Falling

This is the most difficult, awful thing I’ve ever had to put down in words. And I don’t know how to begin with it — knowing that I must begin, that I must say the words and drag them out into the light and make this soul-crushing awful thing I’ve been grappling with for so long real, real in a way it can’t otherwise be — because how long can I hide it, really? How long can I pretend it isn’t real, when almost every day I have to talk to all of you, as I have been for five years now, and say something, anything, about myself and my life? It’s impossible. I’ve never been a person who could convincingly put on a mask, not without everything I feel and think, the truth, visibly leaking out around the edges.

This weekend Jamie and I separated. I can’t even begin to tell you how unreal it is, saying those words. It is amicable and a decision mutually come to, but that doesn’t make it any less gutting and heartbreaking. And I have no idea how to talk about it — there’s a lot obviously I won’t, can’t, say about it, because whatever happens and however things end up this will always be my family, and I love Jamie, and also because I am in full wounded animal mode and dearly wish I could just draw a protective force-field around my life, shut down. But I can’t, not completely. Friends, family, and this life online I’ve constructed over ten years, will intrude, have to intrude, and I have to find a way to handle that reality or I won’t be able to go on writing here. And maybe I won’t anyway. But until now writing here has been, with only a few notable exceptions, something I’ve drawn a lot of comfort and understanding and strength from for many, many years. A place I’ve felt understood — sometimes more here than anywhere else. And now, today, and for probably a long time to come, I’m going to need that understanding, and your patience, more than I ever have.

I don’t know how to get through this, how to survive this. How do people survive this? How are they ever happy again, how do they go on? I want to know, really. Those of you who have been here, where I am, I would love to hear from you. I could use to hear that, despite how it seems and how I feel at this moment, my life really isn’t just kind of over now.

  • http://swistle.blogspot.com/ Swistle

    I'm really sorry.

  • http://swistle.blogspot.com/ Swistle

    Oh, and you asked how to get through it. I waited. Just waited for it to be in the past. And I thought, "There will be a day when I will be looking BACK on this."
    That's what did happen. It was like using a wrecking ball on a house, then having to camp out in the rubble while the replacement house was built around me. But eventually it was done.

  • lloyddabbler

    Ask and you shall receive… remember that. I've never been to your blog before today and I'm so sorry for what you're going through now. I am that person who survived this before and I can tell you that someday you'll look back and see why, in the grand scheme of things, this was what was supposed to be. This is part of the path that takes you to yet another place you are supposed to be, even though it can't possibly feel like it in this moment. Everything I am that I truly love about myself, I came to be or know as a result of my divorce. It can be a source of incredible empowerment, a restart, if you let it. Anything you don't like about your life, your personality, your choices, make a commitment to change it now. Why not? What have you got to lose? What have you let go of that you want back? Take it. What have you always wanted and never reached for because it might have been deemed too selfish, too risky, too "not your life"? Do it. And know that just because it's right to separate, doesn't mean it was wrong to marry him. It's not always a mistake- I found that both things were very right for me. Finally, ask for what you need and want, whether it's asking something of yourself, Jamie, or the universe, you will more often get it if you simply acknowledge the need out loud. I wish the best for you.

  • Jessica

    Yes – Time will heal. You will change. You will change for the better. My aunt always said – when you no longer want him is when he will want you again. She was right. Long story, but my life worked out better than I every could have imagines. Yours will to. Don't fight your feelings. They are real. Get a good therapist, and a good therapist will support you in your feelings.

  • http://www.texasheiss.blogspot.com Amy H

    well crap. Just read this (excuse was that I was on vacation…but still, lame of me to come to the game so late).
    Just wanted to give you a virtual hug and say hang in there!

  • http://profile.typepad.com/blogon califmom

    Just hugs.

  • http://table4five.net Elizabeth

    Oh, sweetie. I have been a bad blog friend, I haven't been hear to read in a while, but when I got the email about the new site on Ning, I thought wait a minute, why is Tracey making a site for separated bloggers? Then I had to come here and start searching, dreading what I was going to find.
    I am so, so sorry. People always say "if there's anything I can do" and I'm saying it, and I MEAN it. Sending you big virtual hugs.

  • http://www.parentopia.com/blog Parentopiadevra

    Separation doesn't necessarily lead to divorce, but even if it does, two happy homes is preferable to one miserable one.
    Still sucks to go thru it though. Not minimizing that part at all. However, there will eventually be happiness and a sense of the new normal.
    I say this from the perspective of a kid whose own parents divorced when I was 4 years old as well as a professional who has faciliated dealing with divorce groups for kids.
    I have books I can recommend and other resources for the asking.