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True Life Stories:
THE STORIES WE TELL
by
Joyce Maynard
Added
on November 27, 2006
Seventeen years have passed
since my husband and I parted. Parted. There's a mild word for
you. Describing an event so full of rancor and pain that even a person
simply standing on the sidelines, taking in the scene, might have felt
the need to shield her gaze, the way we are told to do when viewing a
total eclipse of the sun.
But the bitterness
gradually subsided, to the point where I could tell the story without
the muscles of my face tightening into an ugly mask. My right eye no longer
twitches, as it did for one whole season, beginning around October 1989
and continuing all through the long and bitter winter that followed. I
seldom feel a need to talk about those days any more, (and in fact, when
I meet someone still freshly divorcing, and inhabiting that terrible place
where I once lived, I can spot the signs. When I do, I generally beat
a hasty retreat.)
I was once such a
person myself -- obsessively recounting, to my patient but no doubt weary
friends, the injustices, as I perceived them, of the man I'd once loved,
the father of my children, the one whose face was going to be the one
I looked at as I took my last breaths, if mine wasn't that, for him, first.
I have finally gotten
on with my life, as they say -- preferring to concern myself with the
present and the future, rather than dissecting the failures of the past
-- and things took a dramatic turn for the better when I began doing that.
Still, I am well acquainted with the plot of the story, as I told it,
easily a few hundred times. Title: My Divorce. Hero: Me.
Villain: My ex-husband. Unfortunate witnesses: Our children, aged
five, seven and eleven when the whole thing started. Now in their twenties,
having survived the whole mess, with their love of us both miraculously
intact.
I am a storyteller
by profession, so of course I got particularly good at telling this one.
When someone asked me, "how did your marriage end?" I had my
answer down.
We married young,
my husband and me, and with no shortage of passion going for us. He was
a painter. I was a newspaper reporter. We lived in New York City, but
yearned for a life in the country, a home, a family. In an era when young
women were more typically focused on career advancement and personal fulfillment,
I burned to be a parent, and gave birth to our first child (our daughter)
at age twenty four, almost a year to the day from the night of my first
date with her father. In the six years that followed, her two brothers
joined her.
So we had hardly
known what it was to be simply lovers and partners, before we became parents.
Before making the decision to marry and have babies, we had never explored
the question of who would take care of them, or who would pay the bills,
but how it worked out was that I kept writing magazine articles and books,
and he made beautiful art works nobody bought. We came up short a lot,
and when we did, I took on more work.
I told myself this
was OK with me, but it wasn't. I never even kidded myself that the other
part was acceptable: I took the martyr role as the main child care provider,
while he stepped in on occasion - here's a term no woman is ever
likely to use -- "to babysit." He played on a softball team,
went mountain biking. I stayed home with the children, and hauled them
off to his games. He had a six pack. I had stretch marks.
"When do I get
to go out and just have fun on a Saturday morning?" I asked him one
time.
"You wouldn't
know what to do with a day to yourself if you had one," he told me,
and as heartless as his words appeared, he was actually right.
We argued a lot about
that, and more. No doubt I was angry, resentful, bitter -- emotions I
expressed with tears, speeches, and sometimes with large and dramatic
demonstrations of frustration and rage. One time I held a pair of scissors
to one of my long braids, announcing, "I'm going to cut off my hair."
Once I upended a bottle of beer and poured it over my head. It was not
a particularly successful way to get my point across.
Finding time to do
our work was always a problem. Money was always a problem. Child care
was a problem. Sex was a problem. We communicated poorly. (I deluged him
with words. He gave me silence.)
He gave me a pressure
cooker for my birthday, when I wanted a nightgown, and flowers. He marked
our tenth anniversary by replastering and painting our bedroom, when I
wanted to go away someplace, other than our house. I accumulated my list
of grievances, and it was a long one.
We went to counseling,
without much success. We talked about separating, but were haunted by
the prospect of what a split might do to our children. At night, we kept
to our own sides of the mattress, and days went by sometimes, in which
we hardly spoke. I kept a postcard in my desk drawer, of that famous photograph
by Doisneau, showing a couple kissing in the Paris subway. I wanted to
be kissed like that.
