Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2020

The Courage it Takes to Lose a House

I was born by the sea. As a small child,  I would sometimes sit by the ocean and stare sleepy eyed through sandy eyelids out into the great unknown. I would squint my eyes and peer into the horizon until I got lost in it. I would imagine that the grey flickering shape in the far-away-distance was ... England? Africa? What was out there? Who was on that other side staring out towards me? What was their life like? Could I swim there? Probably not. But what would it look like out on the great expansive ocean in the monotonous grey unknown? 




Last week, with intense and careful planning, my husband and I managed to escape our life in the city with our 6 children, during a pandemic. We ran off to the sea. We were celebrating 9 years of marriage, and really hadn't had a moment alone, let alone together, alone, since our entire family went on Stay-At-Home orders (for us) March 12. We had a lovely weekend. Moments that will stick with me forever, are walking along the beach at night and just hearing the roaring waves, and feeling all the stress and anxiety I've carried around just melt away. Nursing school from my dining room table, while my children cried into their homework, melted away. My husband working from home on top of a pile of laundry in our bedroom, melted away. 8 people living on top of each other in without a single dedicated space for me to hide my introverted brain, drifted out to sea. Children who need us every single minute of every hour of every day, melted away. A child with special needs, requiring intense sensory input, but no therapies or anywhere to get that outlet, melted away. The thought of returning to school in person, or teaching them from my dining room while I cried into my coffee again...  Fredy leaving our home in just a few short weeks for college, gone. The only thing that registered was the roaring sound of the waves crashing against the rocks, and the intense darkness of the night sky which swallowed us up. Big Dipper. Little Dipper. O' Ryan's Belt - shooting stars sealed the moment, and I said out loud... "what if we just lived here? What are we waiting for?" My husband put his arm around me. 

I don't think I ever planned to leave the city. The thought of a quiet, suburban life where all the houses look the same, and all the neighbors look the same... It just doesn't feel good to me. Philosophically, I've always felt a strong pull to live in a diverse neighborhood and to have my children grow up in a world filled with colorful people, and noise, and bright lights. Morally, there is this issue of "White Flight", with white families fleeing the cities when things feel too chaotic for whatever idyllic life they've reserved for whats good enough for their children. Don't get me wrong... there isn't anything wrong with wanting to live in a safe, comfortable neighborhood. But not everyone has the same access to that, and when white families with resources leave mixed neighborhoods it widens the socio-economic gap and creates divides that unfortunately marginalize groups and enforce systemic racist policies. I just can't be about that. 

9 years ago, my husband and I walked into a big ole' 110 year old house, in a diverse neighborhood dubbed the "PhD Ghetto" and we giggled with newly-wed delight. "We are going to fill this house up with babies!". We went from 2 to 4 in a single day. Over the next 3 years we endured 5 pregnancies (2 losses), and eventually doubled in size again, with the addition of an adopted teenaged son. ALL BLESSINGS. Even the losses counted in fortifying our marriage and stretching the yawning hallways of our hearts. My husband changed jobs 3 times, and I changed careers twice - From Relationship Manager, to Stay at Home Mom, to Nursing Midwifery student. The change didn't always come easy for us, sometimes we went down kicking and screaming. But we had a pattern of trusting the process and not being afraid of the unknown. 

But over time, as happens, we became overwhelmed with the busyness of our complex life. Our children committed to amazing public schools in the far reaches of town. Driving our kids to school became a 3 hour round trip on any given Tuesday. Was it worth it? Absolutely. I convinced myself that we could never afford Private School, and even if we could, again, philosophically, that just wasn't our bag.  So, as with any education if you can't pay with money, you pay with time. The commute, and time I spent on the PTA, as classroom mom, and otherwise invested in my childrens' diverse, language immersion school was merely, paid dues. Our house required constant care, and we poured what little money and time we had left into it over the years. No matter how much money and time we put into it, it was never enough - and became a constant source of anxiety for us. 

