Sunday, 28 July 2013

To be or not to be.. a Duck

I've commented before that every now and then I feel an incredible urge to write - to verbalise the anxiety and trouble within my mind and perhaps somehow purge it in the same instance.   Right now I am having one of these episodes.  There may come a time, in the future, when we understand this as some dreadful mental condition, but for now I choose to believe it is a singularly creative impulse and fantasise that the same was shared by such greats as Tolstoy, Hardy and Joan Collins' Sister (I forget her name).

Today has been a markedly terrible day.  Shamefully I cannot attribute this to the onset of an apocalyptic event, World War III or the discovery that Bradley Cooper is gay and thus my chances with him have sunk from -21 to -36.   No, today simply marked the annual Ford Family holiday, which for the first time, this particular Ford was not party to.  I say this with no malice nor expectation - of course I was not a part of the event.  Chris and I have gone our separate ways....he is now with a new love and she is naturally the person attending in my place.  Well perhaps not in my place but in her own new, Carly-esq place all of its very own.

What I am struggling with, beyond my own understanding is how painful it is to have these two separate existences in relation to the children.  I feel like they are my life's work.....my every day thought and action goes in to attempting to provide something further for them, be it a dinner, entertainment, lift, words of wisdom (rare but occasional), cuddles, commiserations, reassurance etc (caviat - the etc includes berating, bawling out, chastising and generally losing temper with).  The list of requisites as a mother is unending.  Yet now I find myself childless for ten whole days......and it is excruciating.  In reality they will be having a fabulous time but I feel like the heart and soul of my life is missing - melodrama?  Admittedly yes, but indulge me please.

So have I not left them before?  Again yes.  This is the silly part.  I have left them for an entire week before - although I must confess that by day five I was chewing my finger nails and counting down the hours.  Somehow though this feels different.  Perhaps because they are away from me rather than vice verse and also because it re-enforces how far and significantly our lives have changed.   The family unit we once were is no more.  And it hurts.  More than I can explain.

This is not a request for sympathy.  Indeed I am not convinced that any person actually reads this blog much nowadays.  I just like to say it out loud.  To no one inparticular and yet to the entire world.  To get it off my chest and then hopefully find some peace and movement in a positive direction.

On a completely aside note, I am currently sitting in a foreign bed - not foreign as in exotic, international  and thus holiday destination bed, but rather foreign as in not my own.  Whilst I would love to say it is the bed of a 6'1 hunk of a man, devoted, handsome, kind, intelligent, humorous and willing to take me on in all my irrational glory, not so.  This is my friends' bed and I am house sitting, or rather dog sitting for the night.  Unfortunately I have a further visitor - a big fat nasty green (also covered in dust?) mammoth frog, which I discovered in the hall earlier today and which I unsuccessfully attempted to remove but rather drove in to hiding beneath the stairs.   I remember as a little girl reading the fairytale 'Princess and the Frog' and wondering what her issue was - why not just kiss the darn creature or play with him (was that what he wanted?  I can't recall) - how difficult could it be.  Well, now I have empathy for her plight (Karma surely does exist).  I tried to help Mr Frog but actually as soon as he began to jump - hearing the noise of his long floppy yellow-green legs slapping against the quarry tiles,  I began to feel physically sick.  No wonder she didn't snog the nasty thing.  

Anyhow.  It's been a day.  But that, fundamentally, is the point of my post.  It has JUST been a day. Just one of many.  Some good, some bad, some indifferent.   "For there is nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so" - Hamlet.  I believe he may have a point.

Thursday, 20 June 2013

Subway Surf - a Metaphor for life

It's not often that I give credit to downloadable Apps and Games (to those of you less technologically minded I would suggest at this point you watch a few re-runs of Tommorrow's World) usually tending toward thinking they are all essentially generic time-consuming nonsense (although the majority of the Game App playing world would undoubtedly disagree).  Today however, thanks to Charlotte and her insightful assessment of "Subway Surf", I concede that they do indeed teach life concepts.  She was sat in the car playing away on her Ipod touch/shuffle/multiplex cinema or whatever it is and I asked her if she was winning - to which she responded "no Mum, you can't actually win at this game - the aim is simply to stay alive!".

