Monday, April 8, 2019

Our lives are not just "befores" and "afters"

"Through her therapy she was learning that though it was agony remembering, it was a much better quality of agony than not remembering."
From The Guardian, "The tsunami survivor who lost her whole family"

I wanted a lobotomy. I wanted someone to cut out the part of my brain where the painful knowledge sat. Or give me amnesia, like a soap opera character, that erased the worst memories, the ones that pinned me to my bed like a still-living corpse. 
The woman in the story, Sonali Deraniyagala, lot her family in, literally, one wave. Remembering for her is undoubtedly worse than it ever was for me. But, as I've written before, there isn't a painlympics. My pain counts. Yours too. (And yes, even his.) And so we learn from each other, including from a woman who, having lost every person she loved most in the world in one horrific tragedy, how to pick ourselves up and move forward.
For Sonali, and for me, healing came with remembering. 
Not right away. At first, it was too painful to remember the births of my children, the holidays together, the laughter. Those memories felt like they belonged to someone else, to another life. To a life that I was wondering if I'd imagined. 
But slowly, with time, I could let them in. The wedding album I'd relegated to the basement found its way upstairs again, ostensibly so my children could look at it but also because I could look at it too, without my stomach clenching. Or not clenching too much.
The photos I'd put in drawers, the jewellery I'd stopped wearing, the clothes that held memories, also made their way back into regular rotation. Not all of them. The chain of a diamond necklace remains, literally, in pieces somewhere at the back of my drawer. Certain clothes were bagged and dropped at a charity box. 
And I brought my memories here.
As I shared my story, over months and years, I exorcised those memories of "before" and knit them seamlessly with "after". I had never imagined that my life would ever again feel like it flowed. Always, always I figured that "the news" as Glennon Doyle refers to it, would remain an interruption, a dividing line between "before" and "after". And I suppose, to some extent it does. But not nearly the way it did. It has become something akin to the "before" we had kids, the "before" we moved to our house. A marker of time rather than a marker of trauma.
I've often said that I have two wishes for this site. The first is to create community around the experience of betrayal so that nobody feels as though they're going through this alone. And the second is to assure everyone, whether you're hours from D-Day or years, that you will get through this. 
Both are the absolute truth.
But the second requires a bit of heavy lifting on our part. It requires us to look square at our life and, with time, remember. To remember the good stuff and, yes, to remember the awful. To sit with the pain of remember that phone call, that text, that sudden knowing. To rest in the memory of your own strength through this. You're still here, right? That's courage and guts that you maybe didn't know you had. It's there. I promise.
Sonali Deraniyagala wrote her story and on those pages, she found healing. I too wrote my story, on this site and in my book. I've long advocated for the power of owning our stories, of reclaiming our memories and our truth. Betrayal challenges our perception of what's real and what's not. When we reclaim that – when we refuse to let others write our stories, when we insist on telling them with ourselves at the center – then our hearts again become whole.

4 comments:

  1. I really love your blog.
    We are not alone...

    They say God doesn’t give you more than what you can handle. But to be honest, I don’t know how I’ve survived.
    I’ve been through hell and back. Been lost, feeling like the ground beneath my feet had been stolen from me (like I had the right to even have one…).
    You know when you watch those horror movies and when a character brings a dead creature to life again? And everyone says “careful, he (or she) will not be the same again!”?
    Well, you now what? That IS true. When you bring something from the dead it is never the same again. It’s another form of life. Maybe it’s crooked. Maybe it has the touch of something out of a Tim Burton’s movie…
    It becomes different.
    Especially the area where your heart used to be beating. It feels always so dark and weird. Like it is only pretending to be alive. Or like it’s only wasting life away.

    People don’t hurt other people only by beating them up. People may well be killing people and they’re not even touching them.
    I know now that lies kill. That shallow people are capable of everything. That they blurt knives out of their mouths that wound you for ever.
    That there is nothing like the pain of shattered dreams and a bleeding heart.
    I swore I’d stop whining. But life has brought me too much pain. And sometimes I can even forget it. And laugh and enjoy being with people. People I know for sure are unable to break me. Friends. Real friends.
    But then comes the soreness of it all.
    And the will to run and never look back comes again.

    And that is why everyone should love themselves more. Respect themselves more.
    And we all have the moral obligation to tell our friends that suffer “you still have time to be loved as you deserve to be loved, and you should never beg for affection”.
    I have never had that from anyone. Everyone is too fearful of giving their opinion. I know.
    I will for sure tell a friend in need of love and respect that they have the option to leave those who bring misery to their lives and to pursue the true happiness they are entitled to.
    Will you?

    I promise I will try to convince myself I am beautiful and enough, and deserving of true love. Because today… my hands are empty and my heart is tired.

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  2. THIS. I thought I was the only one that hid away jewelry, pictures etc. I smiled when I read you did the same. My husband's acting out and affair lasted almost 10 years - so the memories of "life" are contaminated to the extremity. This remains my struggle - we can be doing very well with healing and then I am brought to my knees with a trigger - they surround my existence. I have started to look again at pictures, after all, I have 3 wonderful children and my life with them is more than the pain I feel. Thank you again for letting me understand - I am not alone.

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  3. I was the same. I put away albums, gave away jewellery and could not face certain photos. This resonated with me. I took my wedding ring off on D day and it has not returned in 7 years.

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  4. I'm sort of stuck on this one. I guess I feel like, with a divorce in the middle I do have a before and after. Interestingly, I have not put albums away, because my kids are in them. But I don't often look back. I am still trying to navigate reconciling my past which has a person who hurt me so much in it. I try to draw a parallel with how I manage this re my mom, the never recovered alcoholic. I moved on and made a life largely without her in it. It's different somehow because a childhood always belongs to us, good and bad, perhaps because we are so self focused as a child. But later, the history with my ex, its everywhere. Like the goddamn Lewis & Clark trail. You can't drive five minutes without seeing some marker that those two guys were there. I feel like my old life and memories with my ex, that I used to value so highly, are in some weird painful purgatory. More and more, my life begins to feel like something that is all mine and less about the painful ground zero I am leaving behind with intention. But with a trunk full of photo albums that I don't quite know what to do with.

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