Thursday, July 28, 2011

I'll Miss You 'Til I Meet You

Okay, I couldn't find a live video of Dar singing this, so I chose a youtube video that someone put together. I think those are Dr. Who clips. ??

For me for several years this has been the sad, yet sweet and hopeful refrain that I find I myself humming the morning after many a disappointing evening...

Dar Williams: I'll Miss You 'Til I Meet You


Monday, July 18, 2011

The Ex's Wedding

I am essentially a divorced woman. I don't say this out loud very often, and I never talk about it. It depresses me; and also I don't want to get into any angry, philosophical arguments with someone about the fact that I was never actually married to my Ex totally negates my feelings on the matter. I know that I am not actually a divorced woman; but I am in every sense but legally.
I met my Ex when I was 23, and he was 20. We started dating when I was 25, moved in less than six months later and lived together for the next six years. Combined households, bank accounts, joint decision making. We shared a car. We came this >< close to buying a condo together.

He supported me through grad school. I supported him through the beginning, difficult middle and near disastrous end of a PhD program, which he exited ABD, but sane. We lived in three cities and four apartments. I had friends who married and divorced and became married to other people in the span of our relationship.

I've been asked many times "What happened?" or "What went wrong?" And I think that usually even though I do my best to answer, the person asking the question never feels satisfied with what I have to say. When there's a break-up after such a long time together people want fireworks, they want sparks, and anger. Or at least resentment and heavy disappointment. For the longest time after our relationship ended the only negative feeling I carried that I attached to it was guilt. And even that was hard to explain, because I didn't do anything wrong when we were together, I didn't cheat, I didn't lie to him, I didn't take advantage financially or otherwise.

So the guilt that I have held on to is just to the guilt of not being able to be to him what I knew he wanted me to be.  He was, he is still, one of the best men who I have ever known. I have moments when I know without a doubt that I will never again be in a relationship with someone who is as good of a person as he is. He was always kind, and caring and even though there were times in our relationship when I was disappointed, or moments when I was angry none of that ever grew to be larger or more important than the love and respect that I had for him as a person.
I guess it's one of those cliches where everything that looks perfect on paper just never quite translated to real life. I felt like we spent our whole time together in anticipation of what would be next, leaving Buffalo, moving to Boston, starting grad school, ending grad school, moving into a bigger apartment... When I look back at those times it is so obvious to me that the whole reason we were always focused on the future is because we were never happy, truly happy, in our present.

Still, ultimately I became the one to end things between us; a step that was frightening and inconceivable after the amount of time we had spent together that I put it off for months, if not years, longer than I should have. And after that I felt overwhelming relief, and tremendous guilt. I always believed that it was somehow my fault, that I couldn't be everything that he expected, that I couldn't love him enough, or in the right way and that all of the reasons for this lay in my own dysfunction.

We stayed friends, which freaked everyone around us out way more than it did us. Our former mutual friends were uncomfortable when we were in a room together, but we were fine.

Then about a year ago, I got an e-mail from him. I knew he's been dating someone seriously, I knew they were moving in together - actually moving across the country together to Salt Lake City. He was excited, which didn't surprise me, he was always excited about whatever comes next. So here they were, and then this e-mail landed in my inbox and became a revelation. He was happy, he loved it in SLC, he never wanted to move again. He didn't know if I could understand, but he felt like for the first time in his life that he was exactly where he should be.

Of course I understood; and I finally understood something else. I wasn't the only one who was not as happy as  I should have been when we were together. It wasn't just me that the relationship didn't fit on, it was both of us. I was just the one who finally gathered the strength to do something about it; knowing, hoping that ultimately we could both end up with the true happiness we were looking for. Butterflies happy.

That's what I am still looking for; and what he has found. Yesterday he married the love of his life, back home in Buffalo. The pictures on facebook look beautiful, and everyone looks so happy in them. I wish I could have been there, but I understand that having one's ex at a wedding is strange, and would have created more drama than it was worth.

It's been four years since we split, and sometimes I miss how close our friendship used to be. I understand that the fading of our friendship over time is a necessary part of moving on, compounded by both the growing distance in time, and the larger than ever physical distance between us, but I also know that he still is, and will always be one of the people who understands me the best. A person who chose to know all of me, and loved me just the same. Seeing him happy makes me happy, and hopeful.

Mozel Tov!

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Music of the Moment Thursdays. v1

I am completely certain that without music, I would very likely lose my mind. Because Thursdays are a busy day for me (Kickball!) I am declaring them:

Music of the Moment Thursdays

This week I bring you just one song from my current music obsession - Sara Bareilles. At any given moment, I feel like I could link to a half-dozen of her songs that feel relevant to me.

I've chosen this one today, because not only does the intended message of the song resonate, but I also feel as if there are many, many miles between me and summer vacation. Even though, in actuality it is only four days away. I have so much to do between now and then, I'm not sure how I will get there. But I will.

Many the Miles



Sunday, June 19, 2011

Shades of what?

"I do not at all understand the mystery of grace - only that it meets us where we are but does not leave us where we found it." -Anne Lamott

When I was young, and would tumble and blow around our drafty house with so much undirected energy, my mother would often say, "You have the grace of an elephant. Calm down." She was of course referring to physical grace and, I am certain, nothing more.

Grace was a mysterious word to me back then. Yes, I was uncoordinated, and awkward, and maybe at times I would even allow clumsy - but then why didn't she just say that. This word, grace, seemed to imply more than just the fact that in my adolescence I couldn't always get my body to behave the way I wanted it to. The way I told it to. Being graceful was so much more than just being coordinated. And what in the world did being calm have to do with it?

Over the years the concept of grace has become both more and less mysterious to me. Physical grace. Emotional grace. Spiritual grace. In all realms there is an implication of control, of acceptance and yes, turns out mom was right, even of calmness.  But it is also so much more than that.

I looked it up, "Grace", in Merriam-Webster on-line; but could not find any single definition that satisfied me.

Grace is more than a physical attribute, more than a virtue, more than a gift or a favor that is given or bestowed from one person to another. It's also more than just about how one deals with life, the good times and the bad.  It's intrinsic in a person's outlook, their world view. One might say that it's the lens through which a person can choose to view life's many shades of gray.

So, while I'm still not fully satisfied even with my own ability to define grace, here's what I do know:

This still somewhat mysterious grace is something that I aspire to in all areas of my life. As with most things in life - sometimes I'm winning, and sometimes I'm losing. I'm always somewhere on the spectrum though. Living my life in shades of gray, and shades of grace.