This statement couldn't have been made at a more apt juncture.  With every day that passes this is exactly my challenge.  No religion could convey more deeply the sentiment that was summaried in those 13 words - the main aim of our existence- not to win, but to merely survive.  To continue to inhale despite the fact that all around you has turned to chaos.

One of my greatest faults - one of the many - is that I have a rather idealistic view of  life.  That's not to say I am generally happy - although I may manage mostly to have a positive countenance on the outside (those that live with me know this to be a facade) within I am rarely content.  However I do, or did until about 12 months ago, believe that life is generally something great which can turn out well and does not necessarily have to contain unending sadness or disappointment.

Hmmmmm.

Never one to overly exclaim about my personal misery, it's sad to confess that I am finding it continually more and more difficult to maintain said facade of pleasure with this mortality.  If I am honest, with this divorce milarky,  I realise I have merely traded one form of unhappiness for another......only this version is less familar, slightly more terrifying and much more emotionally charged. 

Perhaps I shouldn't share this intimate information here.....but if you have followed this far you understand that essentially I have always tried to maintain an honest account of my perceived reality so it would be cheating to not now tell you how it feels to have made the decision I contemplated for so long.  I know, from speaking to several of you, that you have had similar concerns with your own marriage situations.  Marriage is difficult, incredibly so, but I do believe divorce is soemthing even uglier.    At the end of the day if you are miserably married for 30 years people will still admire you....because most don't manage it and so appreciate the level of sacrifice required at times.  You may occasionally hate the sight of each other, sleep in separate rooms, be grateful when one has to work away and pray for the day you wake to find you are in bed with only a corpse....but at least if you have stayed faithful to your vows there is a certain element of pride you can take.  In Divorce there are no winners.  No runners up.  Just losers all round.    

The worst part for me is the meaningless of it all.  The realisation that a person with whom you have shared your entire life, body and soul can almost overnight become a stranger - in fact as less than that.  It is the most irrational and odd experience.  And yet a necessary evil to create a boundary over which neither party any longer steps.  How else can you go from 100% intimacy to nothingness?  To me it has been a revelation and realisation.  That EVERYTHING is temporary.  That nothing really lasts beyond the moment it occurs in and that eternity only exists in memories.

Am I regretting my decision?  Well that would have to be a question of which one.  To marry in the first place or to end it 18 years later?  I am trying to regret none of it.  It's been my life and has created the best parts of it along with some of the worst.  What I am trying to believe is that the happiest times are not over and that the future will be brighter than the past.

For those of you wondering about your own relationship though - my advice would be, naturally, that if it can be fixed then fix it.   Remember, the name of the game is not necessarily to win and coming last still counts as taking part......x x x

Friday, 18 January 2013

Ups and downs of a waddling duck: Our Book.

Ups and downs of a waddling duck: Our Book.

Our Book.

