Today is my sister's daughter's 2nd birthday party. I remember all too clearly her birthday two years ago, which I spent 600 miles away, crying on the couch, alone as I so often was. Things looked so much more promising for her first birthday, early last spring, when Mo and I had just returned "home." Today, like so many other days, is another day in limbo, another day spent wondering if this is really what I want, or if the grass really is greener on the other side.
Mo is, you guessed it, out of town. He will miss this party, a fact that neither he nor my sister seem to care too much about. I am the only one left wondering if things will always be like this, if I will live in a continual state of disappointment and wishing that things were different.
We had a good week, Mo and I, the first spring break I can recall where I knew exactly where he was and what he was doing. We slept in, ate out, and drove around exploring the Big City near where we live. I had fun, and I thought he did, too. But, apparently, it's not the right kind of fun, because he felt the need to travel to another town and meet up with his friend, Mr. Bad Influence, for a boys' weekend of gambling and binge drinking. Because, at age 40, Mo still believes that he is 21. Or something like that.
I am so done fighting about this. The man is 40 years old. He is a master at manipulating my feelings and justifying his actions, to himself and to me. If he wants to leave town, so be it. I'm not going to ask him to stay. I told him I was disappointed he would miss the birthday party, and then I watched him leave. No tears, no evidence that this matters one bit. But, oh, it does.
Beneath the surface I am filled with rage, with frustration and desperation. Not all of it is directed at Mo -- there is a fair amount of fury for general circumstances and things beyond our control -- wonky insurance, crappy doctors, infertility, loss, financial barriers to building a family. But, mixed into that, so intertwined I couldn't tell you where one began and the other ended, is a bitterness that rests squarely on his shoulders.
I don't want to mislead you -- things are better now, as a whole, than they ever were before the move. Mo is 100 times the man he was. It takes being out of a situation for some time for you to realize how bad it really was...and that's how I feel about my life until about a year ago. There is no way that I would tolerate the behaviors I put up with for so long now. Things ARE different, in many tangible, wonderful, ways.
And yet, as they tend to do, the more things change, the more they stay the same. I am still left wondering whenever he leaves if this is really what I want. Do I want a husband who feels the need to go out of town and gamble and drink every few months? Does it matter as much as I make it matter? Lots of women have husbands who go out hunting, or fishing, or what-have-you for many weekends out of the year. Is what Mo is doing all that different? He has made so many life-altering changes this past year -- should I focus on that, or on the aspects that I still wish were different? No one is perfect, least of all me. Mo tolerates my insecurities and my meltdowns and my foibles and accepts me as is. Don't I owe him the same?
And then there's the biggest question, the one that keeps me from making any real decisions: would I really be any happier without him?
I know that may seem ridiculous to many of you. You've seen the worst Mo has to offer, and I tend to keep quiet about the good. But there IS good there. I wouldn't still be here if there wasn't. I was trying to explain it to my sister at lunch a few weeks ago: 90% of the time, Mo is great. While she qualified it as maybe 80%, my point is still that the majority of the time things work. But when they don't -- well, they don't in a major way.
Coloring all of this is, of course, my own impending birthday. I will be 30 in just over a month. While I know that many of you have already survived this milestone, I am having a really hard time with it. I just never thought I would spend 10 years of my life -- my entire 20's -- chasing a dream and still come up empty-handed. Walking out on my life now, and trying to start again, is so daunting to me. I spent 10 years building this -- to give up now? When the finish line is staring me in the face? How could I possibly?
My sister (who is wiser than her years) tells me that Mo is simply dangling the carrot he knows I so desperately want in front of me, as he has for years. I don't know if it is that simple, though at times I wonder. We are, currently, on the same page for Plan Baby. As in, we are both okay with waiting until August to start any treatments, and we will pursue another IVF with my eggs and his sperm. Beyond that, we have no plan -- though I suspect that at that point, should it not work, our plans will diverge again.* But, yes, as terrible as it sounds, I keep thinking about August and how much I'm willing to endure to get there. I'VE BEEN THROUGH SO MUCH WORSE. This, this is nothing in the grand scheme of things.
I know that many of you read this, and while you try not to, you pity me. Or judge me. But its all so much more complicated than I am ever able to put into words. That's one thing that my marriage has taught me -- things are so rarely what they seem. And that in itself seems an argument to stay -- for who knows if marriage to anyone else would be any better? Or if marriage would ever even be in the cards again? How many seemingly happy couples have demons I never would guess at?
This post is jumpy, and rambling, and a bit incoherent because that's how my thoughts are these days. I've avoided blogging because I can't make sense of my own head. The truth of the matter is that I don't know what I want. No, that's not true. I know exactly what I want -- what I don't know is the best way to go about getting it. One of the horrible side effects of infertility and codependency is that you lose all ability to trust yourself -- your body, your judgment, your decisions.
