Thursday, August 23, 2012

It's Hard to Dance With a Devil On Your Back.

I am not a static character.

Sometimes I'm so completely at peace with who I am, where I'm at in life and the choices I've made. Sometimes I can look back at the things that happened during my marriage and focus on the lessons I learned and the strength I gained from it all.

On really good days, I can focus simply on the good times so I can be grateful that they happened at all.

Other days, I'm just so sad. Overwhelmingly sad.

Have you ever seen someone survive something and be in complete awe that they made it through?

Because that's what I feel when I look back.

A little more than two years ago my grandmother passed away.

Two days later The Husband asked for a divorce. I cried.

And then The Husband left bruises all over D again and I was finally forced to make a final choice between being with him and possibly never seeing D again and putting myself at risk for losing A and H, or having the police remove him, putting an order of protection in place and starting our lives over.

The day I called the police and fled to my mom's until the order was finalized, D's mom took Destiny and filed for mine and The Husband's removal of guardianship. It took much pleading to have D returned to me until our court hearing.

Soon after we were able to move home, The Husband began a series of such escalating intimidation behaviors that his best friend came to stay with us for a couple of weeks to keep us safe. I got to know many members of the police force quite well. CPS case workers, Guardian ad Litems and child abuse investigators were a constant presence in my home. During that short time, The Husband had my car repossessed and I received notice that I would be losing my home in as soon as sixty days. (Luckily it ended up being ten months instead of two, but I didn't know it at the time.)

When The Husband's friend left, I kept our beloved dog by my side as my constant companion and protector. A few weeks later, she had a sudden and massive seizure. Since I had walked out of the marriage with forty dollars in my pocket, I had no way of saving Duchess. By the next morning she was brain dead, and my neighbors and friends chipped in so I could have her put to sleep. She died in my arms.

The first month alone was eventful to say the least.

Two months after I left The Husband, my dad passed away after a nine year long battle with cancer. I had court the day he died, the day of his funeral and the day after his funeral. At court I learned that I would keep guardianship of D and The Husband would lose his rights and his ability to have contact with her until her 18th birthday. I also learned that she would no longer be living with me once the school year was over. The beautiful little girl who I had raised from seventeen months until she was nine years, three months and twenty four days old would be gone.

In two months, I had lost nearly everything that my adult life had revolved around.

I don't remember much of how I felt then. I remember a few nights where I would wait for the girls to finally fall asleep so I could sit out on the back porch swing and sob until I couldn't breathe.

But mostly I remember numbness.

I walked out of my father's funeral after I was publicly reminded what a small part I had played in my father's life.

Instead of going to his wake, I dropped my girls off and went to court instead so I could plead for temporary orders for child support. We had been left with nothing but past due water and electricity bills that a friend stepped in and paid.

Friends from all over flooded my mailbox with cards and small tokens of love. Many days, those cards were the only reason I could get myself dressed and out of the house. They are all displayed proudly no matter where I live.

People that I'd never met contacted me wanting to know how they could help. Many were friends of The Husband and wanted to secretly do whatever they could for me. They were a wealth of resources. It was because of them that domestic violence shelters helped me complete my legal papers and gave me coaching lessons on how to represent myself in court. They helped me pay for my heart medications. They helped me find a pro bono lawyer for the final trial. They bought me cleaning supplies, toiletries and anything else I was struggling to provide.

I had so many unexpected people cheering me on that quitting or being weak wasn't an option.

I walked through every bit of hell that came my way that year.

I survived.



A little more than two years after it all began/ended and I am ticking off my "Moving Forward" checklist one at a time. The next step is to purchase my own home for the girls and I. Once investors stop poaching the houses I bid on, we'll be moving the moment the title company can close. A new chapter will begin.

But I am not a static character.

I still get angry, I still get sad, I still get gleefully happy whenever I look around and take notice of my freedom. All of that's okay. I'm allowed to feel a range of emotions when I look back at the last ten years.

