand.
“You can do anything you want to do now”, my son said to me as we drove to his dormitory. “I have been doing exactly what I wanted to do,” I replied. “I really wish there was something that I am dying to do but there isn’t. What I want to do and be a part of is going off to college right now”. “Are you going to cry”, Gary asked. “No of course not”, I replied. I know I need the relief that comes from having a complete meltdown but I don’t want to do that in front of Gary. I resist the urge hoping for some relief later. I know the urge will hit me at the most inopportune time like when I am waiting in the check out line at the grocery store.
I have been dreading this day for so many years it is almost a relief that it has finally arrived. That relief is fleeting. Just a few minutes later the grief, loneliness and panic set in again. I know. I will just pretend he is spending the night – well several nights- at a friend’s house. How’s that for honesty?
Powerful emotions swirl around inside me as I watch him walk into the dorm. As I sit in the car, I watch people going about their daily lives – business as usual. It feels like my world has come to an end. I feel like I am drowning in grief and sadness. Silly maybe but I have vowed not to judge my feelings anymore.
My head says it is time to let go. My heart says not yet. Gary has taken the best and biggest part of me for the past 18 years and I was only too happy to give that to him. Now maybe I will have more energy to devote to others and myself. Rationalizations are great but today change still feels like my enemy.
This is death to a special bond we shared, Gary and I. Sharing the bonds of daily living is broken whether we are sending them off to their first day of kindergarten or off to college. The thread that connects us becomes more and more frayed with each passing year until it finally breaks. A new and different connection will be forged. I know that. But I also know that different is good but not always better. I still miss the little boy who was my best buddy and used to give me big hugs and kisses and confide in me. If only I could come back later today and pick him up like I did after preschool! I hope through the grieving process I will come to see this change in a better light but that is not possible today.
Gary is gone now – disappeared into the building with his last load of belongings. This is the building he referred to as “home” on the ride over. When he said that it felt like he had stuck a knife in my heart. I almost said, “That is not your home. Your home is with me”, but thankfully I resisted. What a grand adventure for Gary! He is so ready for this. He looked so happy and excited. That is what really counts isn’t it? I feel a twinge of pride that I have done a big part of my job as a parent. I have prepared him to be independent. In spite of all my sadness I feel strangely energized as well. This can be the beginning of a grand adventure for me too I say to myself. I put my forehead on the steering wheel and cry. Do the challenges ever end I lament as I drive away.
Saying goodbye to our first grader, college student, lover, spouse, friend is always a great challenge for me. What has your experience been?
Monday, August 22, 2011
Marriage and sometimes even a love story (Part two)
“Let’s watch this movie together tonight,” I had suggested to David a few weeks before this event. I remember distinctly watching the movie “Ordinary People”. “That was exactly what it was like for me growing up,” I said to David. “You’re just stupid,” he retorted angrily. He got up and left the room. How does the person in whom you could confide your deepest secrets become the last person in the world you can or would confide in?
“Get out,” I told David again the day after he had smashed the toys. I said it every day for weeks after that. He simply ignored me. He pretended nothing out of the ordinary had happened. How can he do that? It made me feel like I was crazy. Was I imagining what happened? I knew Jessica had seen it and that gave me comfort and strength. I couldn’t afford to move anywhere with the children. I didn’t have the money for the deposits needed to move into an apartment. I didn’t have money to go to a hotel. I didn’t have money to hire a lawyer and I am not sure that would have helped if I did. The next several months passed without any further incidents of violence. Then the violence returned with even more force. It was now directed at me. I am not sure the children really knew the difference.
“You are out of control. You are crazy!” I yelled at him. “You make me do the things I do because you are such a lousy wife!” David shouted as he hurled something at me. I ran in the direction of one of the bedrooms. He followed me. I turned to face him in the doorway of the bedroom. He punched me and I fell down. Samuel was standing behind me and he fell too. I landed on top of Samuel. He was five years old.