Suddenly, sitting there together in the darkness in front of the great expansive sea, it became painfully obvious to the both of us. We didn't have to try so hard. What matters is we are together, and safe, and simple sounds like a luxury that we possibly can afford. We searched for houses on the web the next day. We called a random agent, and booked 5 showings for Sunday, mostly in jest as the power of the moment wore off. 

Sunday came, and we reluctantly gathered our wit for the showings. I almost canceled. Twice. "Why are we doing this? We can't move. Not in the midst of a pandemic. Sofia is a senior in high school." Phil looked at me. "Because we are in the midst of a pandemic, this is actually possible." He was right. This was no ordinary year. Phil's job had flexed into a remote position for the foreseeable future. Nursing school was online. School was starting off virtual. In an ordinary year we could not have stretched our imaginations into some far out coastal-town-life. But in this special moment of time, we could. So we showed up. 

We looked at all 5 houses, and they were just... houses. Except one. One we walked into and we instantly connected to it. It's funny what a home will bring out of you. Phil and I walked in and imagined all the days of our life living out within the walls of this home, instantly. We were home.  We walked through the smaller, comfortable, tastefully decorated musings of someone else's dream, and we just knew we could spend the rest of our days in this quiet neighborhood 10 minutes from the sea. We left that property and immediately prayed. We asked the Lord to put us in that house or shut the door quickly - if it wasn't meant for us. We spent the  next 2 days scrawling facts and figures and were surprised at how easily everything lined up. We called the agent. We put an offer in. It was strong and fair, and one that we felt good about. "OK" she said, "but 2 other people called today and want to put offers in". "Hmmm, OK" we said, dubious. 

Over the next few days we continuously prayed. It never felt more then a 50/50 shot, but it was likely the most peace I've felt in a long while. To completely give yourself to fate, and trust that wherever the chips land, that is exactly where you are supposed to be, well, it was glorious and exciting, humbling and somehow made us feel very small against these roaring waves. If we got the house, it'd mean we'd have 3 weeks to put our house up for sale, pack, and move. If we didn't get the house, it'd mean we were committing to another 2 years, at least, in Philly... because I'd lock into my Fall Nursing program. It truly was a special flicker of time that could pivot the entire trajectory of our lives. To be aware of this special pocket of time, and living fully into it... was truly a special gift.  What a house of cards we all live in pretending we are creating something, when really, we are just blowing in the wind of our own choices and circumstance. It is WILD. 

So, I don't have to tell you that the offer went to a "Best and Final Foot Forward". My husband and I were authentic and thoughtful about what made the most sense for our family, but also considerate and ethical. I had no misgivings that ours would be the strongest. Bidding wars are just not our style. But, we are a family of faith, and so we put together a beautiful letter of intention, and submitted it with our final offer. We waited. We checked in with each other. We both felt like the house would become ours. Not arrogantly, but because we just felt the power of the Spirit moving this entire process. It wasn't too much longer until we got the call. The house went to the highest bidder. It wasn't us. Yes, disappointment rose up in my throat, but also a peace. "Good for them" I said. "We truly wish them the best". I hung up the phone, and my husband and I smiled. Tears streamed down my face, but they weren't because we "lost" the house. My husband put his arm around me. 

"Look at us" I said. "Look how much courage we have. We saw a moment that could change our life, and without question we went for it with our whole heart." "You're right." He said. "And you know what else? I love you here, or there, and our life is what we create it to be." 

The next day, we received a letter from the Sellers of the house. It explained how much they honored our letter, and how much they connected with our story. It broke their heart, they said, to give the house to another couple. But in the end it came down to business. We understood. They closed the letter with "It's funny what a house brings out of our souls. But we know what is meant to be ours, always finds a way to us". And yes, somehow I know that to be true. Nothing has changed, but we have changed. Our complex life has already melted into a peaceful simplicity as we survey what we already have, and begin again with new eyes, from where we are.

