Monday, October 20, 2014

Becoming


The hardest part of the day is the last part. Those six or seven minutes between wakefulness and sleep, as I drift off in the in-between space of moments past and moments yet to come.

Instead of those sleepy, mumbled conversations between two married people, parents downloading their day, giggling over a funny thing a kid said, or offering assurances that the work meeting the next day will go fine.... there is silence. 

Sometimes I unconsciously slide my foot over to his side of the bed, expecting the warm reassurance of his presence.  My toes are always icy, and I used to snuggle them up against his shin.  He'd wince and say "ah, c'mon!", but he wouldn't move away.

Now the sheets are cold.  My toes are icy.  He is not there.

I knew separation would be hard, in the broad sense.  I worried about juggling all the moving parts alone.  I didn't know how I would handle the morning routine all by myself.  And what would I do about dinner?  Do I cook for just the three of us?  The kids only really like to eat about four things, so I mostly cooked for him. For us. Would the kids and I sit around the table, where we ate thousands upon thousands of family dinners, with his empty chair blaring silently at us?  I wrung my hands about the schedule - how much time to spend there instead of here?  How would they adjust? How would I adjust?

What I didn't know, what I couldn't know until I was in it, is the hardest part isn't the big picture.  In many ways, because of his long work hours, I handled many of the logistics on my own anyway. Mornings he was out the door before we were all up. Many nights he worked late, and what to eat or where to eat it never bothered me before.  And managing all the moving parts of the kids' schedule?  Well, that was always my role. I'm a pro at all those things.

The part I didn't expect?  The ghosts. Every inch of my life is our life. Was our life.  Is our life.

See?  It's confusing.

Over there is the bureau we bought decades ago, as a newly engaged couple, feeling very grown up on an afternoon of antiquing.  On the mantle are the metal statues of two cranes intertwined, purchased at a funky little store down the street from our first apartment.  When Greta was born we found a little baby crane. "Look, they are a family now, like us," we said. They whisper to me of what was, what is, and what isn't anymore.

I am surrounded by my most familiar and comfortable space - my home and everything in it - and nothing is familiar anymore.  Or comfortable. 

"We marry people because we like who they are. People change. Plan on it. Don't marry someone because of who they are, or who you want them to become. Marry them because of who they are determined to become. And then spend a lifetime joining them in their becoming, as they join you in yours."  ~ Huffington Post


The funny thing about becoming?  It's not a straight line.  It's not all forward momentum. 

Before I thought of becoming like brick laying - cumulative - each brick snuggling firmly on top of the other as we build.  Upward. Stronger.

Then life happens, and that brick wall is smashed to smithereens.  Every brick is still there, except they lie in an unrecognizable jumble at my feet.  Over there is the brick where we saw our first ultrasound picture.  We made a girl, I whispered to him in awe.  That moment is still there, as solid as it ever was, except now it has a crack down the middle.  All that happy, that certainty of how it would all play out, is altered.

Because sometimes, to become, we have to break apart what is to make room for what will be. 

People do change. We know that for a fact, right?  So why is it so hard to keep up?  To pay attention to the thousands of tiny moments, infinitesimal feelings, decisions, thoughts that accumulate every day?  And then it seems so sudden, when things fall apart, or fall away.  But it isn't.  Because we're always becoming.  Changing.  Evolving. 

But our expectations stay stuck.  It's human nature, I think. I am still that young woman clutching her first ultrasound picture, a Technicolor vision of how my life - how our life - would be dancing in my head.

That vision didn't have alcoholism. Or death. Or cancer. Or depression. Or separation. All these things are just as much a part of my becoming as all the joy, success, happiness and peace.


"Marry them because of who they are determined to become. And then spend a lifetime joining them in their becoming, as they join you in yours."

Ah, yes. Sounds straightforward, right?  All Hallmark card-y.  Hopeful.  Because becoming sounds so positive.  All new-agey and personal growth oriented.

But growth, like becoming, isn't all forward momentum.  Most of the growth I have experienced feels a lot like the opposite, in fact. It feels like zooming backward, blind to where I'm headed, white knuckles bracing for impact. 

