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Starting Over After Divorce
After The Divorce, First Take Care of Yourself by Judith S. Wallerstein
Quote of the Day
Finish each day and be done with it.
You have done what you could; Some blunders and absurdities have crept in.
Forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new day. You shall begin it
serenely and with too high a spirit to be encumbered by your old nonsense.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
Divorce is an end and a beginning. From the
moment you walk down the courthouse steps, you're going to need new
knowledge and new ideas and most of all a new you. Even after the
disequilibrium of the breakup is restored and you've found balance in the
various spheres of your life, you're a different person. But most of all,
you're a different kind of parent.
One of the many things I've learned
is that parents can't help their children until they've thought about
themselves, about where they're coming from. So let's begin right there.
First you need to take control of your own life. I wish I could tell you
that it's okay to lie down and pull the covers over your head, but that's
not possible. You may feel like you're the only person in the world who
could ever feel this bad, but let me assure you, you have plenty of
company. Once you've decided that "it's really over," you'll
have set into motion the task of becoming a different person and, to your
surprise, a different kind of parent. While your decision marks the end of
a marriage, it's also the formation of a new kind of family. It's a new
play with different characters in strange settings, changes in parent and
child relationships, and predictable transitions that most parents fail to
anticipate.
Most people don't understand that
divorce follows a long trajectory. What you feel today is probably not
going to be relevant to your life three, five, or ten years from now. The
quick fix that you want to put into place tomorrow won't be of much use
down the post-divorce road. You can take steps to ease your immediate
pain, but the really hard work comes one day and then one year at a time
with changes that ricochet into your life and into the lives of your
children.
You're about to undergo a
metamorphosis. To succeed for yourself and your children, you're going to
have to create a self-image as someone who can cope with the demands set
before you. You can't become an effective parent until you've regained
your footing and begun to repair the damage done by the failed marriage
and the inevitable stresses of the divorce.
How fast or how well this happens
depends on how you respond to the challenges and frustrations that lie
ahead. There's no way not to cry. Whether you left the marriage or you
were the one left, crying is good for the soul. It doesn't banish the hurt
but at least you can get the pain out of your belly. But if you're caught
up in the image of having failed in your marriage -- because you were
betrayed or you're guilty of breaking your marriage vows or your judgment
was just plain lousy -- your parenting will be burdened. Nor can you
muster the strength you need if you think of yourself as a victim. It may
be grossly unfair if the person you trusted most in the world is the cause
of all your pain, but that feeling must yield to the tasks before you.
As
strange as this sounds, if you find yourself raging at your husband or
wife, it really doesn't matter if you're right. What matters is that being
enraged will eclipse your ability to be a good parent. It will cloud your
judgment and make it harder for you to take care of yourself or see your
children as being separate from you, with different needs and priorities
in their young lives. Worst of all, it will make it much harder for you to
be a compassionate, loving mom or dad.
If your divorce is like most, only
one of you wants to end the marriage. Never in my thirty years of working
with divorcing couples have I seen two people sit down quietly at the
kitchen table and say, "You know, we both made a mistake, let's go
our separate ways." There's almost always pain and palpable grief. At
this point, the hardest thing you face is the need to avoid getting stuck
in your pain. The decision to
divorce requires that you focus on what lies ahead, unrelated to how or
why the divorce happened.
If you are the one who wanted out and
are feeling great relief and pride at having, at last, done what seemed
impossible, you are to be congratulated. But you're still going to face
problems with your children. I assure you that you cannot expect instant
support or even understanding, even if they've seen you suffering.
Who Were You Before?
Unfortunately, the legal change noted
on your divorce papers does not usher in this change in identity. You do.
Divorce doesn't happen in the courts, although the public record is what
makes it official. It happens in the psychological changes that occur over
time in both you and your ex-partner. Most of the changes occur gradually,
with the result that you wake up one morning and realize that you're a
different person. You no longer cry yourself to sleep, wake up angry,
berate yourself for your poor judgment, obsess all night about whether you
made the right decision, or feel like screaming much of the time. After
weeks or months, indeed sometimes years, of feeling shaky and bewildered,
there will come one psychological moment when you become this new person.
How can you tell? You'll know that
you've begun to acquire this important new identity when you finally
excise your partner's voice somewhere inside your head berating you,
accusing you, pleading with you, or hounding you. You are a new person
when you finally stop feeling like a failure who says, "I tried so
hard but my best was not enough," when you feel free, even hopeful,
and can make decisions without trembling inside. In taking these new steps
toward a new identity, reward yourself with something real that makes you
feel good. Try a massage, a night out, a new hairdo, or go for broke and
get a whole new outfit or set of golf clubs. As it is after any shock, you
may start out walking a bit unsteadily but then you will gather strength
as you go forward.
To begin the healing process, you might try this simple exercise. In your
mind, go back over the years and try to recapture who you were before you
got married. Are there earlier self-images that you can substitute for the
sad ones linked to your failed marriage? Were you hopeful as a young man
or woman? What happened to that hope? Did you have other choices when you
chose your husband or wife?
One woman told me, "I was a very
attractive and popular girl. I had several men vying for my attention. I'd
already enrolled in law school but gave it all up when Jim came along and
swept me off my feet with promises of everlasting love that turned out to
be false from the honeymoon on. I look at myself in the mirror and can't
believe the worn, out image with dark circles under her eyes that looks
back at me. Even my hair has lost its curl. What happened to the real
me?"
So try to find your earlier self-images and use them to rekindle the hopes
and strengths that you need to move ahead with your life.
At some point every man and woman,
whether left or leaving, has to face up to the hurt and disappointment
that go with a failed marriage and the continuing tensions of the divorce.
Resolving grief means letting go. In divorce, it's letting go of the
memories collected over many years of being together. It means letting go
of the hopes and dreams that led you to marry this person in the first
place. You need to pull up the memories of your courtship and all the good
times you had together, to mourn each recollection individually and put
them to rest. Many people find that therapy helps them in this process. A
sensitive therapist can provide support as well as understanding that can
break into your loneliness and restore your perspective. One man credited
his therapist with restoring his sense of humor. "I was beginning to
bore myself with self-pity," he said. "Thank God she helped me
snap out of it."