A few weeks back I set out on a quest to  let my overwhelming and often all-consuming guilt go, or at least  figure out the root so I could start the process of releasing it. See I  was convinced I had ruined my husband's life, imprisoned him in a misery  far greater than mine could ever be. I was not given the intimate role  model of lifetime marriage by my parents and in the back of my head,  back far further than I could ever consciously access, believed when it  got tough, people split. Take off. Run, skip, hop or jump their way as  far away from the offending party as quickly and blamelessly as  possible. Our society is no stranger to divorce. Lifetime marriages are  rare, and long-term happy marriages even rarer. I was, in all  honesty, shocked my husband still wanted to be my husband! A woman  approaching her mid-30's or 10th year of marriage may go through this  self-doubt phase anyway, but given my myriad of health problems, balloon  of weight, loss of income, inability to keep up with others socially  and every other weakness, I could not for the life of me figure out why  what I had to offer was enough. But I was missing an important link.  What love does to a person, the intense bond nurtured, long-term love becomes. And the character of my husband. See he was  modeled lifetime marriage by his parents. And his mother was a  home-health nurse, so sickness and illness were not the plague to him  that they are to others. But this miserable mess of a woman that I had  become; sick, childless, no career and very few friends, practically a  recluse, was quickly becoming so insecure I did not even want to be  around myself! Obviously this was becoming a big problem and I had to do something about it.
I picked up a book my mother gave me  in 2007. Its a scriptural take on the creation of woman and our  purpose, our design to compliment man and what an important role we play  in the ordered madness of our world. I tried to read this book when she  gave it to me 4 years ago. It was really lame! The first few pages I suffered through were full of the strangest conclusions drawn from the most  inconsistent evidence and perfectly preposterous analogies. I put it  down and forgot about it. But I recently cleaned out my office closet  and that unread book traded places with the read books in the stack beside my bed. I picked  it up and hauled out to the pool one Saturday afternoon. The first  chapter explored the inclination of the female heart to possess beauty, crave to be delighted in, strive to  obtain external beauty as a way to reflect what is inside. And each word  hit so close to home I felt every thump and thud. It made such perfect  and obvious sense! That will tell you what 4 years of living life will  do to you! The author talked about little girls playing dress-up, and  how before the injustices of the world had a chance to take hold of  heart and soul, we would strut around in shoes so big they tripped us  and lips so red they overtook our faces. Glimmering belts strapped around our  heads like crowns of jewels. Whatever fancy dress was befitting the  occasion. We would bounce and flounce our stuff, in front of mirrors and past our  parents and take pride in the joy of being female, being pretty, as we  dreamed of a future full of glamor and intrigue. Of course my mind went  straight back to the little girl I was so many years ago, playing with  mommies jewelry box and hats and scarves and elbow-length gloves. And I  will be darned if lying amidst the hungover post-teens giggling about  their exploits the night before I did not break into almost a full sob! 
Something I was reading was ripping back all the layers of "protection" I have swaddled my heart in, and that pure innocence of the little girl I once was soulfully mourned her seclusion, challenged her quarantine. I  gradually begun to cease thinking in terms of a $ value on my head, a list of  "good" and "bad" qualities that price my self-worth, and begun to think  of myself as a magnificent creature, fierce and protective while soft  and embracing.  I begun to understand why my heart was aching so bad it  was infecting my brain with self-doubt and worthlessness. Because to  survive I had to shut her truth, her vulnerability! A cold hard world  with many pains and injustices, I vowed early on my heart would never be  truly broken because I would protect it by never truly opening it.  Never truly surrendering. Not allowing love to not only flow in me but through  me, as I was created to do. I am starting to see the beauty in the  feminine, the female. I am opening my heart up to my husband in ways I  have not in over 12 years of relationship. I am trusting him in ways  that for practical purposes are just plain stupid! But the time has  come. Fibromyalgia has stripped everything from me, and I have had to  rebuild my life brick by painstaking brick. If I can rebuild a  healthier, stronger, happier me, a woman that rejoices in her womanhood  and sees her value in ways that are just not considered in this day and  age, I will have certainly turned that lemon into one fabulous margarita!
Thanks for joining,
Leah 
 
I too have wondered what I could possibly offer to my husband now that I have Fibro and other health problems. I keep expecting him to fly the coup at any time, but he stays glued to my side. He takes care of me, shields me from toxic people, and is very patient, knowing I don't feel like doing the things we used to do. I didn't understand it for a long time, and realized he just truly loved me.Sounds as if you got something real too Leah. We are lucky in this day and age to find that, and still have it with all our health issues.
ReplyDeleteWhat is this book...it sounds like something many of us should be reading to help find our joy again! Thanks for writing yet another wonderfull blog.
ReplyDeleteMy mother actually asked me once what on earth my husband gets out of our marriage, and I had to admit that sometimes I wonder, too. I asked him, once, why he stays with me, and he said, rather tenderly, "Because you have nowhere else to go." I took that pretty hard at the time, but what I've come to understand is that my husband wants, more than anything, to be the hero, the white knight. My many weaknesses allow him to fill that role in a way I could never have let him when I was healthy. He DOES love me, truly--not madly, but truly, and I am blessed.
ReplyDeleteI'm a new reader to your blog and this post struck home with me today.
ReplyDeleteI had a bad flare and had the paramedics, yet again, out to help pick me up off the kitchen floor earlier this morning. This evening I have asked my husband for the 100th time why he is still with me, and did he ever imagine that when we got married, he would now be pulling his wife in and out of the bath, or walking at a snails pace hand-in-hand with her whilst she hobbles just a step behind with her walking stick, running around after 2 kids and doing most of the chores. He said 'no, but then again, you're the only one who'd put up with me.' Not true and he knows it, but it made me smile, as it always does. He makes me smile and that makes every day just that little bit brighter.
Thanks for the read tonight. I think I needed to be reminded.