Thank you Cape May, for an experience I will take with me forever. 
And only God knows, where the next chapter will take us. 




Wednesday, November 2, 2011

The Bridge Between


Well friends, here we are again. We are approaching the completion of my 33rd year, and preparing to move into my 34th.To say this has been a full year would be a complete understatement.

Last year on my birthday: I was single, I had a single child, and I had a PLAN.
 
I'll never forget that this time last year, I sat in one of my favorite sushi restaurants and mapped out my goals in every single area of my life (finances, fitness, love, parenting, career, faith, friendships, family). They were S.M.A.R.T goals (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic, Timely). I dotted all of my i's and crossed all of my t's.

Friends, you should have seen the look on my face, as I carefully closed my journal and sat back in my seat, taking the time to savor the last piece of tuna complemented by the perfect glass of Sauvignon Blanc. I was reassured. I felt safe. I knew that my plan would be fiercely executed with gazelle-like intensity. I smiled, smugly, knowing this time next year I would be well positioned to live out my life in fulfilled bliss, financially secure with all the world as my oyster.

Well, funny thing about a plan... even the most intricately thought out plan, is one that God can see from afar. It amuses Him so and you might even hear Him laughing out loud as He puts his Hand in your life and shakes your whole world up.

Don't get me wrong, it wasn't that I didn't want another child, or a marriage. It was that I was in a place of complete acceptance as to what I was given. My heart was given a great capacity for love, and if the good Lord wasn't planning on giving me a Husband and more children, you could bet your bottom dollar I wasn't going to let it go to waste.

That brings me to here. The Lord has provided for me a wonderful, loving Husband, and another amazing and beautiful daughter.


I could have never in a million years imagined from where I was standing last year, that my life would look completely different in just 365 short, short days. I think Steve Jobs said it best in his commencement speech at Stanford. I am paraphrasing, but the sentiment is that it is impossible to connect the dots going forward. You just have to step out on guts and faith that they will connect, and only looking backwards can you clearly see the moments that forward you into exactly where you were supposed to be.


This was a catalyst year. A pivotal year. The year that bridges the 2 parts of my life; the Before and the After. If we are to believe Jung's archetype of the Hero, which is the very framework of almost every fiction book we ever read and modern American Cinema as we know it; than we are to believe that the second chapter doesn't begin until the hero comes into his defining moment. The one where he realizes exactly who is is, and what his purpose is to be.






So, my plan got all messed up. It is nothing more than entertainment now, as I read through the lines of the direction I thought I was going. Instead, God made it clear that He had different plans for me. He had spent years preparing my heart for it, and it would bring me everything I had ever hoped for, and much, much more. But, He also promised, it would not be easy.

Being married to a Widower brings it own unique set of challenges. Adopting and raising a young child that I didn't bring into this earth isn't anything I could ever foreseen. There have been adjustments, challenges, and adaptations in what I like to refer to as the "Chaos Period" - the coming together of 2 sets of families, houses, schedules, rules and temperaments.

But more than anything I stand in awe of God's Grace and Love. I am grateful beyond measure that He would bring together our two families and seal them in love. I am SO excited about the possibilities of what is to come for us as a whole family in this up and coming year and in the years to come. I stand faithfully on the foundation that we are building together, and look forward to the many years that the Lord will provide us, so that we may glorify Him in all ways through our love.


James 1:2-4

Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance.  Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.


Wednesday, September 29, 2010

The Love Triangle

Last night I received an unwelcome email. In a moment of pain and desperation, the sender blindly reached out to me for (hopefully) some concrete answers as an objective outsider in their rather tumultuous relationship. The email was relatively brief, but chock full of dirty little secrets. There was no disclaimer. There was no gentle approach, and certainly no soothing invitation for me to come in. With one click of my little finger, I was force fed an entire meal of discontent.  I was quickly stripped of the freedom to choose whether or not to be involved in this dark little web of lies. I couldn't have stopped it if I tried.

