Thursday, December 24, 2015

To change a belief requires pain and action.

So I have been reading a book lately called Love Does, it isn't a very deep book and a quick read.  The message really is don't take yourself or life so seriously and just go and love.  Which is simple to say and the author does a great job saying it in pretty creative ways through some of the adventures and stories he has.  However, as I have let this message wash over me it is starting to become like the gospel message.  God loves me unconditionally, so much so that he sent his son here to show me how to live, love, and eventually to die in a way that provides me access to be in a relationship with this God that loves me so.  This message is pretty simply.  Sometimes I struggle with all the details, yet I get it and furthermore believe it.  Once we believe in simple messages like these, they can change the way you live.  They for sure change the way you think. 

For my whole life I believed that love could overcome adversity.  In other words when a relationship began to have cracks forming in it, yet there was enough love; love would fill in the cracks and heal it, or at least it could.  I have "loved" two women in my life.  One was in college, I fell in love with her, yet she had reservations or baggage...probably both.  Even though I was doing my best to "love" her, she proceeded to hold me at arms length and essentially "date" other guys while we were dating.  You could call this cheating I guess, it felt like that to me, but we weren't technically exclusive.  No matter the wording I felt betrayed.  In the end, she came back and tried but it was too late the damage had been done to our relationship.  The cracks were too big, it was necessary...probably the right word is easier, to just walk away.   I wrote that off to youth and her baggage, love was ultimately still powerful. 

The second woman I loved was my ex.  When we dated it was fun.  We clicked.  We met the needs that the other needed fulfilled for the most part and we travelled the path young lovers take.  We proclaimed our love and then together decided to get married.  As I look back there were red flags, but those things exist in every relationship.  Let's just call them trials and tribulations.  In many ways I liked the trials because as we persevered through them I thought we were getting stronger.  I know enough about human relationships to know there is truth in what doesn't kill you makes you stronger.  The unfortunate reality of life is that somethings do kill you. 

I have been living in hope for two years.  At first it was the hope that my wife would see the value in our relationship, that she would turn back from the path she had begun down and we could find each other again.  Since the divorce I have lived in the hope that she would come to the realization that we might not have been nor may ever be "perfect" for each other.  But we love each other, have a family together, and the fact that God bonded us together would overcome the reservations.  Then love could overcome this reality. 

So when do you start to doubt what you believe to be true?  How many times does it take for your "beliefs" to be proven false before you stop believeing in them and start believeing something else.  And then let that thing change who you are and how you think?  These questions could lead to bitterness and resentment.  I do not want any part of those feelings effecting the way I think or live.  Yet, the questions remain.  The truth is love doesn't conquer all, only two people refusing to let love die can. 

I think it is time to set down hope and move forward.  I am not sure what that means for me.  I do think that I need to be done allowing these false hopes control the way that I interact with her and the world.  She left me, then divorced me, is currently dating the same guy for 9 months...some would say get a clue.  It's hard to give up on a thing that you believe.  It's not like changing the color of your wall or buying a new car, it truly does require me to change the way that I think. 

So for Christmas this year since I won't be getting any other gifts I will be giving myself permission to put this relationship where it belongs- in the ground.  I have tried to do that a couple of ways symbolically this year, but now I think I am ready.  Honestly, it's not what I want, but like the song says, "you can't always get what you want".  When this year ends I will be doing my best to bury my feelings for my ex as well.  Wish me good luck.    

Friday, December 18, 2015

Most wonderful time of the year?

This is the time of year for family...traditions, meals, gifts, snuggling under blankets watching movies, playing with new toys, etc.  And tonight even though my daughters are in the next room sleeping peacefully I feel lonely.  I am sitting on my couch with my small but nice Christmas tree setting off a serine glow.....alone.  I miss my family, I miss my wife, I miss my marriage.  

I don't want to go through this season alone...again.  I did that on my birthday for the most part it was depressing.  I don't want to date...I want to reconcile my family. 

This is all so messy and so often sad..... 

It's not all bad, it's just at times its sad. 

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

when do you know you have healed?

When do you know if you are healed?  When I have hurt myself physically there is a set period of time while my body heals itself.  With some of the more severe that time was longer and some even required physical therapy.  The pain that this divorce and the actions leading up to it and some since have made a different kind of wound.  As I get further away I am starting to realize a few things. 

I thought this would forever change me for the worse. 

I thought this experience would damage my soul in a way that was unrepairable.

I thought I would be trapped, by self doubt, sadness, frustration, confusion, etc.

I thought a huge part of me had died.

I thought I would be worse off. 

I think I thought wrong. 

This will forever change me, but it doesn't have to be for the worse.  I am a more understanding, empathetic, kind person now than I was before...which is saying a lot I think.  My soul was damaged but as it heals I am finding the extent of what I am capable of and just how strong I am, oh yeah and faith is real.  I have self doubt, sadness, frustration, confusion, etc.  but these things are not trapping me.  There may have been bars made up pf these things for a while but those bars are starting to crumble.  A part of me has died.  When I married my ex I gave her my heart, I believe that we were bonded together in and through Christ, so when that is torn apart, not all of you can survive because of the way the bond works.  Yet, in the midst of that, a part of me is still alive.  Even though I miss my old life, my old every day thoughts, the way I used to make decisions,  the life I lead now isn't so bad.  In fact, I am really starting to like many parts of it. 

When do you know you are healed?  I'm not sure.  But as I check in, I can tell I have walked a long way down the path of recovery.  So maybe the best answer is when you start believing in hope, not as a concept but as a way of life. 

I could be all wrong though, I am a almost 39 years old, entry level employee, with few friends, a small house, a small bank account, old cloths, a bed that is kind of depressing for personal reasons, who sees his daughters far less than he would hope dude.  But, I am starting to actually smile, like a real smile, soul deep smile once and a while.  Stick that in your pipe and smoke it!