Posts tagged ‘Marriage’

March 11, 2013

“You have one RE-friend request.” This is getting serious…

When I became a vegetarian my sophomore year of college some people thought it was a phase. But *I* knew it wasn’t, and more than 20 years later I can say that most definitely. At this point I can’t even imagine going back.

Two-and-a-half years ago when my ex and I first became ex’s, we started telling people we planned to continue living and raising our kids together. And lots of people thought that was a phase too. I’ve been told at least hundred times that we can’t do it. Not just that we eventually won’t want to (although I can’t even count how many times I’ve heard this), or that we shouldn’t (I’ve heard this a few times as well), but that we, quite literally, can’t. I call bullshit on that.

Of course we can’t predict the future. And we don’t know what’s going to happen in 2 or 5 or 10 years. Maybe eventually we WON’T want to keep doing this. But what I can say now is that I see more signs each month that we mean it– we’re really planning to do what we can to keep making this work. Me, my ex, and now his girlfriend too. Here are the top 10 signs that we’re ALL quite serious about it.

10. Last week when my ex asked me to pick up a case of PBR for him from the village liquor store I wasn’t even annoyed—I was happy to do it. A few weeks earlier he, unprompted, brought home a latte for me because he knew I was tired and had plans for the evening.

9. When my ex’s girlfriend makes turkey chili she sometimes asks me “Do you want me to make a vegetarian one for you?” And I say yes. She makes really good chili.

8. Not too long ago we all (minus the kids) ended up at our favorite local bar on the same night– me with my friends and them with theirs. We didn’t sit together, but there was some intermingling. And it wasn’t weird it all. It was really rather nice.

7. In December we once again hosted our annual family party on Christmas Eve. This year there were five names on the invitation– mine, my kids’, my ex’s, and his girlfriend’s. She did half the baking. I discussed with some new friends the need to attach an explanation for those who aren’t clued in to the situation. It might be titled “What, exactly, is going on in this house…”

6. When my kids talk about our family they include me, my ex, his girlfriend, and her dog (my step-dog). The dog was really the last hold-out in all of this. He ignored me for at least a year, acknowledging me only if I was the sole human in the house during a thunderstorm. He now frequently climbs into my lap or sleeps at my feet while I work, even when there are other people around.

5. My ex recently tried to discourage me from breaking up with a guy I was dating. He said “I’m not trying to tell you what to do…” (a critical preface) “…but you seemed to really like him.”

4. A couple of weeks ago when my daughter said “We’re lucky, we have two Moms” I didn’t feel even a twinge of anything but happiness for my kids. Although I’ll admit to a twinge of… something… the day she called me by his girlfriend’s name and explained it by saying “She’s around a lot more than you. You’re always working.” :-(

3. In January we spent a week together at Disney World. All five of us. We really, truly had a great time. (Hint: When the number of adults is larger than the number of kids, family vacations and amusement park trips are waaaay more enjoyable.)

2. We’re currently finalizing the architectural drawings for the addition we’re putting on our house. It will allow us all to have a little more space and a little more privacy. With this one we’re putting our money where our mouths are– a couple hundred thousand worth of our money. So no, we’re not kidding around.

1. And finally, last month my ex and I re-friended each other on Facebook. This probably tells you more about where we’re at than any of the above. :-)

Mylilhurricane

July 13, 2011

Two Short Comments on Other People’s Insightful Stuff

Response to Life as an IndieMom: Babe Meets Boy (Debra Goldstein on Huffington Post)

Here’s to making up our own rules. :) Of COURSE we’ll try to be careful with our kids’ hearts (and our own), but I believe that some risk-takin­g in life is both good and necessary to live fully. I know I want to teach my kids that.

I haven’t yet decided to introduce any of the men I’ve dated to my kids, but my ex’s girlfriend has become part of their lives — and their lives are richer for it. Even if she and my ex don’t stay together forever, I think her relationsh­ip with my kids is a positive thing for them.