Reading the note was a mixed bag. I felt confusion, no longer sure what to believe, as appearances collapsed into lies. I felt guilt for now being privy to all of these awful things, without anyone else's knowledge or invitation. I felt angry that the writer of this email would be so selfish in unloading these intimate details onto a stranger like me, who happened to be closely connected to the targeted parties of the email. But mostly, I felt empathy. I connected instantly to her confusion and frustration. In an ugly, but painfully raw delivery of the truth, one couldn't help but acknowledge the dark and cold place that she was reaching out from.  It was just a brief moment that the familiar feeling came over me, and the passing nod of recognition turned my spine cold.

Looking back on the archives of my own love history, I know now that I was lucky. The men that I shared my life with were generally good people. Sure, there were differences (many). And yes, I am confident in all cases, that the eventual parting of ways was the right thing to do. But, to my knowledge, no one ever vindictively set out to hurt me, or set me up.  If anything, we loved too deeply, mostly quickly, and had an intense inability to let go, when it was clear that things were not lining up. The end result of that kind of equation is that many good years passed, and passed, and passed. We had fun, and we learned a lot, a lot, a lot. But, also a great deal was lost in the dwindling investment of time, and feelings, as these sort of love-relationships would never produce any fruit.

And I don't mean this kind of fruit.


It's clear to me now, that choosing a life parter is both equally more and less simple than we make it out to be. On the one hand, the search is an  intense overkill. I mean, all we really need is a good person, who can hold a decent conversation, make us laugh once upon a while, and who will tolerate our idiosyncrasies, and sometimes poor behavior. Possibly, someone who shares similar values, and dreams as us, and who is willing to invest the time and where-with-all to go the distance. Believe it or not, there are PLENTY of people in this world who want to both give and receive that. So, partner up, people!

I am reminded of my homecoming to the United States, after living in Italy for several years. A leisurely stroll down the cereal aisle left me spinning into sensory overload. There were so many choices, and so many different categories, I couldn't help but feel overwhelmed. Essential Minerals, check. Fiber, check. Low sugar, check. No unnecessary additives, check. What should have been a simple check list left me frozen in a 45 minutes stalemate of indecisiveness. Analysis Paralysis.

On the other hand, I know it is really not that simple. Not, in modern, western culture anyway, where we are always constantly craving MORE. We, as a general people, are mostly sadly unfulfilled in our daily lives. We are relying on the next thing to happen to us, and in our lives, to lock in that forever happiness that will lead us to feeling elated and connected as humans. And when we can't find it, we just fill it up with more stuff.  We create this search for that other person who will complete us, like the 2 halves of an enlightened whole. And, in that search, we determine ourselves, to never, ever settle for anything less than completion. And then maybe we do anyway. And, we spend the rest of our miserable, married years, questioning whether or not this is was the right choice, the right person, the right life.

Last nights email was certainly a fresh jolt out of the dreamy wedded bliss set-up, that we convince ourselves only the "real thing" can look and feel like.

We want to have so that we can be. And I know that innate feeling is a complicated puzzle that we set out on solving from the earliest moments of our existence. Loving other humans is so natural, and so complex and it is a long and sometimes convoluted journey to monogamous, and fulfilling partnership, if we ever get there at all.

I don't pretend to have all the answers. I am still on my own personal journey as well. I have had failed relationships, and many losses. I have been on both sides of the love cloud. I have love and lost, and fought and forgiven, and I sit here today, a single 31 year old mother of one, albeit, very, very fulfilled by my life as it is right now.

However, I know this: we are responsible for the quality of our own lives. Moment to moment, micro-second to micro-second, in every moment, the way that we are being will determine the outcome of what we have. Be and then have. And maybe, just maybe the very resolve that has brought me to that truth, will help me let go of any expectations that I have in a life partner, and what that may or may not look like in my life, when that time comes.

I can only hope, that when they do come around, whole person to whole person, that I am humble and grateful, and that I recognize them for all who they are and all who they aren't. And, that we love each other anyway.