In our twelfth year
of marriage -- when I was thirty five years old, and our youngest son
just five -- news came that my mother had been diagnosed with an inoperable
brain tumor, and I left home to take care of her during what would be
the last summer of her life. Before I took off, I hired two babysitters
to replace me. One was a married woman with two young children of her
own, hired to clean the house and do the shopping; the other (our longtime
teenage babysitter) was going to entertain everyone -- play games, go
on bike rides, take our kids bowling, provide the fun.
Partway through that
long and painful summer of caring for my mother, I came home to see my
family for a few days. Setting down my bags in the kitchen, I looked out
the window to the field behind our house, and saw my children playing.
And a few feet over, my husband and our beautiful young babysitter, looking
at each other and laughing in a way he and I had not done in a long time.
That night, when
I asked him about her, he didn't say much, but when I asked if he had
fallen in love with her, he didn't deny it. I told him I wanted to save
our marriage (for no better reason, I think now, than because another
loss at that moment seemed intolerable), he said he was done trying to
work things out. We'd been unhappy long enough.
So that fall, two hard things happened, within a week of each other. My
mother died. And I moved out of our house.
And though I concealed,
from our children, the part about our babysitter, all of this became a
part of the story I recounted to sympathetic friends.
"I was mistreated"
was my message, and of course, my friends (and the series of supportive-seeming
men who came into my life over the years) all agreed that this was so.
These other men would
do better, they suggested, and in many ways, many of them did, for a while
anyway. These men kissed me the way that couple on the postcard did, and
brought me flowers, and since we had no children together, there could
be no arguments about child care, or who paid for the orthodontist. But
though none of my relationships with any of these other men ended in the
manner that my marriage had, neither did any other of those men go on
to become my life partner. There are many ways, of course, for a relationship
to fail, and infidelity, or neglect, is only one.
Here's something
that happens, over the years, in the aftermath of a painful divorce. (There's
a redundancy for you. A divorce.) Maybe because the actual events
were so hard to live through, you stop revisiting them, and instead, you
revisit only the story you have come up with, to explain what happened.
The process is not unlike how the perceptions of our childhood and youth
come to be based less on actual memory than on photographs in the family
album -- memories of memories. In the same way, the story of how a marriage
played out, and most of all, how it ended, may be obscured by the story
we form to make sense of it.
I got mine down,
and I hauled it out many times over the years: the part about my having
to earn the money, the part about getting a pressure cooker for my birthday,
and a plastering job for our anniversary, the part about walking into
the house and seeing the plate of chocolate chip cookies on the table,
baked by the babysitter.
Among the stories
I recounted over the years, there was a little trilogy involving the births
of our children, in which, once again, the man I'd been married to took
the role of the bad guy. Our second child, our son Charlie, was born at
home, and because the birth had come on with extraordinary swiftness,
I had found myself about to deliver our son with the midwife still a half
hour's drive away, and nobody present but my husband. He had responded
to the situation by telling me he needed to step outside for a minute
and have a cigarette.
It was everything
a man shouldn't do with a woman in labor, and I had suffered it greatly.
The story didn't
even end with my son Charlie's birth, in fact. Two years later, I would
go on to say, I was once again giving birth. This time, my husband had
stayed at my side, for the birth of our third child, second son. This
time, nobody smoked. The trouble came after. The day after our youngest
son's birth, the very day of our daughter's sixth birthday party, she
took a fall on her new rollerblades and broke her arm. Two days after
that, my husband took off to attend an art show in Georgia for five days,
leaving me to care for a six year old in a cast, and a two year old and
a newborn.
But it was what happened
after that which formed the climactic moment in the story: he'd returned
home, just as the rescheduled birthday party was to take place. With twenty
children coming to our house next day, he'd left to go skiing -- making
the observation, as he departed, that I was always hard to deal with when
I was arranging a birthday party.
That afternoon, the
call came from the ski slope: he'd fallen badly, and not simply broken
his wrist, but shattered it. It was unclear whether my artist/athlete
husband would ever have the full use of that hand again.
