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A and Not A

Pulling into our driveway last week, Bug said to me, “When you and Daddy aren’t divorced anymore, he can live in this house with us.”

This is where the breathing comes in handy. “Sorry, babe. Daddy and I aren’t ever going to live together again.”

“Well, but when you do live together again, he can live here with us.”

Inhale, exhale. Just the facts, ma’am. “You will always have two homes. Daddy and Mommy aren’t going to have one home ever again.”

“Yes you will. You will live together again.” He unbuckled himself and was out the door, banging into the house.

These declarations from my kid rattle me. If I were truly certain that this was the right thing, or if Tee were gone from our lives for other reasons, maybe I could make these statements without feeling so blown apart. Maybe. How would I know? Friends who have been widowed or abandoned have their own struggles with explanations. My shakiness is my own, and it comes from lacking an unshakable faith in my own judgment.

What if I am wrong here?

The lawyer emailed me yesterday. She filed the paperwork with the court, and it landed on the clerk’s desk on December 8th.  She wrote, “I know you would like to be divorced by the end of the year.  I think we can do it.  I will keep checking back with the courthouse.”

End of the year?  This year?

What started as an idea became a word. It then grew to a living thing the size of a meteor, moving at its own momentum along a trajectory we can barely track let alone control. Divorce is an eclipse, blocking the sun. It seems to go on for years.

But it does not. It is finite. This one might even meet its end this year.

What if, what if, what if. Is this the wrong choice? What if Tee and I could muddle along, be decent enough companions and good enough parents to our son? In the absence of the awful things, infidelity and abuse and the unspeakables, identifying a right course of action is hopeless. Even attempting to narrow the field of “right” choices down to something manageable becomes a Sisyphean task. Push it up, watch it fall. Repeat. This is especially true for a person with such a remarkable history of poor judgment where men are concerned.

Stay, but how? Go, but how? Maybe a little of both?

Without a clear right way, I choose to trust my instincts. (Yes, those very selfsame instincts that so often lead me astray.) I am unwilling to put Bug through the ups and downs of my loss of faith in his father. Muddling through in a marriage is all good and well, but even that is unfeasible where respect has dried up and disdain has pushed through the cracks. Tee does not need that form of partnership, and Bug certainly does not need to see his folks living that way.

So I tell myself.

Over the weekend, Bug had a neighborhood buddy over for a play date. While they were leaping off the couch cushions in the living room, I overheard this conversation:

Bug: “Did you know I have two houses?”

Friend: “You do?”

Bug: “Uh-huh. My daddy lives down the road and my mommy lives here.”

Friend: “That’s weird.”

Bug: “My parents got divorced, so I get to live in two houses.”

Friend: “Okay. Are you the good pirate or the bad pirate?”

Bug: “We’ll both be bad pirates.”

Grownups are not so different from children. We swing between acceptance and resistance. We sip on sweet lies as we work our way up to taking a big gulp of truth. And we all come around to what we need to face in our own meandering way.

Perhaps, though, acceptance and resistance are a false dichotomy. I don’t know about you, but I want so badly to want what is in front of me. I command myself to want it. I try to force blinders on my imagination and open my arms and will myself to choose this because it should be my desire. This here is what I have so it must be what I wanted. Post hoc ergo propter hoc.

Unearthing the reasons these things landed before me may require a more exacting instrument than the logical fallacy. Acceptance is complicated by the desire to see with clear eyes and adjust my course for the next leg of the journey.

Meanwhile, I ache for the impossible. Just like my son, I fixate on things that were or that seemed to be or that might have been, if, if.

A different version of the fantasy appeals depending on the day. This is why the resistance is not so far removed from acceptance. Sometimes the wanting is for the iconic man of the house out in the front yard hefting the axe to chop the wood to warm us in winter. Sometimes it is for cruising down an open road that preceded even the notion of family. Sometimes it is for tucking into a warm hug and hearing a story from a mystical world in which good and evil are cast in gold and shadow, and justice follows its prescribed path, and the triumph of the proper virtue is never more than a page or two away.

