Sugar Bowl, California
I am at the top of Mt. Lincoln at Sugar Bowl Ski Resort with my beloved
friends from college days. It is Easter. There is a gale force wind
blowing. I am dressed for this blustery
weather, but I am not at peace.
My discomfort does not come from the Nordic conditions; it comes
from a place deep within my soul. It is Easter, and I am separated
from my marital tribe.
My former husband’s family is a raucous bunch of fun-loving
people I’ve known for 20 years. Every birthday, holiday,
marriage, funeral, and confirmation is an opportunity to eat, drink,
and laugh. The depth of knowledge and compassion I hold for each
member is heartfelt. There is love, understanding, and a mutual
admiration for all things good and happy.
Since the divorce, releasing my connection to this high-spirited
clan is a decision I make every holiday, birthday and graduation.
The passing of every communal event is a renewal of my commitment
to finding a new path of being, of relating to the world not as
a married woman, but as an individual.
My former husband found a new partner. A tender, kind-hearted
woman that is good to our children. How can I maintain a relationship
with my marital tribe when there is a new partner on the horizon?
Music impresario Quincy Jones gets together with the five mothers
of his seven children every Christmas. Bruce Willis walks down
the red carpet with his former wife Demi and their three children,
and her boyfriend Ashton Kutcher. In Hollywood , it can be done.
In Sacramento, it is confusing.
I ask my friend, a divorced mother of two children how she separates
herself and old feelings from her former spouse. Always make
it about the kids, not you. The clarity of her words reminds
me of what my mother used to say when I couldn’t find something
obvious, if it was a snake, it would have bit you.
Make it about the kids, not you. Reframing
the new relationship with my former husband in the context of the
children makes decisions easier. There are fewer curves to negotiate.
Make it about the kids, not you means attending their soccer games,
wrestling meets, birthday parties and rites of passages, if it’s
beneficial to the kids, not me.
Releasing attachment to the old is hard. It is an unsettling observation
that in order to gain new territory, I have to release my footing
on the old terrain. It is an act of faith to release. Faith that
the transformation of self in thought and deed will bring tranquility
and comfort once again. That the new territory gained will be a
rain-washed place cleansed of all sorrow and heartache. A new land
where there are clear blue skies and a rainbow to greet me. Welcome
home.
My new version of home doesn’t include communal celebrations
with the extended family I left along the way. Divorce is like
that. There are casualties. Innocent bystanders get hurt because
they were part of a relationship whose formal union didn’t
last. I didn’t divorce just my husband; I divorced his whole
family. I cannot be two people at once: my former married self
and my new emancipated self. I have already made my choice.
The Easter Sunday I spent with my friends was not the kind of
Easter I’ve spent before. There were no egg hunts. No big
feast around a table with loving faces. This Easter was the resurrection
of self.
The last ski run of the day at Sugar Bowl was a mixture of elation
and sorrow. The wind was howling and it began to snow. I am in
a new land…looking for clear blue skies…and a rainbow
to greet me.
Welcome home.
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