the two- second blink

“The notion of divorce has become one of failure again,” said Ms. Morrison, 42, a resident of Park Slope. “It used to be, ‘You’re free, rock on!’ Now it’s, ‘You couldn’t make it work, you failed.’ ” Ms. Morrison described people’s reaction as “the two-second blink” when she says something along the lines of, “Zack is with his father today.”

Apparently, the divorce rate has parked itself at 30%. I never liked it at 50% and sometimes the world around me seems dishearteningly 70% . Divorced people don’t crave more P.L.U.S (people like us) – we crave to see good and solid unions. We don’t snicker when another marriage bites the dust, we gasp as shocked if not more shocked and saddened than the marrieds.

What cheers me up ? Many things but click here for a simple one that never fails me

what creeps me and what charms me about christmas

I have always loved Christmas, the magic of it, the giving, the decorations and the beautiful smells. I like the way the whole world seems to stop a bit and do what is right. For one day, or a few weeks if you are lucky, we are all living the way we are supposed to.

When I was a little girl I always got a letter from Santa just outside of my stocking. It was written on the cardboard that my dad’s dry cleaned shirts  came folded in. It was written all in caps, not shouting, but in the style of the letters we got at camp from my dad. I did not like the year Santa mentioned that I was blossoming into a beautiful woman. Santa is not supposed to notice those things. I was deeply embarrassed and sad that my childhood was being pulled away from me. The next year there was no letter, just a clock radio(pushing punctuality) and a Dr Pepper lip balm(pushing prettiness). Womanhood looked like a real drag. I was only 12 and a half. I looked at my brothers and they still wrestled around on the floor until someone almost lost an eye, acted like neandrathals or neonatals and no one expected much of them beyond cleanliness– a long shot mostly.

As a newlywed- our first Christmas together, my then brand new husband was placing a new pair of skis beside the tree. I said ‘what on earth are those?’ He told me they were the present he was giving me. I said’where is the letter from Santa? Why aren’t they wrapped? They have to be wrapped so I don’t know what they are”(not easy with skis) He did these things for me  and every year played the role of surprise beautifully. Every year I got a dress from him, that somehow fit me perfectly and that I loved. I had that gorgeous feeling that he was paying attention to my style, my likes and knew my exact size from memory. Nothing is quite as lovely as a man in a dress shop at Christmas  choosing well for his wife.  Choosing well feels like being noticed.

When we split up I played Santa for the first time ever in my whole life. I did not feel very Jolly. I wrote all the letters with my left hand  and even wrote one to myself. This was another time to talk about the year to my children. What had happened, what we still had. Santa told them they were strong and that life had been hard but it would get better and feel more ok every day. I wrapped all the gifts, my own as well, put the notes beside the three stockings, re read the one I had written to myself, shivered in bed until I feel asleep.

The next day things were okay- I did my best, swallowing hard when I felt the tears coming up.  Eyes were dry until  Christmas dinner, 12 of us around the table and my nephew cut the noise  in half with his innocent question ‘Where is Mike?’ For a 7  year old it was a natural question. For me, first christmas alone and a million years from feeling any connection with  my ex husband, I could not speak, could not answer him but could only look at my daughters  across the table and  whisper with full eyes ‘I am so sorry’.

Last  year I had problems finding my joy I normally feel at Christmas. I felt more bombarded than usual by the early prompts to shop,consume, and emulate someone else’s idea of Christmas. My parents were not going to be with us, due to my dad’s rapidly progressing illness.It was a taste of the future without them.  I was particularily overrun with work and  parties and began to panic that I would not give anything original at Christmas. I tried to find the heart of the season at a soup kitchen serving the homeless, it helped a little but the goodness felt fleeting. Four days from the Eve, I called my ex husband  and invited him for Christmas Eve dinner. My children did not want this they said they were not ready- but I assured them it would be fine, no one would lose an eye.

This is why alcohol was invented.

He came for dinner, bringing me a poinsettia (16 years of marriage and he did not know I hate poinsettias?) and a bottle of wine. He carved the meat, said I looked pretty and left right after dessert. I breathed in and out, after all-other ex people do more. Some share vacations, family cars,  beds, monogrammed towels, parent teacher meetings, all special occasions, sock drawers, spice racks and even some bodily fluids.

I did well last year.  I gave my children an original gift.

read about what helps me at Christmas on my other new post by clicking here

darkness

In the morning before I wake completely, I feel unsure about what my life is. It is not blissful but blank in those fuzzy, almost awake moments. Then suddenly and with precision, the animal claws its way into my thoughts announcing the truth. A black blanket, deep and thick but not warm covers me completely. My mouth opens wide , I make no sound but I feel myself cry. It is so deep that it does not resemble other cries.  Mouth stretched open, eyes closed, no sound. Help me, I hear myself say.

It is a time that is so extremely difficult that life floats blurry around me. I look at my daughters. I would give them anything I could to make them happy. But I can’t give them the family they want. They want it so badly. I feel it like a  magnetic pull; it is what they know and it feels right. This sharp knife twists through me.

Exhaustion is a gift as it forces sleep. Sleep allows me to leave my life, my difficulties and my sadness. I go to bed early because at 4:30 I will wake, as though by alarm clock, to file and sort and take apart all the issues. They swirl in a stew and each morsel is pulled out, looked at and analyzed and thrown back in. I push the stew away but it has feet and runs back to me. It is so close to my side I feel it’s heat.

The loneliness is hard to explain. It is bigger and blacker than I expected. It feels like it has no end. In it there is profound disappointment, abandoned dreams, shame and a sadness worse than death. it is a death. A death of what I hoped for and believed in. The layers do not end, they seem to reproduce. Their taste is sour and sharp.

I wrote this to myself four years ago the morning after I separated. It was a bleak  moment for me and a hard one to share here and even now  but it is important. Even in this darkness I knew there was light. Right away the universe began supporting me for the right choice.

I sometimes think people believe that we leave marriages easily without trying, without sadness and without remorse. It is the hardest decision to come to even when you must.

read more from me on my other new post called “Ground Zero” by clicking here.