From time to time, I wonder if friends and loved ones on the outside of this can see more clearly than I can. Are these hurling shards of planet and moon on a predictable collision course? Do these witnesses stand back biting their nails and holding their breath and hoping for minimal damage, all the while thinking, Thank heaven that’s not me? Or is something else happening, something no one quite knows or understands, like a supernova where a star once burned? Like an earthquake along a forgotten fault line?

I have to admit, I haven’t the foggiest idea how to proceed. The divorce is happening, but it is only one hurdle, not a finish line. Crossing it opens the field to far more questions than it answers. I do not need to list them here. If you have been through it, you know. If you have not, then for goodness sake, don’t waste your brain power imagining.

Bug and I sat down this weekend and drafted a letter to the North Pole. He wrote the “Dear Santa” part and then dictated the rest to me. It was a lengthy correspondence. He only asked for a single Pirates of the Caribbean Lego set. From there, he went on to describe in great detail how he lives in two houses, so Santa should visit both, and in what order on which mornings. He then explained he would be in Massachusetts at Christmas, so Santa must also remember the two cousins. And, yes, Santa please dress warmly and wear a hat.

I cannot give my kid certainty about his future. I cannot even give him a mom free from stupidity and impulsiveness when it comes to men. Unfortunately, Bug is going to suffer a bit of the fallout from the more volatile parts of my unfinished self.

I can, however, give him my best shot at an honest answer. A story from a magical place, a few songs, and a hug when he needs one.

I can also give him two houses.

Maybe he will learn to want what he’s got. Maybe he will always have a taste for something different.

If he is anything like me, maybe a little of both.

Divorce, Parenting

Parts, Whole

In the dark chill at the end of another wearing day, the third in a succession of days managed on five hours of sleep, I stand on Tee’s doorstep. Inside, my boy is wailing. It is dropping into the 20’s tonight, and behind me, a river of cars, cars, cars, rushing in every direction.

In the early fall, I used my tuition waiver to take a course on somatic skills for conflict resolvers. In intervention situations involving extreme stress, when the intense feelings of the conflict parties can blindside even the most seasoned professional, it is wise to remember the wisdom of the body. Lift and align the posture, raise and expand the vision, breathe into the belly. The full range of our intellect is more available to us when we root ourselves in physical balance. Now, as I stand on the doorstep, I make a practice of allowing my vertebrae to slip into place. I lift my chin. I open my eyes. Hearing the sobs before me and the roar of traffic behind, I breathe.

Inside, my son is a crimson-eyed nuclear meltdown. Tee tells me the boy did not sleep at school on a day disrupted by two field trips.  Bug yanks himself from me, rocketing up the stairs in his socks and t-shirt. It is late. Between this moment and the comfort of his bed is dressing all over again, another commute, dinner, pajamas. Tee and I try to speak calmly to Bug as he hides and cries upstairs. Whatever reserve of self-control the child has is tapped out. He twists himself away from us, flails, weeps. These days, such outbursts are rare. But what can you expect? Without rest, none of us is any good. I understand this. I am experiencing this, on my third overdraft from the sleep bank.

I cannot stand to see my child so miserable. I pull Tee around the corner and whisper, “I would be fine if he stays here tonight. We can trade a day. I’ll help put him down. I just hate to drag him out of here when he is so tired.” Tee stares, blank. The response, or complete absence of one, is so typical of this man that I am surprised to find myself surprised. His passive face calls up no indication he has even heard, let alone can summon a thought. One beats, two, three, four. No words. Until this: he steps back around into the stairwell and calls up:

“Come on, Bug, time to get your shoes on and go.”