“You are not going anywhere,” David said to me. He stood between me and the door. He wouldn’t let me leave the room much less the house. Every time I tried to leave he pushed me back into the room. I tried not to scare the kids more than they already were scared. I heard the kids in the next room playing together. They came in and said good night to me.
The next day David got Samuel and Jessica off to school. Ellen went next door to the sitter’s house. Eventually David dragged me into the car with him on some errands. He stopped for a red light. I jumped out of the car. I was fortunately only a few blocks from the office. I can’t really remember what I said or did at the office. I know I really didn’t tell anyone what had happened. I was too embarrassed. Somehow I got a ride back to the house. I called the police. David didn’t come back to the house that night.
“We can’t do anything m’am since your husband isn’t at home. If he comes back give us a call,” the police officer said to me.
I went to work the next day. The children went to school and the sitter. The children were understandably acting out at home. I was feeling totally overwhelmed. I called a few family lawyers but I didn’t have the money to hire one. That night David came home again. The next time David became violent and tried to keep me in the house I was able to run out the front door and get to my neighbors. My neighbor called the police. I ran back home immediately to see David pulling out of the driveway with Samuel in the back seat of the car. My heart sank.
“Do you have someplace you can go for the night?” the officer asked me. Finally I was talking to a compassionate officer who didn’t look at me like I had horns. Domestic violence wasn’t taken very seriously by police officers or even the courts back then. I frantically searched in my mind for someone to call. We had just moved to this city several months ago. This isn’t exactly something you want to talk to good friends about much less new acquaintances. “You need to call someone,” he insisted. Since David had fled before the officer arrived there was nothing that could be done to him right then.
“He is your son’s father and there is no custody order so I can’t do anything about him taking the boy,” the officer said. Very reluctantly I picked up the phone and dialed the person I knew the best in my new city. “Eva can the kids and I stay at your house tonight?” I heard myself ask. I felt like I was outside my body – like I was watching this happen to someone else. I knew Eva was going to ask why and I dreaded that. She did and I responded, “David has hit me and tried to keep me from leaving the house. The police officer does not want the children and I to stay here tonight. ” Eva hung up the phone without saying anything. “We will be all right here,” I told the officer. I spent the better part of the evening in a panic wondering where Samuel was and if he was OK. David dropped Samuel off at the house later that night and left. Maybe things are going to get better I thought.
I had a restraining order issued but I could never get David served with it so it was of no use. During that time I think he would have simply ignored it anyway. I filed for divorce. By some miracle David simply stopped coming back to stay at the house. That didn’t mean he disappeared from our lives entirely.
I was afraid if I told people at the office I would get fired maybe not right then but eventually. I kept everything a secret for a while emulating my upbringing. I must have made some excuses for leaving the office on occasion but I don’t remember anything about that. I know that I never told anyone about the violence. We never spoke about it with the children but I know that the children kept everything a secret as well. We were an isolated island of misery and despair surrounded by and functioning in a huge ocean of normalcy at least for others. I went to work. The children went to school. We carried on as if our life was not all about fear and violence. I felt disconnected as if I lived in two separate worlds. I had no idea how to help the children cope.
“I am going to kill you, cut your body up into little pieces and bury it in the desert so no one will find you. I am going to kidnap the kids and take them to Mexico,” David spewed this venom. He had barged his way into the house on the pretense of picking up the children for a visit. Suddenly he stopped. Jessica had entered the room. It had become a pattern that was repeated over and over again. He would say these things every time I had contact with him. Each time Jessica would enter the room David would stop. I know Jessica heard what he said. My poor Jessica! I was afraid David would really carry out his threats. I think Jessica was too. He was crazy enough, at that time, to do it.
The phone was ringing again. I looked at the clock. It was 2 am. “Who are you sleeping with tonight you whore?” I heard David scream. I hung up the phone. I double checked to make sure all the windows and doors were locked. I lay awake all night. I was afraid if I didn’t answer the phone he would come over to the house and do something worse.