It's how we survive the out-of-control moments, the backward zooming moments, that define who we become.

Back to marriage. To becoming, and growth.  How do I ask someone to stay with me as I zoom backwards?  As I cast my eyes at the broken pile of bricks at my feet, only to stare in amazement that I'm the one holding the sledgehammer?

I guess the answer is that I don't.  This moment in my journey is an inside job. 

I can kick and scream and lament what was lost, or I can set about, well, becoming.  

17 comments:

  1. I've missed your writing. I wish you peace. I wish I had more...some kind of sweet Hallmark-y kind of words that could soothe you. Something that could kiss the boo boo and make it better.

    But I don't. None of us does. So l keep good thoughts and prayers as you become.

    Sherry

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  2. SoberMomWrites said it well. So sorry for your 'hurts'. Thinking of you and wishing you strength as you re-build. One brick at a time.

    Shanon

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  3. This is beautiful. Ironic that something of beauty can emerge from pain. I am so sorry for your loss. I too sleep alone, but that was my choice, and my ex-husband was the one who felt like the bricks of our shared life were a heap of rubble at his feet. I wonder sometimes which hurts more, being hurt, or knowing that you have hurt someone who didn't deserve it.

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  4. This is profoundly beautiful and brilliant! I am sorry for your valleys. You are a strong woman. I wish you strength and peace along your journey, my friend.
    xoxo

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  5. I'm glad to see you writing, and I am sorry for the limbo you're in, but I sense, it's going to come together. With the gift of time. xo

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  6. Welcome back ... the WE of sobriety will hold your hand as you "become" ... whatever God intends if you surrender o.d.a.t. I find the hallway cold and lonesome when I'm "waiting on outcome, or circumstance" to change, to shift. What I do know is you don't have to do it alone ... you have God, the fellowship of other sober women and YOU, the you that you are becoming. Embrace the possibilities of whoever SHE is ..... <3

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  7. Beautifully written as always because it comes from the heart and that's why we can all relate. I know you will be ok as long as you put your sobriety first. Because that's what you taught me:) xoxox

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  8. God uses our brokenness in many ways. Your words are rich with a hollow echo. I have missed them. I'll be praying for you as I have before over the years. I wish you healing and peace. My heart feels heavy for you.

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  9. Thank you for sharing your journeys once again. I have been following your story for years and I am relieved and grateful that you have returned. I have gone through this very recently, and I know those ghosts. Please read "Broken Open" by Elizabeth Lesser. It helped me so much to grieve in the moment, and turn the worst thing that ever happened to me into the biggest opportunity for growth. It helped me not to waste the pain, and not to put it off. The only way out is through the fire, and you already have the battle scars to help keep you strong. Sending love and light to you and your children.

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  10. You are a fine writer, Ellie. I'm so sorry you have to go through this. You are helping people as you become. Hugs.

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  11. Sending up a prayer for peace for you, Ellie, in the midst of this trial... as the others have said...your words are rich and your transparency is deeply valued. May whatever painful trial you are now enduring bring you to a deeper intimacy with God and a deeper bond with those family and friends who walk with you through this. Be strong and courageous. You are full of everything you need right now.

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  12. Sending you much love, Ellie, in what is surely a difficult and emotional time. Thank you for sharing so honestly and writing so beautifully about what's going on. xox

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  13. I just want to share my experience and testimony here... I was married for 6 years to my husband and all of a sudden, another woman came into the picture... He started hailing me and he was abusive. But I still loved him with all my heart and wanted him at all cost…then he filed for divorce. My whole life was turning apart and I didn’t know what to do .he moved out of the house and abandoned the kids... so someone told me about trying spiritual means to get my husband back and introduced me to a spell caster…so I decided to try it reluctantly. Although I didn’t believe in all those things… then when he did the special prayers and spell, after 2days, my husband came back and was pleading. He had realized his mistakes. I just couldn’t believe it... Anyways we are back together now and we are happy. In case anyone needs this man, his email address ophantemple@yahoo.co.uk
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