For the first time in my life, I realize that it's okay to be human. That no one can tell me how I ought to feel about anything. I'm allowed to have differing opinions. I'm allowed to stand up for myself. I'm allowed to express hurt, anger and betrayal. I'm allowed to ask tough questions. I'm allowed to choose who I bring closer and who I keep at a distance. I'm allowed to protect my daughters when I feel they're in danger, regardless of where that danger may be coming from. I no longer have to feel numb in order to survive.

No one has control and no one ever will again.

I need to remember that I've achieved the most important goal of all.

I'm free.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Down the Rabbit Hole

I will not get sucked back into this vortex.

It has been two years since we spoke by phone. It has been two years since we have been near each other without an officer or judge present.

I don't want to know you. I don't want to hear about you. I certainly don't want you to share intimate details about your life with me.

But in spite of myself, I respond to your chatty text messages and emails. I ask how you're doing. I make myself crazy and neurotic wondering what you're up to, who you're seeing and whether or not you've changed enough for me to ever fully trust you with my children.

In spite of myself, in spite of everything; I still miss you sometimes.

I haven't gone on a date in over nine months because I don't trust myself or my judgment. I've been learning the pleasures of being alone, and there are many. But today, for the first time in a very long time, I'm lonely. I miss someone knowing my intimate details. I miss being able to share my every thought. I miss someone understanding the dynamics of my family. I really miss someone knowing my body and how to make it respond. I miss everything we had together during the good times.

And I sometimes wonder if you ever miss me, too.

I know that most likely, I'll find someone when I'm ready. I certainly haven't been looking because I know I'm not there yet. And I also know that if I never find that person, then I'll be just fine on my own.

But I still wish we had made different choices, been different people and had the outcome I always wanted.

But mostly, I wish I had a clean slate where you never existed. I wish I was free.

The Six Year Anniversary 4/26/2009

I found this in my unpublished drafts. I was too scared to post this. I didn't want police or anyone else notified.
I had completely forgotten about this night. Looking back, I think it speaks volumes. 



The night before our anniversary, I went out for sushi with a couple of girlfriends. It's the first night I'd really been out in almost two years. My friend Kristina and I had been talking about it for months. She knew I desperately needed the break but I either didn't have the funds for it or couldn't get away. (My issues with getting away are another story entirely.) When my Dad received more bad news from his Oncologist, she swore she was kidnapping me if I didn't agree to go, so April 17th I went to Ra for a night out with the girls.

We laughed and joked and drank Saki Bombers and shared a bottle of Sparkling Saki while we delighted in the deliciousness that are Viva Las Vegas Rolls. At some point I remembered that our anniversary was the next day. I groaned that I'd forgotten yet again while I was sure he'd remembered, and joked that I was the man in this relationship when it came to things like anniversaries and birthdays.

It was already ten at night and I had NO IDEA what I was going to give him. We went through the list of places that would be open.

Gas Station.

Walmart.

Sex shop.
Bingo!

We decided that we would go back to Heather's house since her roommate had some friends over that Heather needed to say hi to, then we would head to Castle MegaStore for some "toys."
Perfect.

At some point, I texted the Husband to see if he had remembered the anniversary. It was apparent that he had not, but was trying to pretend that he had. For some reason, I found this to be hilarious and started to quiz him on what he had planned so I could eventually call him out on his fib and laugh together at how scatterbrained we were to both forget our anniversary.

Bad move Masochist. Bad move.

He did not appreciate the light-hearted ribbing. He finally told me that since I was "making fun" of him, there would be no anniversary celebration and I could simply sit at home by myself. This promptly brought me to tears which caused Kristina to take my phone from me while she shook her head at another night ruined by the Husband's anger. I begged her to take me home and she obliged.

We stopped for food at Filiberto's as a peace offering, but he wasn't home. I sent him a message and waited. When he finally showed up, he was holding a bottle of Tequila. So I asked, "Plan on doing any drinking?"