David picked up my mail from the mailbox and read it. He broke into the house, answered my phone and ransacked my things. He stole my car. He called me at the office and at home accusing me of having affairs with every man I came into contact with. He would come to pick up the kids for a visit and punch me in the face when I opened the door.
How does one respond to all of this? Should I fight back? Should I be passive in hopes of placating him? Would it really matter what I did? Is my response really going to affect his behavior to any significant degree? It seemed no matter what I did he was hell bent on abusing me. Nothing could stop that. Any change that could have affected his behavior would have to have been done long before he first raised his fist to punch me. I knew he was in a rage and wanted to destroy everything. Things like courts and police have no power over such a person. That was perhaps the scariest thing of all.
I apologize to the reader if this all seems out of order or makes little sense. As I write this I am overcome by potent remnants of the fear and anger. I feel confused. It is as if my defenses kick in and my mind becomes foggy to protect me from too many bad memories. I have tried so hard to forget the details of what happened. I don’t even want to remember them here.
These events went on regularly for at least nine months during which David engaged in all of the above and more on a weekly basis. The children and I lived constantly, every minute of every day, with the fear generated by his actions. I was trying, perhaps mistakenly, to keep things as normal as possible for the children.
I don’t recall why I did not get more help from the courts or police. Was I right to feel bad about myself because I didn’t fight back? Or should I just judge myself as a victim who is helpless to change, at that particular moment, the course of events? I tried not to judge myself too harshly. In some way I sensed that if I fought David too much and involved the courts and police he would fight harder and maybe carry out one of his threats. I hoped David’s rage would eventually be spent and he would simply go away. That strategy didn't work all that well. (To be continued)
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Loneliness
I hadn’t been back since it all happened. It happened quite a long time ago – almost 16 years ago now. As I prepared for this business trip I promised myself I wouldn’t do it. In fact I swore I would resist any and all such urges. As soon as I disembarked the plane I am afraid it started.
Why do I insist on revisiting the past? Do I just like to torture myself or is there some positive purpose to this exercise? I was on a mission to revisit my past even if I didn’t want to. I was inexorably drawn back there.
It is this past – the events that happened in this desert city - which I sought to escape by marrying Warren. When I met Warren in Italy, I hadn’t resolved or come to terms with this past. I was still mired in the past. I wanted an easy escape and I found it in my new relationship with Warren. Oh I didn’t realize that at the time. I only see that now.
New relationships are so full of possibilities. They can be the catalyst for new beginnings in every aspect of our lives. Romantic relationships, when they are new, have the euphoric effect of a drug. At first, new relationships seem like an escape from the past. But in fact the past, if left unresolved, will haunt and destroy any new beginnings as it did with my relationship with Warren. The seeds of our divorce were sown in the very beginning by the unresolved issues of our past lives.
The first encounter with my past, on this business trip, did not occur of my own volition. I passed by it on my walk from the gate where I disembarked the airplane to the baggage claim. I was struck by the starkness of the scene. The last time I was there it was teeming with life. Back then these were the United Airline gates my young children used to fly out of to visit my sister or parents. Now even the chairs had been removed. It was a big empty room. The emptiness served as an even stronger reminder of how much time had passed and how much had happened since the last time I waved goodbye to the children as they disappeared down the ramp. I continued to follow the signs to the baggage claim and then to the car rental shuttle. As I crossed the street to the island to catch the shuttle I remembered that this is where I used to drop my parents off to catch the plane back to my hometown. I see myself hugging them and saying good bye with tears in my eyes. It all seems so real! My children grew up here but they don’t think of this place as their hometown. Sadly, my children don’t have a hometown. I catch the rental car shuttle bus and silently celebrate that there are no memories here.
This is why I left. Memories were everywhere. They surrounded me and, for a while, they suffocated me. The memories were painful back then. The memories are still painful. I was surprised by the strength of those memories after so many years. I felt tears welling up in my eyes. Some memories are merely poignant as so much of my life is behind me now. Some memories evoke regrets for my choices and failures and for the roads not travelled. Then there are memories of the unhappy events over which I had little or no control. These are the most powerful memories. I felt paralyzed by the intensity of the pain those memories evoked.