Those of you who know me, or have read sufficient of my posts, will understand that writing, for me, is deeply therapeutic.  These last few weeks have been extremely difficult and yet I have felt unable to document my feelings for fear of reprisal from those who perhaps consider that I have brought my misfortune upon myself.  I hope that anyone sharing that opinion will halt right here and exit without comment.
For my friends, family, followers and those just comforted by truthful accounts of life, I hope that sharing my sadness can help you somehow in your own situations.
So, after seventeen and a half years of being together, the last five of which have been post Brain Injury, I have called time on our marriage.  It was not an easy decision to come to.  How could it ever be except in the most extreme of circumstances?  but for me at least I feel it is the right path to follow.  Not the path some would have chosen, but here, right now, in my shoes, with my history, my weaknesses, my imperfections and my limitations, it is the path I need to travel.
I am, understandably, highly distressed that it is ended.  I feel bereaved in many ways.  The person who has shared my thoughts, dreams, love, longings, anger, sorrow, passion and pain, is gone.  I hope not out of my life entirely but his role in my story has changed and that hurts deeply.  In truth, the man who I married left five years ago, and whilst the new version is wonderful  in many ways, the pressure and strain of the last five years have taken their toll.
What saddens me, more than anything, has been the attitude of others.  For some reason people feel a need to take a side .  I guess for many people the concept of change is terrifying and perhaps needing to blame one party is understandable.  Life is much easier to bear if we can convince ourselves relationships fail only when someone does something terrible or brings about their own destruction.  Accepting that sometimes fate deals a bad hand, that can result in overloading and collapse - well if we accept that, we also have to accept (frighteningly) that we may be next.
Am I excusing my own failure?  perhaps.
Going back to the title of this entry though - the book.  I recently tried to explain to Chris that in my opinion marital relationships can be more easily understood if we liken them to being as a novel.   Some people manage to create epics - hearty volumes which fill the pages and go down in history as being inspirational and something to aspire to.  Just as the literary greats make it on to lists of 100 must reads, these marriages, by being the exception rather than the rule, stand out.  The marital equivalents to Tolstoy's War and Peace - how apt.  My relationship had it managed to survive much longer would have be entitled War, War, more War and finally Armageddon.
These 'books' come in all manner of genres....there are romances, tragedies, mysteries, comedies - more often than not the genres merge throughout confusing both the characters involved within, and those who look on  from the outside.  No two novels are ever the same.....some mirror others at times but essentially the style of writing, the intensity, the depiction can never be identical.  This is why it is painful when others try to compare- to determine whose book is more favourable......and who is the villain in each.
Some believe that a book must never end......that even if the pages are blank, or filled with drivel,  meaningless nonsense or painful tales they must continue until an epic has been created.....not understanding that the length of a book is not the determining factor for greatness, rather the content and the way it enables others to feel as they read.
I would imagine as an author, part of the talent of creating is also  knowing when enough has been written; when to add more would simply spoil what already exists.
As a book lover myself It upsets me when I feel I need to let go of my books, for want of space usually.  Regardless of whether they are here on my shelves though or deep in my mind I will always treasure the reading experience that a great book has provided.  It would be ludicrous to think that once I am finished I would destroy the book out of contempt,  simply because it is over.  That is no way to treat something which once gave you such pleasure.
This is one of my greatest sadness's.  That at the end of so many years, so much metaphorical writing, I feel we are encouraged to view our stories with disdain.....to try to forget them altogether, to learn to dislike the tale, to disregard rather than cherish the memory of it.  I have read hundreds and hundreds of books in my life and I can safely say that to appreciate a great story I do not need to remove or lower  my admiration of any other great book.  Each is entirely different and able to be appreciated in it's own way.  They cannot always be compared and to love one does not mean you cannot have loved another before it.
Of all the sadness that exists in divorcing this is the saddest part.  The thought that one day, the person who once meant your whole world, whom you have created new life with, is no longer there.  That the aspirations you both had have fallen by the wayside and now it would seem, or so people say, that there is no room for even a friendship to exist.  I struggle with this.  Relationships fail, for a multitude of reasons; infidelity, intolerance, lack of respect,  selfishness, aggression, arrogance - many reasons why couples lose faith in one another - many human frailties which we all share.
Ultimately no-one can judge.  And when it comes to understanding why I am ending our tale,  the crux of it, for me, is simply this.....that the book Chris and I have written has become so sad I do not wish my children to grow up believing that this is what a story should be.   They deserve better than to watch as two people destroy each other in the name of love. 
I hope my friends that you can understand.....but more importantly that whatever chapter you find yourself in right now it is a happy one. x x