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True Life Stories: LETTING IT FLY
by Joyce Maynard
A note from Joyce:
This one first ran in the New York Times Lives column in 1997. It's about
an act of rage, but really, of course, it's about the grief and loss a
person carries (sometimes years after the event) over the death of a marriage.
Sometimes, when I'm writing (and when I'm lucky), I find that in the act
of telling one of my stories, I do not simply recount what took place.
I discover something I didn't know, that was going on. That happened when
I wrote this one, and found myself saying the line " the worst thing
about divorce is not what the other person does to you, or how he behaves,
but the strange and terrible behavior divorce produces in your own self."
Because this is not, in the end, a story about my ex-husband's crimes
against me (real or imagined) but about my own.
Seven years after
I separated from my childrens father it was still hard going back
to our old house. I knew that house so well, I could find my way around
in the dark. I knew where the wild trillium came up in the woods out back
of the garage and where the ladyslippers grew. I knew every knot in the
floorboards.
After my marriage
ended I moved to a small city, thirty miles from that house, and my children
continued to spend every other weekend with their father. Sundays were
designated my time to pick them up. Our children found some kind of rhythm,
transporting their brown paper grocery bags filled with clothes from one
house to the other and back again. But I'd rather have driven a hundred
miles in any other direction, than make that particular trip.
Usually when Id
get to our old house, my former husband would be there, standing in the
doorway. But one Sunday late last winter he and our older son had gone
off with friends so I was only picking up our younger boy, Willy. And
for the first time in ages, I stepped into my old kitchen.
A bitter taste rose
in my throat, like what happens when you think youre going to throw
up, but you dont. I stepped into the hallway and glanced at the
bed where all three of our babies were born. I went back in the kitchen,
ran my hand over the wood of the kitchen counter, where I must have prepared
a thousand meals, and looked out the window, to an eery and beautiful
streak of light from a full moon slashing across newfallen snow. I remembered
another full moon night, when my husband and I had skated on black ice
on the pond down the road, and another full moon night, when wed
fought so bitterly I paced the rooms of this house until dawn, lying down
briefly next to first one of my sleeping children, and then another, unable
to find sleep.
This wasnt
even close to the first time I felt that bitter taste: I had it the day
seven years ago that I drove a U-Haul filled with my belongings down this
driveway, the day I sat in a courtroom, hearing a guardian ad litem evaluate
my performance as a mother. I could have risen from my chair and put my
fist through a wall, that day. The surprise was discovering that years
later, the wild rage I felt in the early stages of divorce seemed to have
flared up again. Suddenly I felt the urge to paint graffiti on the walls,
smash dishes. Although if youd walked in the room at that moment
all you would have seen was a 42 year old woman looking out a window,
not saying a word.
Now comes the hard
part of this story. On the kitchen counter lay my ex-husbands screwgun.
I picked it up and palmed it as if it were a 45. I put it down again.
Picked it up and tucked it under my jacket and walked out the door.
Then, like a person
in a dream, I saw myself raising my arm the way my two sons have taught
me when were playing catch, and I let that screw gun fly. I watched
it land in a clump of snow-covered bushes. I walked back into the house
and called to my son. Time to go home.
By the time I got
back to my own house, I felt sick with shame and embarrassment at what
Id done. Monday morning I tried to work, but all I could think about
was this man I used to be married to, looking for his screw gun and realizing
that it had disappeared the same night Id come to his house when
he wasnt there. I saw his face, twisted into a mask of justifiable
rage.
Just after noon I
put on my jacket and headed out to my car. And as I drove it came to me
that the worst thing about divorce is not what the other person does to
you, or how he behaves, but the strange and terrible behavior divorce
produces in your own self. After an ugly divorce, someone who used to
love you reshapes his view of you into that of a hateful and monstrous
person. That Sunday night I turned into her.
As I turned the
final bend in the road leading up to my old house I saw with relief that
my ex-husbands car wasnt there. So I walked over to the clump
of bushes where Id thrown the gun. At first I couldnt spot
it.
Then I saw the handle,
just barely sticking up out of the snow. I dried the gun off on my shirt
and carried it onto the porch, where I set it on a table. I didnt
put it back where Id found it, because to do so, Id have to
enter the house. And it wasnt my house any more. I got back into
my car and drove away.
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