3.28.2010

Who You Calling Broken?

There were lots of things many people had to say when I separated from my husband of four years:

"You were married?" (My ex travels A LOT.)

"I told you it wouldn't last."

"I guess no more double dating?"

"Way to follow in your mother's footsteps!"

My mother-in-law insisted I was nothing but a "bad sport."

And on and on, filters hopelessly absent in most people's assessments of my un-wedded un-bliss.
Most of the responses, however, hovered around the concept of a Broken Home. As in, how will I possibly make up for my son's stigmatized status as a Child of Divorce. Conservative pundits found their way onto my radar with pronouncements of long-term horrors in store for my children, poor bastards.

Children, you say? Did I forget to mention the part where I got knocked up seven months after moving out of the marital home? BY A DIFFERENT MAN?

So now, not only did I have a son whose emotional, financial, and psychic stability I was threatening, but I was about to bring another baby into the mix whose very birth was being ignored by the one who had impregnated me.

And I was still living in Bronxville, Westchester, epi-center (however illusional) of picket-fence, SAHM, family values living.

Oh lo the bygone, sylvan days when graceful (if alcoholic) acceptance of a fucked up marriage was the only path, and girls were sent away to birth babies in secret.

Hark, in their stead, the separated and swollen-with-child Brooklyn Mama...cuz as soon as I could, I beat a fast path back to Fort Greene, where I started to recreate my narrative and tell myself and my kids a different story than the one our world wanted them to know.

So instead of talking about Broken Homes, we spoke of how lucky Luca was to have two Happy Homes. And bedtime stories wove in threads of his country house, where he had a grill and a backyard, and his city apartment, where we had three floors of neighbors and a whole playground within walking distance of our lobby door.

We talked about Papai's new girlfriend and how much fun they all had together.

And when Dash arrived home with me from the hospital, Luca's dad and I both thrilled at how much fun it was going to be to have a baby brother, even though he didn't have a Papai like Luca had. I told my kids how lucky we are to have each other, to have so many people around who loved and supported us. And that we are one Whole Family, all in one place in our hearts and heads.

Un-living together, yes. Un-married, yes.

But so very Un-Broken.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Awesome, Brave, Beautiful Share, that will surely go well beyond the scope of your life and help someone else, who is deciding how they will handle the changes happening in their life.

Sorry, I didn't have the chance to know you, but glad to be able to read your awesome testimony.

God Bless and Great Fortune to you and yours on your this next leg of your journey!
Leslie-Ann