Bad move again, apparently.

He started slamming doors, stomping around the house and yelling at me for being gone all night. He was angry that I had been "making fun" of him. The more I tried to explain, the angrier he became. He told me I was crazy and drunk.

Drunk, yes. Crazy, not today Sir.

Then he told me to get out of the house, go for a drive.

If anyone else had tried to kick me out of the house, I would have told them to fuck off. But when a 230 lb. Bipolar who has left you bruised and bloodied before tells you to get out- you get the fuck out.

Here's where I act like an idiot:

Instead of taking my car, I took his truck. His precious truck that he loves more than he does our children.

Stupid stupid Masochist.


I grabbed my Filiberto's (which I was NOT going to share with him anymore thankyouverymuch,) some water and drove 2mph to the next street over and ate my food. Twenty minutes later he came screeching down the street and HIT his truck with my car. Not hard enough to damage it because that most certainly was not the point. Just hard enough to try to intimidate me.

Normally he would have, but being intoxicated and therefore somehow invincible, I started laughing. He leapt out of the car and walked on top of the hood of my car to get to me. I laughed even harder. He flung the door open and ordered me out. I continued to laugh and then laughed some more when I realized that I'd spilled sour cream all over his seat. His precious seat.

I got in my car, he got in his truck. He left, I sat there and debated on where I should go.

Home seemed like a very stupid option.

Driving anywhere on a main road seemed like an even stupider option seeing as how I still wasn't exactly sober.

So I slept in the parking lot of the local Mormon Church.

Happy Anniversary Masochist. Mazel Tov.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Reflections

I have pitied you so much these last couple of months.

You were my confidante, my aggressor, my best friend, my abuser, my lover and yes, at times; my victim.

I have spent the last eleven months coming to terms with the last third of my life. I have examined the mistakes that I made, the choices that I should have and given myself credit for forgiving so much and trying so damn hard. Let me be clear... I am fully aware of the damage I caused in the beginning of our marriage. I was ready to divorce and run at the slightest transgression. I was belittling. You didn't make enough money, you didn't dress the girls how I wanted you to, you drove the wrong car... I didn't praise you enough.

I know my transgressions fully. They are numerous.

You have had eleven months as well. Eleven months without a family, without responsibilities and I was hopeful that you would have examined your mistakes as I have mine.

And today? Today I want to hate you. I can only pity you for your inability to learn from your mistakes. I don't believe that you will ever evolve because you are incapable of truly examining your actions. Rewriting history, blaming medication, blaming a lack of medication, blaming me, blaming your parents, blaming children... you have learned nothing except that if you don't admit your mistakes than you never have to take responsibility for them.

J, I am sorry. I am so sorry for the pain I caused you. For emasculating you and tearing your apart when I should have been your greatest supporter and partner. I didn't believe in you enough, and for that I am ashamed. Looking back has taught me to ask myself, "Would I want to be with me?" And being able to do so will make any and all of my current and future relationships better. I am sorry that I had to hurt you to learn that lesson.

Our children are watching us. They are learning how to handle a mistake that can have devastating consequences. And you are teaching them to bury it. To lie. To make sure that everyone you come into contact with knows that you are not to blame.

They don't buy it J. They left you and told me that you lied. You blamed your Bipolar medication. When you were sentenced for Child Abuse, you blamed a lack of medication. Now you're telling our children that you were never ill. That your medication made you angry and aggressive. A is old enough to remember what you've been like off of your medication. She knows the truth. You are not fooling her, you are simply reaffirming her belief that you can't be trusted.

Reflect J.
Learn.
Grow.

It's the only way you'll ever get your girls back.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Six Months Later

Dear Fatbear,

I dream about you sometimes.

We sit and talk about everything. The future I wanted us to have. The mistakes that were made. The choices I still wish I could stop you from making.

You are an open book. Full of more honesty and integrity than you've ever possessed outside of my subconscious. I wake up feeling cleansed. It's cathartic.

