Archive for June, 2009

I Still Remember….

Friday, June 26th, 2009

 Note: I wrote this non-rhyming poem several years after my divorce. I found it this weekend in an old notebook and decided to post it on its own, since I am not sure where it belongs in my manual, which I will start to post as soon as I sort through a few more files.  But this one, written in two parts, seems important enough to post now.  Healing takes a long time, but it comes….. I promise!

 

Healing Homework: I Still Remember

12/09/2000

Sunlight was pouring through our kitchen window

Yet darkness poured over me like an endless night.

I struggled with the words, as my husband sat opposite me, cross-armed.

The words I uttered in earnest fell on impatient ears, already closed to love.

 

Our marriage was in shreds, and like Humpty-Dumpty, I couldn’t put it back together again.

I babbled on & on, digging a deeper hole, falling into complete darkness.

Defeated, I walked away from the table…wounded by his contempt,

As if a knife was embedded so deep in my heart I could not pull it out.

 

I left it there, the virtual bleeding starting on the kitchen floor,

Dripping blood on every step as I retreated up the stairs.

I still remember the pain, and in remembering,

I cannot recall the love he once professed again & again.

                                                                        8/06/2001

But now I have tucked away the pain to an obscure corner of my heart,

And when the sun pours through my living room window, the darkness has disappeared.

My heart has mended, yes, with scars, but only slightly visible,

Perhaps even stronger than before.

So if I ever fall in love again, my heart may break, but I know it will mend,

Because, then, the pain of that loss was larger than me,

And now, while I still remember, I am much larger than the pain.

 

P.S. When I was in the throes of distress, I often found a “sad song” was needed to reflect my mood.  I wish Lonely Motel was written then, but it is a brand new song written & sung by Jay Jacobson, my son-by-marriage, and you can hear it if you go to www.jayjacobson.com and click on the photo of Jay near a window with shadows and the title Lonely Motel.  Even if you are not a fan of country, I think you will love this single. When you go to the site, the first thing you will hear is the title from his newesy CD Get Ready. But just click on Lonely Motel and you will hear an excerpt.

Great listening!

Divorce over 50 ….

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

 

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Love makes the world go around looking for a divorce lawyer.

Quote from Henny Youngman’s 999 Funniest One-Liners, Wing Books, 1994.

 

While Googling for articles about midlife divorce, I came across a 2004 article published by AARP .  The article, entitled “A House Divided,” is authored by Elizabeth Enright, a freelance journalist who writes on family issues. Here are some brief facts.

First, Enright noted that divorce over 50 is on the rise, based on an AARP survey  that consisted of 1,147 men and women, ages 40 to 79, who had been through a divorce in their 40s, 50s, or 60s.

Second, the study revealed that both men and women emerged far more healthier after their mid-life divorce than they had expected or dared to hope for.

Third, and even more interesting to me, is the fact that the majority of midlife divorces are initiated by women. In the survey, 66% of women reported that they asked for the divorce, while only 41% of the men initiated the divorce.

While reading the article, I came across a paragraph that related directly to my situation. The author noted that while “marital discontent festers for years,” baby boomers are quicker to decide to divorce compared with women born before the boomers.  (I am in this pre-boomer category.) The reason given is that more women in their 50s are independent, because they have careers that allow them to leave a bad marriage sooner.

The article deals with many issues, such as: delaying divorce because of the kids, who takes the blame, and getting back into the dating game.  The survey did find that more than 75% of women in their 50s were in a serious relationship within two years after their divorce. (81% for men)

The bottom line for me was this statement: “For all the pain of midlife divorce, it tends to leave a normal, healthy, and optimistic man or woman in its wake.”

To read the complete article, please go to http://www.aarpmagazine.org/family/Articles/ and type in A House Divided in the SEARCH box.

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Ellen Sue’s comments:

I found this article to be not only interesting, but enlightening. I often felt guilty because I initiated our separation, although my husband eventually asked for the divorce after we reunited for  a few months. Now I see I was in good company.

The first few years after my divorce were difficult for me emotionally and financially, but once I was able to find work that I liked and pay my bills, I found that I was a happy person and decided that there were worse things that NOT being married. (Since I was single for 13 years, I never really expected to remarry.)  Then along came Alan and I found myself at 65 contemplating remarriage. As the article stated, the fear of never finding love again is largely unfounded.

