Skip to main content

I'll sing the high, baby, you sing the low.

I was talking to someone the other night, someone who used to be married and isn't anymore.  I'm almost at an age where, sadly, my own divorce is less interesting novelty and more shared experience.  The CDC tells me that when women get married between 20-24 (I was 23), the likelihood of divorce after 72*  months is 19%.  That was according to data gathered in 1995.  I wonder if the rates are even higher now.

It was interesting how he spoke about marriage and life after marriage.  He said, "I was very happily married."  I find that sentence both beautiful and tragic.  Because really, how many people say, "we" are happily married, all the while forgetting that each of us is a universe unto ourselves, an entire separate reality?  Even after the confrontation and the loss, our own reality is slow to change.  He still thinks of himself as part of a pair, but his other half is missing.

My marriage having ended long ago, I'm not sure I remember what it feels like to be part of a pair.  Sometimes I think I long for an idea that's mostly fantasy and a nostalgia for something my senses remember but my mind has forgotten.  The familiar smell of someone else on your pillow, the warmth of a shared shower, the embrace of forgiveness after a fight, the moment you realize you don't have to try to remember their favorite song, biggest pet peeve, most cherished memory.  When someone else feels like home.

I long for that on days like today, days when I come home and my roommate has been out of town for 4 weeks and Spencerificus seems tiny and entirely unable to help me fill all the empty space in this house.  I sit on the porch and watch the neighbors with their kids, working in their yards, and I feel content, but there's a nagging emptiness that never seems to go away.

Anyone who knows me, anyone who's read just about anything I've ever written, you know that a huge part of my life is about family and what family means and fighting to feel comfortable being alone with myself when the idea of family is elusive.  And even though I'm kind of sad about this sometimes, lonely, I think I'm at the point where I'm as solitary as I want to be.  I don't want to get more comfortable with being alone.  I like the hope.

My friend, the divorced person of mystery, said he has a spot in his life that someone walked away from and he's always wondering about a new person's relationship to that spot.  Spot is such a specific term.  I don't have a spot, I have a space.  It's a much more general concept.  However, the desire is fundamentally the same.  We tend to be so ashamed of this kind of thing, of longing, of loneliness.  But how can something so fundamental be shameful?

I have a space in my life.  Someday someone will fill it, and as Cary Ann Hearst sings, "We'll be together every day and night.  We'll have a miserable life."  I don't want to forget to be excited about the possibility of hanging my heart on someone's barbed wire fence.



* I'm 29 now, married at 23, so 29 yo - 23 yo = 6 x 12 = 72 months.

Comments

Briana said…
I had a friend once, actually 2 in this same situation, who really wanted a family, kids. She (both) was in a great relationship, to a guy whom she found out after several years, didn't actually want a family...at all. One dealt with it by giving herself permission to have the family (the kids) without the spouse. The other ended up in a relationship with a man she loved desperately, who took years to extricate himself from a poisoned marriage because of his dedication to his kids. I don't know what either of those stories really means. But you're smarter than me, and maybe you will...

Popular posts from this blog

Thoughts from last Thursday: Tonight we set up our Indie Bits game, and I'm consumed by nervous anticipation. I imagine this is not unlike when your firstborn child goes to kindergarten. OK, maybe it's not that serious. But the feelings of, please don't bite anyone , and I hope you make friends translates roughly to please don't break while someone is playing you , and also please no one play this game because What if you don't like it?  What if people hate it? What if it doesn't work? What if it's uninteresting? What if the puzzles are too hard? There are so many ways this can go wrong. These are not feelings I typically experience with the things that I make, as I usually make things just for myself. I've always been more of an engineer then an artist. At middle school art camp, I was competent at various techniques, but I never had any great ideas. We would be set free to our own creative devices with a new method, and I sat there, feeling inad...

2011 Reading Challenges

On the first day of this new year, I am pulling together the reading challenges in which I want to participate.  There are so many that sound interesting that I'm not doing, particularly a bunch of them that are regional authors, which I'm trying to cover with my Global Reading Challenge.  I've chosen a bunch of them, but the problem won't be reading quantity, but more like reading strategy.  I read 3 or 4 books a week and most of these challenges allow crossovers, so I see no problems reading enough books, merely reading the right books and then, perhaps more challenging, writing about them, which some challenges require, and some only suggest.  Either way, it's a neat way to prioritize reading for the coming year. The Challenges in Which I Shall Participate Southern Literature Challenge - I've never read enough Southern Lit, and while some of the newer stuff is truly awful, I'd like to explore some older books. It's any book set in the South by a S...

2021 Reading Challenges

Apparently a blog is forever, since this one is still hanging out there. I could be using it to write about being a traveler, but that's been done and most of my thoughts should remain private anyway (they are *not* flattering). So I'm going to track my 2021 reading challenges instead because that's the only set of goals I'm really setting for myself this year. (2021 goal = have fewer goals.)  League of Extraordinary Penpals It's a secret! This challenge is part of a penpal group that I pay to be in, so they don't want people sharing the challenge. I'm going to try to figure out how to review and track these books here without sharing the challenge in ways that aren't okay.  For now, I'll just say that I'm tackling the Genre-tastic, Book Club, Around the World, Dewey Decimations, and Social Butterfly challenges, not all of which involve reading a book.  Current point tally 4/5/21: 150 5 Countries I'm in an Around the World group on Goodreads ...