Tag Archives: mental-health

We are Stronger than We Think

The Lotus Flower by jennyzhh2008 from Pixabay

(Strength, Resilience, and Beauty in the face of Adversity)

Thinking back on those first years of surviving the reality of dissolving the marriage contract and building a new life on my own, I sometimes wonder how I got through it all.

My ex and I had been together for 40 years – 38 years married – when he decided he wanted to be single again. I had been a stay-at-home mother, wife, and business partner and had very little work experience let alone money. But there I was, reeling from betrayal and emotional pain, fighting for a fair settlement, fighting for a place to live, fighting for my life. I was 60 years old.

It wasn’t pretty. At first I didn’t bravely straighten my back and get on with it. I cried a lot, slept very little, tried to hide my fear from everyone, especially my adult children. My ex wanted all the savings, investments, property and half the house. His argument was that HE had earned it while I enjoyed all those years of free room and board.

It doesn’t sound right, does it? Aren’t there laws about such things? Yes, there are, but nevertheless, it took four years and major legal bills before my lawyer managed to get a separation agreement that wouldn’t leave me close to destitute. I learned early on that the law is not necessarily “fair’, that you need a lawyer who will fight for you. Without the support of my friends, my children, even my in-laws…without them I honestly don’t know that I would have survived. Literally.

But I did. I only mention all this because I know, whatever your situation, you are going through your own version of hell and I want to say to you: find the strength that is within you. Don’t become a victim. Fight back. Don’t give in because of fear.

I realize now that my mother – imperfect parent that she was – made me strong. She used to say, “Anything a man can do, a woman can do better.” It took me a lifetime to realize that her voice was the backbone of my survival. All I had done as a “mere” stay-at-home mom – raising children, being a caring, loving partner, home maintenance, landscaping, social planning, business partner – all these roles had made me strong. Like in Helen Reddy’s song “I am Woman,” I could do anything. I just didn’t realize it until push came to shove in the lawyer’s office.

How does any woman get through the absolute devastation of divorce, let alone at a late stage in life? I now see it is because we are women. Seriously. Women are strong – just as my mother said. If we believe in ourselves, we will survive.

Not only will we survive, we will thrive. My life today is full and content and downright good. I made it through to the other side, and it’s well worth the journey.

Fight for yourself. Don’t let anyone ever say you aren’t worth it. Because it’s just not true. You’ll be okay. You’ll be better than okay.

“The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don’t have any.” Alice Walker

It’s My Life Now!

I am 74 years old and have been divorced for more than 10 years now. Why does writing this feel like a confession at some sort of Divorcees Anonymous meeting? Maybe because deep down inside, I am ashamed that my husband of almost 40 years dumped me. There’s no sugar-coating it, that’s what happened, and beyond my dear friend, fellow-blogger, Vhairi, I’ve not talked about this honestly with anyone. I’ve protected my adult children from not only the sordid details of the why of it, but also from how damaged I was and really, still am.

I have built a new life on top of the old, but I struggle with making important decisions, and money worries keep me awake nights. And then there’s the age thing. I keep reminding myself that I am OLD! That yes, that is me in the mirror, not my mother.

Divorce took out my self-confidence; it was years before I began to recognize that the negative self-talk that echoed in my head every day was my ex-husband’s voice. It took more years to forgive myself for staying in an emotionally abusive relationship for so long, long after my children were grown and gone.

But here’s the thing: Through reading, writing on this blog, talking with friends, and just getting on with life, I came to realize that I have always been a survivor, that all women are survivors. We do what we have to do and sometimes that means staying with someone who hurts us. Sometimes it means staying because we’ve been too damaged and weakened to leave.

I’d like to recommend a book that really helped me not only forgive myself but also to embrace the future. “It’s My Life Now: Starting Over after an Abusive Relationship” by Meg Kennedy Dugan and Roger. R. Hock. The word “abusive” is harsh, and maybe you don’t feel it applies to you, but I believe this book is worth reading to see how women in many different situations have found the inner strength to move forward in life after the terrible emotional carnage of divorce.

Today, I am truly thankful that my ex dumped me; otherwise, I fear, I’d still be living as a shadow of my self. I never thought I would say that, but it’s true. It hasn’t been easy. It isn’t easy now, but I am a survivor. No…more than that… Remember the song “I Am Woman” by Helen Reddy in the 70s? The lyrics mean more to me now than they did back in the early days of Women’s Lib:

Whoa, yes, I am wise 
But it’s wisdom born of pain 
Yes, I’ve paid the price 
But look how much I gained

If I have to I can do anything 
I am strong
I am invincible
I am woman…

HAPPINESS

A quick catch up for readers new to this blog.  This April, it will be eleven years since my husband left me.  We’d been married for over thirty-seven-years, I was a few months shy of my sixtieth birthday and I did not see the fracture coming.

They say it takes one year for every decade you’ve been together to really ‘process’ the grief and ‘move’ forward.  (Notice I say forward and not ‘on’.) In my own case, I would say that was about right. 

Year One was horrendous.  I don’t remember too much about it except demands from him and his lawyer and being curled up in a ball on the floor at 2am sobbing.  Year Two was fractionally better in some ways and worse in others.  The divorce went through, the legal stuff came to an end and he remarried.  Any dreams I might have had of there being a reconciliation were over.  Years Three and Four were about finding my footing, making major decisions without being able to discuss them with him, venturing out into this new single world and starting to rebuild my life. For the first time in almost forty-years the only person I really had to consider was myself.  And that was scary. Year Five brought Covid and put the whole world on hold. Ironically Covid gave me breathing space and the opportunity to move to the coast. 

