The Garden Gnome |
I
awake to the feeling of a fat baby. Not an infant but a nice study
nine-month-old who drools and smiles winningly at me. I have been holding him, my
body is relaxed and my spirit is calm and blissful as the little cherub’s
chunkiness swims in and out of my consciousness.
Immediately I remember that my boys are not here; they are with their biological father in another house on the other side of this little valley where we returned after six years at the wet coast, during which time the previous nuclear unit we were imploded and we separated. But all was not lost as we uncoupled and re-formed very nicely, behaving ourselves with an impunity that now elicits amazement when other people hear about it. Upon learning (from the horse’s mouth) that my previous partner, the father of my two sons, was leaving me for another woman, I felt immediate relief and did not, as he remarked gratefully a little later, throw a cast iron sauce pan at him—that was a bit of an inside joke, for we had a friend whose illustrious, mayor-of-Hinton grandmother had done so to her husband, for less reason, it seems.
Immediately I remember that my boys are not here; they are with their biological father in another house on the other side of this little valley where we returned after six years at the wet coast, during which time the previous nuclear unit we were imploded and we separated. But all was not lost as we uncoupled and re-formed very nicely, behaving ourselves with an impunity that now elicits amazement when other people hear about it. Upon learning (from the horse’s mouth) that my previous partner, the father of my two sons, was leaving me for another woman, I felt immediate relief and did not, as he remarked gratefully a little later, throw a cast iron sauce pan at him—that was a bit of an inside joke, for we had a friend whose illustrious, mayor-of-Hinton grandmother had done so to her husband, for less reason, it seems.
Yes, I felt relieved. For so many
reasons, which all boil down to my soul’s unhappiness with us as a couple, with
him as a father, with the patriarchy in general, and the nuclear family unit as
a ridiculous attempt to thwart the desires of women. But I digress.
This
morning, as the pale, colourless sky defines itself into bleached denim (a hue
my jeans seemed to achieve back in the seventies, though now they rip and fall
to pieces when they’re still dark blue) and the rocky mountain peaks emerge
from rose-tinged clouds, snow covered—it’s only the last day of March—I orient
myself to a childless day and consider the possibilities before me. Every other
week is like this. My friend Rosemary keeps track, and calls me for hikes when
the children are not here.
See the world through the eyes of a child |
For a long, long time I had a
really hard time with this—with having a good day when the children were not
with me. Their warm bodies—their living, breathing physicality—steadied me so
enormously (and much to my surprise, for I had always thought that babies would
be a.) the last thing on earth I’d get around to doing and be.) be a lot like
cats, easy to deal with on my terms) that after Primo was born I oriented
myself into motherhood with a righteous passion. You might say I had got the
call. I busied myself quite thoroughly with mothering, had another, a brother
for the first, and found such deep satisfaction in caring for these creatures,
that all else quite literally dissolved and fell away.
And so did I.
The separation was a wake up
call, obviously. But I was motivated to move forward in a healthy way, keeping
the well-being of the children in mind as I navigated the waters of, well,
moving forward. Now, almost seven years into this version of family life, a
life where the boys move between two households, and two sets of loving
parents, this is the new normal.
Grandma Mabel |
But what is not normal is my own
well-being. For though I was relieved that the couple thing was done, my heart broke
over the separation from Primo and Secundo.
It never—and still does not—felt
right when they weren’t with me. Primo was four and Secundo was one when they
started sleeping at another home. The very first night at their dad’s house was
treated as a sleepover. Their Grandma Mabel had come to help out and I slept
there too—how civilized. We had pancakes in the morning and the boys climbed up
and down the steep staircase of their new Fernwood home in one of Victoria’s
character houses, Primo a pro, Secundo laboriously and very carefully climbing
what seemed like Everest to him.
Becoming acclimatized to
separation from my children was my own Everest. Living in a mountain town where
emotional challenges pale in comparison to actual exploits, I have often,
silently, compared my journey to an epic expedition. For I have steadily toiled
upward on my quest to acceptance, though storms and avalanches and every kind
of obstacle have threatened to abort my mission. (Just not six weeks ago I
phoned him and asked (in tears) couldn’t I have the boys more?) I really hate
it when they’re not with me.
He gently—even kindly—said no,
and sorry. And I didn’t hate him (any more than usual) because I’ve always
managed to love him. Just because I didn’t want to be a couple with him, never
meant I stopped caring for him. At some points he felt like my teenage son, or
a brother gone a bit bad. Quite simply, he is a member of my extended family;
our relationship is very much defined by twenty-first century mores: we are
friendly and businesslike, and we have a history, though I rarely dwell on it.
But I’m able to co-parent well with him because I do know him so well. His and
my DNA live on in our boys, daily becoming more apparent as they mature, and
bits of them—which are so obviously bits of us—emerge and manifest as
fascinating genetic permutations of our egg and sperm come to life in the form
of these humans we created, who are at once foreign and familiar.
The other day I met a woman who
is sad. She’s just started her own journey toward herself, a self she left
behind at seventeen when she had her first child. Now, half a lifetime later,
she’s left the husband she met as a teenager and, head up to the wind is
wondering what’s next. When I hugged her and said, Let those tears out out, she
replied, There’s too much in there, I’ll never stop if I start.
I cried for six years once, I
told her.
Sometimes you just have to trust
that you will make it through. And you just have to start.
This morning I honour my friends
who are trying—and crying (you know who you are). I honour the moms and dads
who are just starting to navigate the turbulence of separation and divorce with
children. I honour your struggles, your fears, your anger, and your best
attempts at moving forward. I honour how hard it is to remain yoked to that
partner that you’re so happy to have left. I honour the mistakes made in the
confusion of the loss of love, in the grief of dissolving your shared hopes and
dreams, and in the strange and bizarre grip that anger has in keeping you
connected when it’s too hard to admit that, yes, you still love this person,
but no, you can’t be together any more.
I hope you wake up one spring day
and see the bluebird sky outside as the pinnacle of potential, and that your
broken heart heals, as mine has. I hope you can find the strength to work hard
at your stuff, stop blaming the other, and come out the other side as a mom or
dad whose legacy to their children helps them learn. I hope you can be the
peace you want for the world, and model for your children behaviour that
teaches them how to move through the world like it’s a healthy place for them
to inherit.
2 comments:
Hi there Kat,
You don't know me, though I took yoga classes from you in Canmore, years ago, like in 2003. I found the story of you and your family many years ago as well, when I was living on the Sunshine Coast. Now, through some serendipity (and a link from Janice Tanton's blog) I have found you again and I just want to say thank you - I am now going through a separation and your most recent post couldn't have hit closer to home. I have a 7 year old. I'm thinking about moving back to Canmore as I still have family there. Maybe we'll cross paths...Blessings, Christine.
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