People come and go in and out of our lives all the time for various reasons. Not all of these losses are crushing and they are certainly a reality of living and loving. Again recognizin­g that it’s important to proceed with caution, maybe learning with and from us about the value of even temporary relationsh­ips is the best way to help prepare our kids for rich lives that include losses both big and small. www.rearra­ngingatoms­.com

– Mylilhurricane

Link to this comment on Huffington Post

———-

Response to The (Sometimes) Surprising Benefits of Divorce for Parent-Child Relationships (Jonathan Weiler and Anne J. Menkens on Huffington Post)

I have experienced all of these benefits since splitting up with my husband. I definitely appreciate my time away from my kids, and take advantage of it to do the things I like to do that are practically impossible with a 4- and 6-year-old around — dinner or drinks with friends, going for a run, getting lost in a good book, and of course, dating. At the same time I appreciate the times when the parenting is all up to me. My ex has a big personality and is a highly involved Dad. He holds our kids CLOSE. I would never, ever want to change that, but at times when we were together I had a hard time finding space for me to be a Mom. I somehow didn’t feel like there was room for me amidst all of his larger-than-life “Dadness”. I now have more time alone with the kids and the space to create my own relationships with them. I’m also more intentional about planning fun things for us to do together, not just hanging around or always trying to get something else done. Maybe I could have done this even when my ex and I were still together, but I didn’t, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to do it now.  www.rearrangingatoms.com

– Mylilhurricane

Link to this comment on Huffington Post

May 31, 2011

There’s no ME in Marriage

Response to Melancholy Marriage: Are We in a Post-Romantic Era?: Low-conflict, low-stress melancholy marriages (Bella DePaulo on Psychology Today)

Having not yet had the opportunity to read Pamela Haag’s “Marriage Confidential” I’ll comment instead on this great summary of what sounds like a very interesting book. I’m particularly intrigued by the idea that in marriage, time spent being with friends or having fun is held against a person. I was struck by this quote from a married man:  ”Not only must all tasks be shared equally, but any time spent away on an individual activity must be made up in kind to the spouse. It’s like there’s this mental calculation that sounds a warning whenever one partner is enjoying himself too much.”

I can say that as a married woman I often struggled with this same feeling, but I think it may have been even more about being a parent than it was about being married. With two young kids, two careers, and a house to manage, there was simply too much to do and if one of us (me) was out having fun, it meant the other (him) was carrying more of the burden, at least in that moment. I always had this sense that any time I spent on things that were separate from my family life – time with friends, running, reading, contemplating the universe in a coffee shop – was somehow stolen from my husband and kids. As if I no longer had a right to do the things that made me happy before I became a Wife and Mom, the things that made me, ME.

And while I felt I had to pay my husband back for any time spent “away,” I wasn’t able to do so, because he didn’t desire similar time away. So on top of this vague feeling that I wasn’t reciprocating for that “stolen time” in the way I should be, I also ended up wondering if there was something wrong with me since I seemed to want (need?) time away from my family in a way that my husband didn’t. And it wasn’t really fair to blame him – he wasn’t saying I shouldn’t have the time – but I often did anyway. I blamed him for not allowing me to ease my guilt by paying him back.

Eventually my husband and I separated and I’ve found my way to reclaiming some of my independence and my “right” to do my own thing some of the time, but since we still live together and co-parent those feelings haven’t entirely gone away. I do wonder at times, if I had been more successful in claiming that time for myself within the marriage, might things have worked out differently. But I tried, and so did he, to find a way to make it work. And now we’re trying something else. www.rearrangingatoms.com

- Mylilhurricane

Link to this comment on Psychology Today

April 28, 2011

What’s good for me is good for everyone

4/14/2011 – Response to “Stop Putting Your Kids First” by Vicki Larson, HuffPost

I agree that parents shouldn’t sacrifice their needs for the sake of their kids – and I think this includes deciding whether or not to separate.

When the possibility of divorce is raised, someone usually comments, “Aren’t you worried that this will ruin your kids?” Many people still believe that staying together for the sake of the children makes sense. I question this long-held wisdom.

My son loves me and he loves his dad. He would not like to learn that his parents are separating, if that’s the route we ultimately choose. But I wonder how parents who stay in a troubled marriage are behaving in a way that benefits their children. Does it make sense to sacrifice one’s happiness hoping that it will save our kids pain and discomfort? Or is there already pain and discomfort living in a home when parents aren’t in synch? I believe in the guiding principle that what’s good for me is good for everyone, and conversely what’s bad for me is bad for everyone. It means that families actually function as a unit. When you take care of yourself and your own needs, are you also taking care of your kids?

www.rearrangingatoms.com

ahappyalchemist

Link to this comment on Huffington Post

April 26, 2011

Maybe if we weren’t so extreme about how we do marriage OR divorce this would all be a lot easier?

