By Serge Bielanko for YourTango
There are times when I look back on the not-so-distant past and wonder how the hell I ever ended up divorced. Thing is, I never actually wanted to get a divorce and neither did Monica, my ex-wife, as far as I can tell.
She did want a separation and I ultimately ended up understanding that we needed to do that. Our marriage had rotted from the inside out, like a two-dollar red pepper that still seems decent until you hit it with the knife.
We were hollow logs filled with ghosts of ideas and visions that had long since died. We ended up like dreamers without a dream.
In other words: we sucked at love.
But divorce? Oh, hell no. For a very long time (almost a year of separation), it honestly never crossed my mind. I can’t speak for anyone else, of course, but even if it did cross Monica’s mind at some point, she still continued to hem and haw about slamming our life together shut with one final death blow.
So, maybe she didn’t want divorce either or maybe she just didn’t want the weight of it on her shoulders, the dirt of the decision smeared across her hands; I’ll never know.
Fact is, it doesn’t much matter now.
We were two people who had once been in a really cool love affair; we were parents to three incredible young kids; we were two souls, more than a little scared about what the hell was happening to us.
I didn’t want divorce, but then one day — after the long separation dragged on and on — I filed for it anyway.
Why? I’m not that sure. Something inside me told me it was time.
Isn’t that the lamest, most asinine reason you’ve ever heard?
The final years of our marriage had been drenched in kids, stress, a cross-country move, and family drama. Life became stale for us in all the ways that life gets stale for so many married people.
We never went on dates anymore and never really took family vacations. Our sex life was an omnishambles and we ended up sleeping in separate bedrooms simply because the mere whiff of each other dreaming in the middle of the night triggered all kinds of repulsion and animosity.
We were lost. Maybe we could have saved things — and by “things” I mean the marriage — but even now I don’t think we could have.
We went to a therapist once, but it was too late. I think we freaked her out; I think she wanted to tell us that she was a therapist, not a voodoo doctor.
Even through it all, one thing kept eating away at me … a shark devouring my breath, minute-to-minute, day after day, to the point where there were times (many, many times) when I was certain I would collapse and die out there in the Walmart aisles or driving down the road with the kids in the back … a man killed by the sadness in his heart.
I still loved her. Isn’t that f*cked up?
How can you go through so many things, so much pain and suffering and viscousness, so many blues on blues, and still come out the other side of a shipwreck relationship with your love for the other person still intact? And have that love still be growing, too?
How the hell do you explain something like that? I don’t know; I have no idea. I toyed with the notion that maybe I’m simply weak or co-dependent. I wondered if I was just a big pussy, a dude too afraid to move on.
“Have some fun! You’re single now!” That’s the sort of thing people will tell you when you’re going through the worst sh*t you’ve ever been through.
People are so stupid, even when they mean well.
But even as I was trying my best to move on, I just kept thinking we weren’t supposed to be done.
In the back of my mind, I felt like the death of our marriage would be the death of a part of me that I didn’t want to die.
I have no idea what that even means. There were so many parts of me from our marriage that needed to die, vulgar and strange parts that had been born up out of the mushroom dirt of discontentment.
When I ultimately did file for divorce in October of last year, I knew it was the right move for Monica and me. I felt certain we had to end our world on paper in order to get a glimpse of whatever else there was.
And even now, as we’ve emerged from the rank haze of a sh*t storm marriage out into the cooler, clearer fields that come with being divorced and unobliged — and, for all intents and purposes, free as hell — I’m still not altogether certain what lies ahead.
But that’s fine. I don’t need to know. We’re dating each other. We’re two people fresh off the Divorce Boat, walking back into each other’s lives in a strange, new way.
And check it out: I never stopped loving her.
Maybe she stopped loving me, but I f*cking doubt it. It’s tough to switch love off, especially the real thing.
Tons of guys would love to date a woman like her, but I doubt there is another one in the world who could ever understand her or dig her like I do. Does that sound cocky? I hope not; I’m just speaking my mind.
You can divorce another human being and walk away if you want. I understand that. If you need to never, ever see them again, more power to ya.
But that’s not me.
I divorced a woman just to end up standing at her back screen door.
Look at me, peering in with my fistful of supermarket flowers.
Look at me, what a sad beautiful bastard I am! Oh boy. Can you see me there?
Look, I’m smiling at her moving toward me across her kitchen floor. Ha! I know the future is so uncertain, the past rotting in its grave, and I divorced her and she divorced me.
But hey, here I am.
I’m banging on this door — on HER door, my man. And I’m nervous like a schoolboy.
So, when you think about it for a second, I reckon that’s about as good a reason to end a marriage as any, huh?
____
More on the story of Serge and Monica’s break-up and reconciliation.
This article originally appeared on Your Tango. For more like this from Your Tango, try:
I don’t understand any of this culture anymore. So, who wrecked it? TV, Books, internet, music? I lost my wife of 38 years to cancer, and here are people in love getting divorced! We weren’t best friends when we married…and we fought like rabid dogs. But we knew…we KNEW we were meant to be be together…and the last five years were off the charts happy. My last birthday, I asked her for a gift I knew SHE would love, and we spent our last summer together sharing that gift. She died two months after we found out she had cancer.… Read more »
Wow your poor kids, growing up seeing this. They are doomed to emulate your toxic relationship.
I was the one that threw down the hammer a final time. We were not married, but I was so very much in love. I adored him. Cutting him out of my life felt like ripping open my chest and tearing out whatever was left in me that had any meaning. I died inside. I couldn’t go anywhere we’d gone, couldn’t think of him without feeling crazy. I still can’t go near his town or our old haunts without feeling an ache in my chest. I cry just from taking a certain road or hearing a certain song. But I… Read more »
Serge, man, my dude…I’m in the middle of this very same thing. Ok maybe not the *exact* same thing, but yeah. My wife and I are separated, she’s pushing hard for divorce, and I’m knowing we need to die. Our marriage needs to die, parts of ourselves need to die. We’ve done things that deeply hurt each other, although those were never our intentions. We lost our way. I lost myself in my roles as father and husband. I wasn’t the man she married anymore, I had become some weird frankenstein monster that even I disliked. She played her part… Read more »
Cue Madeleine Peyroux’s “We Just Couldn’t Say Goodbye.”
I’m glad for the optimistic end, but find it sad that the author felt so confused as to why he was still so attached to his wife. It says nothing positive about our culture that the persistence of such a bond needs any justification at all.
This speaks to the complexity of human emotions and relationships more than any advice list ever could. I love the fact that you don’t feel the need to rationalize your feelings, because feelings are rarely rational. You can both want something and still watch it fall apart. I’m happy for you and hope it works out.