There is a belief among those who were able to come through a divorce fairly unscathed that those of us who didn’t handled our situations poorly, that if we had worked a bit harder we also could be going out to dinner with our ex and taking “family” vacations and experiencing a “peaceful divorce.”
I take exception to that belief! As someone who bent over backward and played nice doggy when her ex was withholding money, disrespecting his children and using the legal system to abuse his family it gets my dander up for someone to tell me my ex behaved badly because I handled my divorce poorly.
An acquaintance recently said to me via email, “As friends tell me their horror stories about their exes and how poorly they handled their divorces, I often wonder to myself how did I get so lucky to have a peaceful divorce.”
A wrongheaded perspective on divorce.
I respect this woman and what she is striving to do for her family. I think the issue with her and people like her is that they are unable to view divorce but from one perspective…their own. They believe that if they made it work for them then everyone should be able to make it work also.
I had experience with divorce in my family. My paternal grandparents were divorced. They were friendly with each other. We used to go visit my grandmother and my grandfather would stay in her home during our visits. When he became ill with cancer she took him back into her home and cared for him until he passed away. They neither one ever remarried and are now buried next to each other.
My mother was married and divorced before she married my father. I have a half-brother as a result. My mother and her first husband weren’t friends but they were civil toward each other and worked together for the sake of my brother. My brother has a collection of photos taken with him and both his parents throughout his life. If there were a gathering and both parents were there they made sure to get a “family” photo of the three of them. There was never a time that I remember seeing my mother and her first husband engage in conflict. And I certainly never heard her disparage him in any way.
One size does not fit all when it comes to divorce.
When my ex decided he could no longer stay in our marriage I naturally thought we would end up having a relationship similar to those that I had experienced as a child of divorced relatives. I expected more than my ex was willing to give me, his children or himself.
Every time I extended the hand of friendship it got slapped. The man wanted NOTHING to do with being civil. It took me 3 years of attempting to play nice before I realized I was pissing into the wind and only damaging myself by continuing to “work” at building the kind of relationship with him that I had witnessed as a child.
Allison also wrote to me, “A friend of mine posted something beautiful on my FB page. She quoted Emily Dickinson saying ‘Luck is not chance; it is toil. Fortune’s expensive smile is earned.’ Our peace took work and that’s what I want to show people. Others who are willing to make the effort could get similar results.”
Argh!
It would seem Allison has this stubborn need to believe that those of us who have spent years suffering the negative consequences of the bad behavior of another person or just unlucky because we didn’t “toil.” We weren’t willing to put forth the effort so we must have earned what we got.
Those of us who have dealt with abusive exes do so without a support system because of beliefs like that. We learn to keep our mouths shut and suffer in silence because opening up and talking about our high conflict divorce doesn’t get us empathy, it gets us judgments from those who haven’t learned that their perspective is not the only perspective.
I’ve been in a very lonely place since my divorce. My family was not supportive. After all, they experienced “peaceful” divorces and in their opinion, there must be something wrong with ME, if not my ex would be sharing meals and taking vacations with his children and me.
The majority of my friends and family suffer the same lack of insight that Allison does. They have an inability to look outside their own experiences and realize that every story is unique. Our own perspective shapes what seems right and wrong. Seeing something from a different perspective can raise our awareness and enable us to show compassion and empathy for the situations of others.
Allison and those like her filter everything by their own personal history, beliefs, motivations, and concepts that they hold true. So do I but the difference between Allison and me is that I’ve seen both sides of the coin so my perspective is broader. I’m able to see things from her perspective and my own because I’ve lived both. And, I’m also aware that just because something worked for me doesn’t mean it will or should work for everyone else.
It can take courage to see the perspective of the other person’s situation, acknowledge it and then look for the best solution for both. I think Allison believes she has a one size fits all solution to the problems that arise due to divorce. That belief is dangerous for Allison and women who buy into Allison’s words. She isn’t offering solutions; she is misleading people by showing only her perspective and dismissing the idea that there isn’t one solution for all situations.
I’d like to talk to Allison again in ten years after her ex has remarried and has a wife who doesn’t buy into him having dinner and taking vacations with his ex-wife. Or, after her ex-husband gets tired of playing house with his ex-wife. When she has some true experience with the outcome of divorce I’d like to talk to her.
I’ll do something for her at that time that she hasn’t done for women like you and me, I’ll listen, attempt to view her problem from her perspective and show her some empathy. I don’t wish Allison conflict in her life BUT things change and with her inability to understand that her situation isn’t static the time is going to come when she will need understanding, empathy, and compassion. Good thing for her there will be women open enough to not only offer her support but listen to her without judgment.
—
If you believe in the work we are doing here at The Good Men Project, please join like-minded individuals in The Good Men Project Premium Community.
◊♦◊
◊♦◊
Get the best stories from The Good Men Project delivered straight to your inbox, here.
◊♦◊
◊♦◊
Sign up for our Writing Prompts email to receive writing inspiration in your inbox twice per week.
The Good Men Project is an Amazon.com affiliate. If you shop via THIS LINK, we will get a small commission and you will be supporting our Mission while still getting the quality products you would have purchased, anyway! Thank you for your continued support!
Photo:Getty Images