And then I am up, hefting a giant tornado of a boy without a lasso, wobbling down the stairs. I am splayed in my work skirt in the foyer of Tee’s house with this arching, spitting 40-odd pound wildcat on my lap. I force his shoes on, and the heels of them, flailing, crack me several times on the shins. Tee sits on the bottom step an arm’s length away, silent, watching. Bug’s body wrenches with sobs. He is speaking in gobbledygook, wanting everything and nothing.  I long to lift my child and carry him up to his bed. Crawl in next to him, let him surrender to my strength, sing him “Friend of the Devil,” rub his back. But that bed is not his tonight, no matter how badly he wants it or I want it for him. There is nothing for us to do but drag ourselves out on the serrated night.

I finally have to wrap the full power of my embrace around Bug’s torso from behind, force him still, all while doing the one and only thing I can remember to do: breathe, breathe, breathe.  My grip tight, my core willed to softness, I whisper into his prickling scalp. “Deep breaths, baby. Shh, shh. Mommy’s got you, you’re safe, you’re okay.” Against my own rising fury, I speak these comforts. Anointing Bug with my scant supply of serenity has a cooling affect on me. The waves of rage at this passive man so close and so remote, and waves of distress about my own insomnia-wrecked body, and the waves of despair about the impossibility of rescue, they just roll on over. Without crashing into me or taking me down, they only pass by because I’ve got my boy in my arms, and I can breathe through them, and they cannot drown me.

I hope my love for my boy is enough to bridge these rifts in his world. A friend of mine, a hopeless romantic, tells me one of his guiding quotations is this:

Love, in the purest sense of the notion, can only be given and received completely. Anything less may be of great value, sustainable, and appreciated, but it is only a reflection of love.

He is childless, of course. Still, I marvel at the sting of the sentiment.  My heart swells, aches, bursts open for my son. What could be more pure than the love a mother has for her child? And yet, do I truly give it completely? I deny him the single home, the one bed, the place he is always safe where both his parents are there to carry him to his sole sanctuary when he is unable to get there himself.

I wonder if I am capable of such pure generosity. I choose to follow a calling which carries me away from a man who cannot fulfill his promise. Bug is the one who pays for this choice. It would have been so easy, at any point during the past eighteen months, to say, “My heart can endure its own loneliness. It can even bear intimacy in the absence of faith. But it cannot stand my son’s suffering.” I could have asked Tee to stay, and offered our child that one, concrete gift of happiness. Is mine a true love, if I offer my boy only a fraction of what I have to give?

Without warning, Bug surrenders. He puddles, his skeleton and muscle dissolve to brine and beginnings. I pour him into his sweatshirt, gather first him then his backpack and my keys, step into boots, fumble with this shifting cargo out the door into the where traffic growls and pounds against the night. All I want is to slip my boy into the cocoon of his becoming, close his ears to all of this noise. I carry him, still sobbing, then drive him, still sobbing, through the tangled knots of congestion. Home, home. And when we come in, he is almost sobbed out. I am thankful for the small favors of grandparents who let us stay, for a warm and lit house, for someone to dust  the toast with cinnamon and slice the apple. My boy, wrung out, eats in bed, slowly but with an insatiable appetite. I read to him from The Secret Garden and sing, finally, the song about running from the law straight into the arms of temptation.

Today, a poem called “Descartes in Love” lands in my inbox from The Academy of American Poets:

 Love, accepting that we are not pure and lucent hearts, ricocheting towards each other like unlatched stars—no, we are tainted with self. We sometimes believe the self is an invisible glass, just as we believe the body is a suit made of meat. Doubt all things invisible. Doubt all things visible.

Because I hear no pulse up on the scarred surface of things, it can seem as if nothing living is left down below. Then, on pure chance, I tap a buried vein. Up flows nourishment almost too rich to stomach. I have neither the courage to trust in its permanence nor the strength to claim its limit. Faith in the moment as it slips through my fingers is the best I can do.

I am still more tired than I have ever been. But my boy sleeps now, his belly full on my breath, his soft spine curled into my unbending one. I will keep vigil. My love may be an imperfect force, but for this one night, its current is constant; its source, bottomless.

 

Ken Chen’s “Descartes in Love” is part of the series, “Brief Lives.” It came by way of Poem-A-Day from poets.org.