I spoke to the prosecutor's office last Friday.

I called because D keeps asking me when all of this will be over. She's terrified that she'll have to speak in court. It doesn't matter how many times I reassure her that she won't have to see you, no matter what, it's just not enough.

I wish you had to see her tremble.

The prosecutor assured me that you were still being reviewed. That you hadn't fallen through the cracks. The police have charged you with one count of child abuse and one count of violating the Order of Protection. The prosecutor will then decide to keep, modify, drop or add to the charges. I'm still expecting a Violation of Probation charge and probably more Violation of a Court Order charges for the week you just couldn't seem to stay away.

Everything is done by chronological order. Did you know that? From the time you're charged, that's when they get to you. So no matter how horrible your crime, you still have to wait for the people who were charged before you. Seems like a silly way to do things, but I guess it makes sense.

Here's what I want you to know: I don't want you to go to prison. I never did.

Not after your first two Domestic Violence convictions.

Not after your first Child Abuse felony conviction.

Not after you gave me a concussion. I lay there crumpled on the floor, sobbing until my throat was raw, and all I could think was, "I can't tell. He'll go to jail."

So I didn't.

This time, If I'm asked my opinion, here's what I'll say: You have completed over two years of court ordered Anger Management. You started counseling in 2003. You began medication in 2005. You have been on supervised probation since 2007. You have been treated by renowned doctors at Mayo. You began and quit group therapy. You've had every opportunity to receive help. You've been given THREE chances to avoid prison.

I cannot stand by you anymore.

It kills me.

This time, I will not organize a letter campaign, lauding you for being an exemplary father.

I will not speak on the stand for you.

I will not hold your hand and reassure you that we will make it through together.

Most likely, you are going to prison.

Most likely, you will not see your daughters for a very long time. D is no longer yours at all, and you will only see her if she decides to contact you as an adult.

What a shame Fatbear.

I look around, and there are memories everywhere. We had the cozy house with the caring neighbors, and the lucrative business and the three beautiful little girls that everyone envied. You were my high school sweetheart. You built me my picket fence and I would have followed you anywhere.

And now you're someone I don't even know.

You don't ask about your daughters.

You don't pay child support.

You pretend like we never existed at all.

I will be in court, when you are finally convicted.

And I will stare you in the eyes.

Because we do exist.

Everything happened.

And I will never let you forget.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Beautiful Disaster

I think the hardest lesson I will have to learn as an adult will be that I can't save everyone.

I wish I could say that I will leave him a little better, a little happier, a little stabler and a little more hopeful, but I don't think I even achieved that. He's still troubled and angry and I'm a little less shiny, a little less innocent and a little more jaded.

I can't help but want to stay stubborn... not strong... stubborn, and refuse to let this disease win. But maybe it was never meant to be my fight. Maybe I'm not meant to slay this dragon.

It makes me sad. It makes me weary. And it makes me angry.

During my hardest times I can usually sit by the water or under the stars and talk to God and feel like I really get an answer on what I should do. This time He feels so, so silent. And I feel so alone. I wish I knew what the right answer was.

But every day I fight this fight for my husband's sanity and our marriage, I find myself further losing my spark. I feel myself becoming duller. I miss being shiny, and I don't think I can find it again with this constant barrage of discontent.

Either way, I'll miss you my Fat Bear. You were my first love, and I loved you deeply and I tried so hard to hang on for us both. I hope you fight the good fight and don't let this disease ruin my best friend and his true potential for greatness. I will always believe that you can find happiness and that in the end, you'll start controlling your destiny.

I'm not sure where I go from here.

