The boys and I got on a plane without Daddy. And
without asking him.
It has taken us a long time to get to this point. A
long, long time. I've known about the adultery for five years. And I've known
about the pornography for nine. Nine long years. Nine long years of feeling
like a failure. Of trying everything. Of praying my heart out. Of going through
all the steps and all the actions I can possibly think of outlined by church
leaders, therapists, books, scriptures and professionals that I've talked to,
researched, consulted, and cried to. So many nights crying. Panicking. Not
sleeping. So many 3 a.m. fantasies of flushing his stupid iPhone down the
toilet. So many mornings not wanting to get out of bed. Not wanting to face
another day. So many therapy sessions and medications and hypnosis sessions and
massages and appointments trying to work things out, trying to work things
through, trying to cope. Just trying to make it through another day.
And then there was the smiling. "Hello, yes,
everything is normal and fine. How are you today? Yes, I'm great! See you at
preschool and music lessons and church and Institute and choir practice (even though
I'd rather be crumpled up in a ball on my bedroom floor crying)." One
year. Two years."Hello, yes, everything is fine ..." (My cheeks
hurt so much from the fake smiling -- I think my face might fall
off.) Three years. (More counseling, more appointments.) Four years. (More
meds, please.) Five years.
I'm broken. I'm shattered. I have nothing left to
give. I have nothing left to give my children, my husband. There is little to
no "myself" left. Finally, teetering on the edge of possible
institutionalization, fearing that I was reaching a point that I would no
longer be able to physically and emotionally function enough to care for my
children, I fled. And I was right. For the past six weeks, I have passed a good
portion of my parental responsibilities to my parents while I have learned to
eat, sleep, and breathe again. In all honesty, the first two weeks are a total
blur, and at a certain point, I had no clear recollection of the passage of
time.
You know ... that's the funny thing about marriage.
If you really honor it, really consider the relationship sacred, no one else
sees the struggles or the multiple tries. Just you. You may experience major
trauma to the relationship. But then you reconcile and try again. And nobody
sees you do it but the two of you. Then it happens again. Your hopes are dashed
a second, a third, a fourth time. And you try again and again and again. And
all the while, no one else is aware of the process ... just you and your
spouse. On the surface, everything is as it has always been. And then when it
happens the seven-hundred-and-sixty-fifth time, and you finally give up and
take some action that is visible to the general public, the general public may
wonder: "Hey! Why are they giving up so easily? Why don't they just give
it one more try?" In short, the outsiders miss the process and only
see the end result. And you think, "AHHH! If they only knew..."
So ... The moral of this story is: This was our
seven-hundred-and-sixty-fifth try. And as sudden as this split may seem to
everyone else, it's not sudden at all. Five years (that's HALF our married
life) of blood, sweat, and tears and hours and hours and hours and weeks and
months and YEARS of working together and counseling together and talking
together and meeting together with church leaders and therapists as a couple
haven't done the trick. So, here we are.
The boys and I will miss all of our now far-away
friends and family terribly, but we have a wonderful support system here across
the country, and have already felt the hand of the Lord in our journey here. He
is very aware of us, and I know He has us in the palm of His hand. Wish us
luck!
Come visit my blog often. I will try and post updates and lessons
learned along the way. Writing is very therapeutic for me. ;) It's hard to
explain how physically and emotionally exhausted and unstable I feel right now.
Spiritually, though? Holding strong!!! And that's what's most important,
right?! Faith in every footstep.
Can't sleep tonight so I thought id read your story. It's true. No one sees the struggle or pain or one million tries. It is so destructive...will they ever see how much their thoughtless actions cost them?
ReplyDeleteMelatonin helps me go to sleep..it helps turn my brain off when I need to sleep..I am glad that your parents can help you with the kids..always you time to rest and regain strength..after I found out about my husband I literally slept 8 hours in a week it was not good...
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