The heat and humidity have broken, and a fresh, cool wind is blowing. I've turned off the fans and the crossbreeze is moving through my little railroad flat, cooling me, and the cats.
I've always wished I could be the kind of person who could work up a righteous rage when a relationship is ending. I've always envied people who could hold onto a grudge forever by ticking down a list of perceived wrongs. You did THIS! And you did THAT! And another thing, let me remind you about the time you did something else. In fact, I am going to remind you about that thing you did. Until the DAY. YOU. DIE. (Actually, I've seen marriages like this, where every disagreement is an endless scorecard of grievances and rewards that people hold to their chest like a poker hand, waiting for just the right moment to whip them out.)
However, something in my nature has always, after tears, righted itself quite quickly, and I just let go of the suffering. My experience of things has always been, how can I be mad at someone for being the person that he is? (Of course, I'm not referring to wife-beaters or child-molesters here. There is a special room in hell just for them.)
I understand that a good part of why we suffer when a relationship has to end is that we are not getting what we want. We do get oh so very, very attached to getting what we want, don't we? The Buddhists call this "getting attached to outcomes." I'm always fascinated by people who keep on in relationships long past the date that they start reeking, merely because they cling to the hope that because they've invested a lot of time in it, they can somehow salvage something palatable out of it. They are invested in an outcome that they foresaw years ago, and even though it's plain it ain't gonna turn out that way, they just keep on hoping.
When Matt and I broke up, it took a long time for me to get over being sad, and yes, mad at him. We had been together for five amazing years, but it ended at the right time. Still, it was a good six months before I could even speak to him. And when I did finally reach out, he was quite surprised.
"I thought you'd never speak to me again," he said.
"Why?" I replied. "You are the person I fell in love with. We had a lot of love in the last five years. Trashing all that good stuff and acting like we didn't have it would be throwing the baby out with the bath water," (Yes, Jane actually said "throwing the baby out with the bath water." Sometimes the only thing we have at our fingertips is a split infinitive and a hoary old cliche. I hang my head in shame.)
The love had changed, but the things that inspired it were still there. So Matt and I keep a deep, deep fondness and respect for each other. We'll talk, and he'll cut his eyes at me, and he knows that I know exactly what he means at that second. And I have a friend who is still a little mad at Matt for something he said fifteen years ago, and honestly, I don't even remember what it was. Let it go, already!
But to my larger point.
The Being Sad part is passing, and isn't it pointless to manufacture high dudgeon and pissed-offedness over someone being himself, and being completely honest about it?
And I'm getting over being mad at myself. I made a decision, walked into it open-eyed. I stepped out into Diner World to frolic with you homers for a while. It was lots of fun.
I think this experience has opened me up in a real way. It has permeated every area of my life and believe me, it has been noticed. I guess I am starting to shed my leathery hide. Example: A friend at work who reads me like a book, came in this morning, rubbed my back, and asked, "How are you doing?" and I just started to cry. (Jesus, will I ever STOP?) God, don't you just hate it when people are sweet and kind to you and give a shit?
I attribute this newfound openheartedness to one thing:
I met someone who made me feel that my name was safe in his mouth, and oddly enough, despite this sad outcome, I believe it still is.
(But if he tells anyone I'm nice, I'll kill him.)
2 comments:
Slowly we are learning and feeling our way through this transition. I have been a protector for so long that I always modified myself in order to prevent her pain. But now she is managing her own pain and discovering she doesn't need to hate me to let me go. At least I think that's what she's discovering. I hope so because my assertions that I will always love her and don't see any conflict between this and my need to move on have always confused her and made her feel I was jerking her around. Well, surely because of some of my interlocking fears I have been jerking her around. But in the overall picture I see only love and no need for hatred or acrimony or bitterness. Disappointment, surely, for she wanted to spend the rest of her days with me. But I'm beginning to see that, very slowly, love is possibly going to win the day. She wishes me well and I no longer see the bitterness and sarcasm I used to see.
None of this emerging light addresses the other questions.
1. Adult children are thoroughly susceptible to shock and pain and to feeling the underpinnings of their world have collapsed, and one doesn't spend two decades raising them to suddenly abandon them to their own fate. They are my children and their well-being matters more to me than my life such that if I REALLY had to choose, I would not choose my life. Fortunately the real world rarely offers such stark choices. I just need to find the messages and the proper occasion -- AFTER being certain of all the other decisions.
2. Two kids in college is a new financial burden quite shocking enough without splitting the remaining income into two households. I honestly don't know if it can even be done, in which case a little apartment in Fair Oaks near the river and the bike trail may not be an option after all. (One advantage to these suburbs is even the cheapest housing is in a nice neighborhood -- and by cheap I mean <$700/mo. Try finding THAT in NYC.)
Still, I expect if I actually move that for her self-protection she will need to cut me off from her life for awhile, and I am also, slowly, getting used to that idea too. There's no moving forward without leaving SOMEthing behind.
Wow, Don.
Astonishingly open.
Thank you.
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