4/12/11: Response to Diagnosis… Divorce?: Why Does Divorce Rank Up There with Death of a Spouse? (Rachel Clark on Psychology Today)

I think Crimson’s right. It’s interesting… I sometimes wonder if the fact that I never really threw myself full-force into marriage in this “all-American way” was a primary reason that mine failed. But I know FOR SURE that my unwillingness to do so is one thing that’s making its failure easier to handle.

I never thought of my marriage as a merging of two people. I didn’t want to give up my friends, or my ex-boyfriends, or my interests, or my “me time”. And, not surprisingly, my marriage lacked intimacy – maybe because of my hesitation to merge with my husband in the way I was “supposed to”, or maybe for other reasons, or maybe a little of both. But I did feel that I was able to hold on to who I was, at least until we had kids, then it started to become more difficult.

All of this means that my new, post-marriage life is not a huge departure from my married life. Old friends have become busy with other things while my attention has been on my family, but for the most part they’re not too far gone to call back. And like my marriage, I’m not doing my “divorce” in the typical way – we’re still sharing our home and not pursuing an official dissolution of our marriage. This means the financial aspects of divorce are, at least for the time being, not impacting me greatly. Even more importantly, living together with our kids means I’m not feeling the loss of my family in quite the same way that many divorced people do.

Maybe if we could change BOTH how we do marriage AND how we do divorce, with neither being quite so extreme, this whole thing would be a lot easier for all of us?

- Mylilhurricane

Link to this comment on Psychology Today

April 25, 2011

A marriage doesn’t have to last forever to be successful

Comment on New York Times magazine article “Ellen Barkin is No Uptown Girl” by Alex Witchel, April 22, 2011

As I see the writing on the wall, the fact that my husband and I are heading toward separation, I take particular solace any time I come across someone describing an amicable split — especially when kids are involved. In this weekend’s NY Times magazine, actress Ellen Barkin talks about how she and her ex-husband, actor Gabriel Byrne, continued to celebrate their kids’ birthdays together — even their own birthdays together –long after their marriage ended. “Any time I cook a holiday meal, Gabriel comes here, and Christmas is usually his holiday, so then I go there,” Barkin said. “I don’t think a marriage has to last forever to be successful, and I think we had a good marriage and we managed to keep what was good about it alive for 25 years.” Every marriage does have some positives, things you shared, a spark that brought you together, and in some cases, kids you created whom you hope will thrive even when your marriage could not. That is my hope as I face uncertainty and concern about how my family will reconfigure after we separate. It’s a dream of mine that my son will have both parents at his birthday parties, at his important school events, and even at holiday meals. Parents don’t need to live together to share special occasions and provide their kids with as much love as they can on special occasions. That’s an act of selflessness that I hope we both can manage. Have you been able to have family meals or birthdays together with your ex for the sake of the kids? How has this worked for you?

– ahappyalchemist

April 6, 2011

Why Rearranging Atoms?

Chemistry. It’s a word we associate with great relationships, usually used to describe a really strong connection between two people. There’s even a dating website called chemistry.com, because it’s what so many of us are looking for. In describing relationships chemistry metaphors extend even beyond the word chemistry. When people talk about fireworks, a common way to describe what people with an intense connection feel when they’re together, they’re talking about chemistry too; in fact, the sounds, colors, and heat produced by fireworks are all a result of chemical reactions. Chemistry can also characterize the failure of two people to connect. Saying that two people mix like oil and water, in other words don’t mix at all, is a chemistry reference as well.

Chemistry metaphors can even represent divorce. For many of us it’s difficult to imagine dividing our families even if we’re unhappy. It was once similarly believed that the nucleus of an atom could not be divided, but nuclear fission – the splitting of atoms – was eventually achieved. And so too, do many of us reach the conclusion that the nucleus of our families can, in fact, be split.

But this blog is about the space between fireworks and nuclear fission – when a marriage isn’t meeting the needs of both partners but they don’t want to see their family go up in flames. It’s about the creative solutions people are finding to the stay-or-go dilemma and the positive outcomes they’re realizing. It’s about rearranging atoms, because theoretically, if you rearrange the atoms of coal you can create a diamond. Realizing that a marriage isn’t what you hoped it would be may be difficult and disappointing, but it doesn’t need to be a tragedy. In fact, people everywhere are finding new arrangements more rewarding than the original one, turning what began to feel like a lump of coal into something with a brilliant sparkle.

There’s a quiet revolution going on. Let’s talk about it…

(More soon to come.)

 

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