Oh there is much to regret and there is much to celebrate about my life here. I do feel sad that so much of my life has gone by. I feel like I failed to enjoy so much of it. I do regret getting caught up in the treadmill of life. I imagine myself as a hamster running inside the wheel in its cage. In my drive to get to the next task I missed out on the joys of the moment. I remind myself that I did gain valuable insight and wisdom during those years which has helped me to avoid this pitfall in my later years. If I allow my thoughts to dwell here too long I will be overcome with sadness for what is past.
But there are other memories as well here in this city. A real tragedy happened in my life when I lived here. In many ways that tragedy has defined my life. I calculate events as prior to or subsequent to the tragedy. I calculate my personal growth before and after that event. I mark the emotional growth of my children based on that event. That event marks my life and the lives of my children in so many ways.
If I ignore my memories I feel like I am acting outside of myself. If I indulge myself and go back in time I feel overcome with grief and regrets.
I found myself driving, without any conscious thought, around this city in the desert where I spent so many years of my life. It was here I spent my life as a young adult, wife and mother. It was almost as if someone else was in control of the vehicle. I drove past the last place I worked. I drove past the first place I worked right after I moved here. I drove past the historic district where so many events in my life took place. I stopped in front of the beautiful historic home that houses a restaurant and is a venue for private parties. The wedding reception for my last marriage took place in that house. Many years before that I threw a 40th birthday party for Eloise there. She was one of my closest friends. I tried to recall the last time I saw her.
“Eloise, Eloise!” I called as she walked past me in the cavernous hallway of the sports arena. She finally turned and said hello. We hadn’t seen or spoken to each other in months. She didn’t ask me how I had been. “Can you and Brian come over for dinner with some friends next weekend?” is all she said. “We are going to be out of town that weekend,” I responded. “Another time then,” she said. I never heard from her again.
I can’t help but wish that I were staying with Eloise and her husband while I am here on this business trip. We could be reminiscing now about when our children, who are now young adults, were toddlers. We spent that part of our lives as friends. We had met quite by accident. We instantly connected. We did so much together with the children and with our spouses. We spent all our holidays together. In fact we saw each other almost every weekend when the children were young. Our spouses even became good friends. Then one day our friendship ended just as suddenly and mysteriously as it had begun.
Eloise and her husband didn’t come to the funeral. They didn’t send flowers or even a sympathy card. Maybe they didn’t know that Brian had died. They knew he was sick with Lou Gehrig’s disease.
I ran into Eloise at a restaurant a few months after the funeral. She was waiting in line in front of me. I recognized her immediately. I hoped she wouldn’t notice me. When she turned to go to her table she saw me. After I placed my order at the counter I sat at a table at the opposite end of the restaurant from where Eloise was. I deliberately sat with my back to her. A short time later, I looked up from my food to see here standing next to my table.
“Don’t you want to talk to me?” she asked. I wanted to scream some things at her but I didn’t. Did she even know what had happened in my life since I last saw her? Did she even know Brian was dead? Did she care? “I have nothing to say to you,” is all I said. She looked hurt, turned and left the restaurant. What would I have accomplished if I said those things to her? We could never be friends again not after what she had done. She was my closest friend. Right after Brian was diagnosed she and her husband disappeared from our lives.
Still for some mysterious reason I called her many, many years later. I lived in another state by then. We chatted. We brought each other up to date regarding our children. We exchanged contact information. Neither of us ever contacted the other again.
It feels so incredibly empty to return to a city where I spent so much of my life – 14 years- and so many important events in my life occurred and yet I am seeing no one from that time in my life. It feels like a huge void. My thoughts returned to Eloise. What if I had said those things to her in the restaurant? What if I had told her how much she hurt me? Would we have rekindled our friendship? Do I really want to be friends with a person who deserted me at one of the most difficult periods of my life? Maybe, while I am here on business, I should pick up the phone and call her to see if she can get together for a cup of coffee. I was tempted to call her but I never did.
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