I am so afraid of making the wrong decision, that I just don't make any at all. And yet, in the back of my head, I'm formulating Plan B**. And Plan C.
I just wonder what I will take for me to put those into action. Because, really, I'm not all that sure that I can take much more.
When is enough, enough?
* I've started a savings account that can be utilized in a variety of ways -- including pursing SMBC if the need arose, or adoption if Mo ever came around to it.
**In an ideal world, no one would have kids in a less-than-stable relationship. Everyone would be happily monogamous, and remain so for the life of their offspring. This isn't an ideal world, and so many people make less-than-ideal situations work every day. My stepbrother and his wife are just one example -- poor, living with their parents, about to have a baby while living on welfare. I teach kids from every type of home you can imagine -- single mothers, two-parent homes, stepfamilies, grandparents, even aunts and uncles. I refuse to put off my dream of being a mother until I find "Mr. Perfect." No matter what happens with Mo and I, I will be a fantastic mother. Period.
Saturday, March 26, 2011
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Oh, Jo. First, I'm so glad to hear from you. I can honestly say that I think of you often and wonder how you are doing.
ReplyDeleteI have so much that I want to say but don't know if I should. After all, I really only see a snapshot of your life.
You're 100% right. There are many husbands who go away for weekends (or longer) hunting or fishing. How would he feel if you decided to go away for a weekend with the girls?
You need to ask yourself if you're ok with this...if you're ok if things ALWAYS are like this. Do you want a child with things like this? If your answer is yes, that's ok. If your answer is no, then that's ok, too.
I just want so desperately for you to have the weight lifted off your shoulders (whatever that weight may be).
Hey Jo. It's nice to hear from you. I see you on my reader list and wonder what's up with you. To be honest, I've been a little worried. I'm glad that things are going (at times) well.
ReplyDeleteI have to admit, I don't understand your relationship with Mo, but I certainly don't judge you. I do feel concern though. I'm concerned that a child would put a serious strain on Mo and your relationship. I've watched my daughter wreak havoc on my relationship with my partner. I thought we could rise above it, because of our lose and my crippling anxiety about never being a mother. But in the end, it's not really enough to keep the day to day stresses from seeping in. Parenthood is way more stressful than I ever could have dreamed. It's exhausting in ways I never imagined. If you were to ask me if I'm happier, day to day now, than I was before I had Isa, I don't know what I'd say. I'm definitely more fulfilled and I NEVER regret having her. She is amazing. But it's brutal on my relationship and we didn't have the difficulties that you and Mo have. So I genuinely worry about that. Before I would have been sure it would be fine, now I'm not so sure.
I'm sure I sound preachy. I guess I am being preachy. I'm just trying to be honest. Having a child is difficult for even the most stable of relationships. You seem to admit that your relationships with Mo has instabilities. And the fact that he feels the need to leave for a weekend every once in a while, I don't know. I worry he'd feel that urge even more with a kid around. Babies can be so overwhelming and confining.
I'm sorry if I'm being offensive. Obviously I don't know you and I don't know Mo. I can only go off what you've chosen to share with us and you've said countless times that you can't paint an accurate picture. I only say these things because you don't seem sure yourself so I feel I should share my experiences in the hopes that they might be helpful.
I really, really, REALLY think a therapist of some kind would be a huge help to you. First going to one by yourself and then maybe, later, going to another one with Mo. An impartial third party that is trained to help people through these kinds of situations can be so helpful. Many times they know what to ask and can help you see the forest for the trees. I would have never gotten through many parts of my life without one. And my partner and I would probably not have agreed to have kids without one either. So I'm speaking from experience when I say a therapist or counselor of some kind can be invaluable.
You seem to have many questions about your life and where you want to go. I hope you can find the answers and be happy with what you choose. I think it's legitimate to wonder how much better things can be. For most people the happiness we've been raised to expect just doesn't exist, not in the way I think we're told that it does. But I do think we know, deep inside, if we're in a healthy situation that can be what we need it to be, even if it's not that now. It might take us awhile to know it in a way we can say, but I do think we have that inside of us. I hope you find that knowledge in yourself, whatever it may be.
Good luck!
(Gah, blogger ate my first draft...)
ReplyDeleteI've only been reading your blog for a few months, and I don't think I've commented before...
Your post brought back a lot of memories about my first marriage. I don't know enough about your marriage to judge - and by the way, NO ONE outside a marriage knows enough about a marriage to be able to judge - but I thought it might be helpful if I shared some of my perspective.