And now, eleven years on from that awful morning when he came downstairs to tell me our marriage was over, I am happier than I have been since my early twenties.

How can that be?  And what do we mean when we talk about ‘Happiness’?

The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines happiness as a ‘state of well-being and contentment’.

I’ve recently been reading a lot of about Bell Curve of Happiness/the Paradox of Aging.  In general – and I stress in general – our happiness appears to be highest in our early youth.  From there it’s a downward trend until we reach our forties where we hit our nadir, and this is something that is seen worldwide.  Midlife is the time when we experience maximum pressure in our lives – dealing with teenagers, stress at work, elderly parents, mortgages and rising interest rates, menopause and hormonal changes etc.

However, from our early 50s onwards, happiness appears to start increasing and keeps on increasing the older we get.  Don’t get me wrong, aging brings on serious life challenges.  In my own life, I’ve experienced divorce, friends and family have died, and I’ve experienced my own bout with cancer and radiation etc., so it’s not all been plain sailing.

But I think aging brings with it an appreciation for life.  With far less ahead of, rather than behind, us, we realise what a privilege it is to have reached this age. Not everyone gets that chance. One starts focussing on what’s important and becomes grateful for the everyday magic of ordinary life.  Of course, there are exceptions – there are exceptions to every ‘rule’ – but the general principle seems to hold no matter where you live in the world.

I’ve recently been listening to the comedian Jimmy Carr.  I didn’t used to be a fan – to be honest, his laugh put me off – but the more I listen to him, the more I am struck by his wisdom.  A few comments from the podcast I’ve been listening to include these gems.

  1. Twenty-five years from now, you would give everything to be the age you currently are and have the health you have, now.  Very true.  There’s a sixteen-year age gap between my brother and myself and a couple of years ago he commented that he would love to be my age – I was 69 at the time – again.
  • Happiness can be measured.  Your quality of life minus your envy defines how happy you are. And I agree this is also true.  I used to be envious of so many things – other people’s houses, boyfriends, popularity, jobs, looks, weight, finances etc etc.  Now…?  I don’t care. Yes, I have wrinkles.  Yes, I could afford to lose quite a bit of weight.  Yes, my body hurts – especially when it rains. But so what? I buy a lot of my clothes from Walmart or the Thrift Store and I don’t need or want the latest this or that.  My TV is tiny. My car is almost twenty years old, but I love her.  And I love how fascinated my grandkids are when I put CDs into the CD player rather than always streaming things. The person I least envy?  My ex’s new wife – How’s that for an admission?  And why is that?  Because, according to my kids, my ex ‘hasn’t changed’.

I am the first person to admit I’m lucky.  Financially, as long as I don’t do anything stupid or the global economy doesn’t collapse, I should have enough money to see myself out, and that’s a huge relief that I never take for granted.  And yes, I’ve had cancer and will be on medication for the next five years.  I also have some heart issues – as well as arthritis and a lot of other conditions that comes with aging – but although I wake up sore most mornings, I am grateful for what I do have.  Kids and grandkids I adore.  Living on the coast.  If I want to take myself down to the beach, it’s only an eight-minute walk from my house.  Friends old and new who offer me support and laughter. A home that’s perhaps the smallest I’ve ever lived in, but holds memories – photos/pictures/some of my mother’s ‘bits and bobs’ etc – that make my heart sing.

But Bell Curve or No Bell Curve, for anyone going through some kind of trauma – whether it’s divorce, illness or whatever – I’d also remind them of the tarot card The Wheel of Fortune.  Sometimes things go well in our lives and sometimes they don’t, but the wheel is always moving.  Everything passes.  As a previous post from a few years ago reminded me: This too shall pass.  It might pass like a kidney stone, but it will pass.

Getting to Where You’re Going

It’s been 13 years since my ex announced (by email) that he didn’t love me anymore and wanted a divorce. I was 60 years old at the time and I was completely floored.
A few years later, with my dear friend Vhairi, we decided to write about our experiences struggling through the pain and betrayal of divorce, totally unprepared for the aftermath, and wanting to share what we were learning along the way.
My last post was seven years ago. Life got busy as I began to emerge out of the darkness. I started my own freelance writing business, new grandchild, new dog, a couple of trips across Canada, and then Covid changed the world…but the real reason why I stopped posting is because I thought I had said all there was to say about getting through those early years. I had nothing left to offer.
Wrong.
Maybe the outwardly big things were settled. I had my own name back, had my routine, cleared the house of furniture, reminders of him, and made it MY home. It was MY life, and yet here I am again, back on the page, realizing that the struggles actually never stopped, that I am still feeling my way through life on my own. I have three adult children, six grandchildren (how fortunate am I!) and we are still juggling our relationships around the past, the now, and the future with the ex as the big ink blot in the middle. So many decisions to be made by myself, friendships that came and others that dissolved. It was naïve of me to think I was free and clear of it all. Or ever will be.
I’ve learned a lot and unlearned more, and I hope to write about some of this here on this blog. If anything helps any of you out there, even just knowing you are not alone, that will be good.
But true confession: it’s to help myself as well. I need to understand who I am and how I want to play out the years I have left. The stain of divorce will never be erased. I want to find a way to turn that stain into a joyful work of art, part of my story.
Please always feel free to comment, ask questions. We are on this journey together, and together we are strong.
Isobel