Beautiful Disaster

Lyrics

He drowns in his dreams
An exquisite extreme I know
He’s as damned as he seems
And more heaven than a heart could hold
And if I try to save him
My whole world could cave in
It just ain't right
It just ain't right

Oh and I don't know
I don't know what he's after
But he's so beautiful
Such a beautiful disaster
And if I could hold on
Through the tears and the laughter
Would it be beautiful?
Or just a beautiful disaster

He's magic and myth
As strong as what I believe
A tragedy with
More damage than a soul should see
And do I try to change him?
So hard not to blame him
Hold on tight
Hold on tight

Oh 'cause I don't know
I don't know what he's after
But he’s so beautiful
Such a beautiful disaster
And if I could hold on
Through the tears and the laughter
Would it be beautiful?
Or just a beautiful disaster

I'm longing for love and the logical
But he's only happy hysterical
I'm waiting for some kind of miracle
Waited so long
So long

He’s soft to the touch
But frayed at the end he breaks
He’s never enough
And still he's more than I can take

Oh 'cause I don't know
I don't know what he's after
But he's so beautiful
Such a beautiful disaster
And if I could hold on
Through the tears and the laughter
Would it be beautiful?
Or just a beautiful disaster

He’s beautiful
Such a beautiful disaster

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

It's Hard to Tell Where Truth Ends and Illness Begins

There are a lot of resources that are limited. Tears, I have discovered, are not one of them.



J and I had a conversation last night, where he was saying that being Bipolar was like being a superhero. I retorted that if that was true, he had unfairly cast me as the villain.

"Why, what do you want to be? The hero?"

"No. I just want to be the wife."



In this round of mania, it seems that I am the source of all of his unhappiness. Except he wasn't happy when he met me, and since Jerry Maguire was full of shit and it's actually impossible to complete a person, he's still unhappy. And as he says, he loves the feeling of being angry, so how on earth can you be happy if you're choosing anger every day? You certainly can't have both.

He wants a divorce. Or so he's said for the last few days.

I buried my grandmother just five days ago. Well not me personally, I don't mix well with physical labor, but you get my point. He didn't even wait two days after her funeral before he became the bully once again. I didn't know that I could get any lower emotionally than I already was, but he's proven me wrong.

Over and over and over.

Now all I can do is cry. Cry for the man that I've fought so hard for. Cry for how hard it must be to be so angry all the time. Cry for myself for once again being the proverbial punching bag. Cry because I didn't even have time to grieve before I had to once again become counselor, defender and protector.

Why does he want a divorce?

It depends on what time it is when you ask him.

Sometimes it's because I've done nothing positive for him.
Sometimes it's because he doesn't find a single part of me attractive.
Sometimes it's because I can't go hiking with him or keep up with him physically because of my health problems.

He wants someone to make him happy. He wants someone who can take his anger away. He wants someone who doesn't challenge him to find a better way to live.

I've made a choice to stay with someone with severe mania. I know there will always be manic episodes. I know that life will never be consistently peaceful. I know that I will always have to fight for his mental health. I stood before God and said, "In sickness and in health," and I meant it.

To hear him say that I'm not enough, that I'm not worth it, that my illnesses make me un-want-able is like a punch to the gut that I just can't handle. Even though I know that none of this is true, I can't stop crying and I can't stop thinking about every horrible situation he's caused that I've faced head-on out of love for him.

My seven year old found his wedding ring; thrown in the laundry room like it was some tin tchotchky from some God-awful pizza place. I wore it on my thumb and told him that I would give it back when he knew he wanted to be with me. That if he couldn't wear it, I would wear it for both of us. And I did, for three days. Today my hand just felt heavy. Like it was a weight I just couldn't bear anymore.

I'm not strong enough today to carry this relationship for us both. So I hid them somewhere safe until I'm ready to carry us through again.

I don't know what the truth is. I don't know if his mania is like alcohol, and all of the truth is coming out, or if it's simply his anger talking and he really does love me. All I know is that my heart is broken for us both and I don't know how to fight this battle alone anymore. My heart is so full of pain that it's hard not to pick up something sharp and fall into old self-harming habits.

I wish I could put my heart next to our rings, until it was safe to take it out again.