I got divorced when I was 28 after 4 years of marriage. We were at the point of starting to try to have kids, and I realized I needed to figure out if the marriage was right for me before adding kids to the mix. Ultimately, after an agonizing few months of introspection, I realized I'd made a compromise that I wasn't willing to live with.
Ending a marriage is a selfish decision, but that's not a bad thing. This life is all about figuring out how to make it the best life for you. And I learned a lot about myself going through those agonizing months -- I know myself so much better (being in my 30s helps too. :)
And please don't sell yourself short. If Mo is the right person for you, that's great. If he's not, then there's someone else out there for you. Don't let the worry that you won't find someone else color the judgment you're making: it's really a question of if Mo is the right person for you and if you're willing to accept who he is and how he behaves (those are intermingled, obviously).
Maybe some of this is helpful perspective. I'm happy to talk more about it if you'd find that useful.
I'm thinking good thoughts your way. *hugs*
I do not pity you, I do not judge you.
ReplyDeleteYou deserve better than this. I hope you get it.
It's so nice to hear from you again. I've been wondering how you were doing.
ReplyDeleteHonestly, I think a most people gloss over the bad parts of their relationships, and that just makes everyone feel less-than in the end. For example, a few months ago I was talking to one of my cousins about how Prawn and I had been fighting. She mentioned that she and her husband rarely fight. In my head I was all, "Well isn't that good for you, little miss happy sunshiny rainbow life?" But it turned out later that we had been defining "fight" differently. I meant bickering about whose turn it was to clean the living room. She meant an actual fistfight.
Anyway, where I was going with that, is that I think you are completely correct. Probably nobody really has the perfect life they seem to have. As long as you feel that things have improved and you're happy most of the time, maybe that's okay. But you're the only one who can know that. No matter which way you decide though, I have hope that you will be a mother again. And you're going to be a great one!
I'm with Quiet Dreams. You do deserve better. He is dangling the carrot and manipulating you, and because he's manipulating you, he's not accepting you for who you are. And I can remember a few posts back where he certainly wasn't accepting your meltdowns and foibles. He's not 21. End of discussion. He's not single, and he's not made of money. He has other people to consider now, not just Mo, and everybody but Mo seems to realize this. I also know you'll be a great mother and you don't have to wait till you find Mr Perfect, but marriage can be better. Not all men are like him. I'm so glad you've posted again. I worried about you and checked everyday. (Evidence of motherhood, I spend a lot of time at home.)You need to take care of you. I know I've said this before. Mo expects you to take care of him like he's a child, never forcing him to be responsible, etc. And when I say 'force', I'm talking about tough love. You have every right to have expectations, even high ones. He doesn't seem to agree, but hate it for him. Good luck, sweet pea. Email me if you ever want to talk.
ReplyDeleteJo...I was so happy to see this post from you show up. Like Quiet Dreams said, I don't pity you or judge you. I just want to see you truly happy.
ReplyDeleteI know you will be a fabulous mom and I hope to get to see that day arrive.
{{{Hugs}}}
I've been thinking of you and hoping things have been going very well for you. I wish nothing but happiness for you. You are one very strong woman, and only you can decide what you want your life to look like. Sending you love.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad to hear from you, Jo. I've been thinking about you and wondering what was happening. I don't have any advice, because I really don't know your whole situation. But, I just hope that you find the best path for you and Mo!
ReplyDeleteJO, so there you are.
ReplyDeleteWell there is no pity from me or judging, but there is a place in me that thinks you would be happier, better, more content without Mo in your life. That is not judging anything, you're right MARRIAGE is a big deal and all of us, me included, have stuff in our marriage that we wish we coul change, things that might make us less happy some days, but Parenting changes the game again. My husband and I hardly fought before the boys...we had disagreements but we never fought, never resented one another, even through the infertility, we were a solid force.
Then we became parents to the boys and OMG, well someone above said it, you are just not prepared for how HARD Parenting is. I thought that becoming parents for us would be the Golden tix, and it was, but it was a tix to us becoming snippy and callous and selfish too...knowing that we have the LOVE underneath, the battles we've won together and the lack of resentment before is the HELP. I can't imagine how this would look if we went into this with those issues.
that being said, I think the world of you and your commitment to MO and your marriage, please just remember how WORTHY you are, what a good person you are and how happiness is not a privaledge it's a given...one you are WORTHY of.
xo
It is good to hear from you - I think of you often as well.
ReplyDeleteNo marriage is - or will ever be - perfect. Everything is a compromise but you've got to decide how much 'give and take' you are willing to live with. Are you doing all the giving while he's doing all the taking? It will wear you out, girl. Drain you emotionally.
Just like anything else, it is easier to see when you are outside of it. For all of the hurting I still have, it is so much better than it was. I will forever stand by my decision to get out.
I hope the answer becomes clearer to you and, as always, much love . . .