So my final thoughts are to keep up your spirits, single or otherwise, and call on family and friends to help you over the humps.

I would like to end these thoughts with Louise Hay’s Dedication* in her book, You Can Heal Your Life. My friend Jo recommended I add a spiritual element to my blog, and this book is my first choice, so you will probably see me refer to it often.

*”May this offering help you find the place within where you know your own self-worth, the part of you that is pure love and self-acceptance.”

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Introduction to Divorce-Dayz Manual

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

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            “Thank God for divorce,” my daughter Eileen once stated in a passionate voice, “or I would be stuck in a bad marriage for life.”  That statement threw me at first until I thought about it more and spoke with other divorced people.

            “I have never been happier being alone,” said a professor I worked for, after he separated from his wife of 43 years.

            “Our marriage was a mistake,” confessed one of my close friends.

            At the age of 80, my friend Cindy’s grandmother kicked her husband out of the house.  He wasn’t pulling his weight.

            My own marriage of 30 years ended in divorce. The other important comment my daughter Eileen made was that I stayed too long in my marriage. Probably true.  And even though we both agreed to the divorce, the experience was traumatic. (Of course, I was also going through menopause and school at the same time, which added to the stress.)

            While divorce may be a relief, that doesn’t mean it is easy.  In addition, the longer you are married, the more difficult the separation because of the years of history and shared experiences—good and bad—between you and your husband.  Even when the marriage has been going sour for a long time, the process of divorce takes time while it is taking its toll.  I asked divorced friends, of which I have many, when they knew their marriage was over, and I was astonished with some of the answers.

            My friend Mindy  said she knew the night before the wedding at the rehearsal.  My friend Sonny said he knew when he said, “I do,” and should have said, “I don’t.”  Another friend, Pam said her marriage had been over for years and she was staying until the children graduated high school. (I suspect many women do this, either from a sense of loyalty or guilt. That is why divorce often happens when women are older, because they want a two-parent family for their growing children.)  I had an inkling when I was engaged, but ignored the feelings in my gut and thought I just had the jitters.

            Extricating yourself from a long-time marriage is not always easy, but then, who said life was either easy…or fair?  Like the song, “I Never Promised You a Rose Garden,” I realized that I was holding onto a rose garden fantasy.  Actually, I think I was taking stupid pills instead of vitamin pills!  I began to see through my pain and tears that there was a way out into a reality that I could create with a lot of help from my friends. If perception is reality, then I had to change my perception of what life could be, without a husband, and create a new reality.

            Now when I think of my daughter’s statement, “Thank God for divorce!” it doesn’t sound so strange after all!

 

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Below is a tentative Table of Contents, subject to change without notice, like ads for sale items often state. This Table of Contents seems to work for now, but as I learn more from you, the reader, it may change. I have labeled them Lessons for lack of a better term, but please accept them as guidelines that may help you as you wind your way through the haze, maze, and daze of divorce.

 Lesson #1: Crazy Dayz

 Lesson #2: Dayz of Our Lives

 Lesson #3: Courtin’ Dayz

 Lesson #4: Dayz-Free Rules

 Lesson #5: Dayz of the Ex-Files

 Lessons #6: Waves through the Dayz

 Lesson #7: Dayz of Forgiveness

 Lesson #8: Dayz In, Dayz Out

 Lesson #9: Amazing Dayz: Resources

 Appendix: Other Divorce Stories, More poems, & Quotes

 (I plan to post parts of each chapter every week, keeping the postings short, since there are also other categories to sandwich in between.)

 

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Announcing Divorce Dayz

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

dd-ellensueThis is me, Ellen Sue, several years post-divorce and smiling. There is life after divorce!

Divorce Dayz is a blog for midlife women anticipating, experiencing, or having experienced a divorce after many years of marriage. My own midlife divorce left me devastated, so over the years I began a manual to help myself and others survive their divorce and then thrive in the second half of their lives.

I hope this blog will empower women and I hope women will respond to the posting so we can support one another during what could be a very difficult time.

As with my other blog, www.menupause.info, there will be book reviews and quotes, with the addition of research I may uncover, as well as articles that I find that might be of interest.

Your input is important to me, so I hope to hear from all of you reading this.

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This is called a “bottle-brush flower.” (not its real name.) With divorce, you may need to scrub away your old life and start anew.

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