In the end he did,
but only after expensive surgery that nearly bankrupted us, and months
of recuperation during which all of his energy had gone to physical therapy
and rehabilitation, with little left for our children, and nothing for
me.
I always say, when talking about the art of storytelling -- fiction or
nonfiction, either way -- that a crucial element is what you choose to
tell and what you leave out. The filmmaker establishes point of view simply
by placement of the camera: where to zoom in, how to light the actors,
what music will play on the soundtrack, even. Even with documentary, we're
not getting the whole story, ever. Only the story the director wants us
to see. Only the story, as he or she sees it.
It took me a long
time to admit this, but the same could be said of my own most well-known
oeuvre, The Divorce Saga. (Most well known to myself, anyway. The
one I've been telling for close to two decades now.)
The Greeks had their
mythology. I had mine. There comes a point when the story takes on a life
of its own, and it is hard to know the full truth anymore, if you ever
did.
I know now there
was another side of the story. When I told talked about the divorce, I
omitted this part. Not just to keep my listeners from considering certain
details, but more destructively, to keep them from my own scrutiny too.
It is the part my
former husband would spin -- if he were the type to regale sympathetic
listeners with a saga, himself, which he is not likely to do. And in this
one, I am a less heroic figure. Not simply a long-suffering victim, but
a woman who engaged in her own brand of hurtful behavior, inflicted wounds
on the marriage, as damaging perhaps as those of her partner.
Rewind to the spring when I was thirty one years old, the seventh year
of our marriage. Six weeks after my husband smashed his wrist -- seven
weeks after the birth of our third child -- I was on a highway coming
back from New York City late one Friday afternoon, with my infant son
in the seat beside me.
I'm sure I was feeling
neglected and put upon. I was tired from three long days of working in
the city, cleaning up manuscripts for a women's magazine. It was a job
I'd taken on, with a certain weariness and regret, as the medical bills
for the wrist operation piled up. For three days a month, now, I made
the round trip to New York City this way, to sit in an airless cubicle
and ghost write articles for a magazine designed to help women take charge
of their lives, even as my own spun more and more out of control.
Now the three days
were finished, I was heading home with my son (a nursing baby, he came
with me everywhere) and I was exhausted. And though I didn't tell myself
this, no doubt I was angry too.
Just as I reached
the New Haven exit, I remembered that this was the weekend of my husband's
tenth Yale reunion, and that a bunch of his old friends would be there.
The thought came to me to pull off the highway, have dinner, show off
our baby, before heading back on the road for the last few hours of the
drive home. But who knows, maybe I was thinking something else too. Maybe
I was enjoying the picture of getting, from my husband's classmates, a
kind of tenderness and support that had been lacking in my life with him,
for a while.
One of the people
in attendance at this reunion dinner was an old friend of my husband's,
whose wife had recently died of non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma at the age of thirty
one. He and I barely knew each other. We had met at the funeral, in fact,
only a few weeks earlier. He was my husband's friend, more than mine.
Now we sat together
at dinner, he and I. And in a way I only came to understand, years later,
we recognized each other: two lonely people, each one grieving a different
kind of loss and heartbreak. His was the death of the woman he loved.
Mine, the dream of the marriage I didn't have -- the kiss in the subway,
and the husband who would stay home and help with the birthday party,
rather than go skiing.
Over dinner, and
a glass of wine, we talked about our lives, with a kind of naked trust
I might not have possessed, if he weren't a new widower, and I, the mother
of a newborn son. Over dessert, and a second glass of wine, he asked if
he could hold my baby, and he did. By the time the meal was over, I knew
I was too tired, with too much wine in me, to drive back home that night,
so he walked me over to the dormitory where attendees at the reunion were
housed, to find me a room.
Then we were sitting
on a hard little single student cot, and then we were kissing. Then I
pulled out a drawer, from the dormitory bureau, and laid it on the floor,
with a folded up towel in the bottom, and set my baby son inside. Then
I lay down beside the young man, still raw with grief from his wife's
death, and spent the night with him.
In the morning, I
drove home to my family. At her school picnic later that day, I remember
my six year old daughter commenting on a red mark on my neck. It was where
the widower had kissed me, the night before.
My husband's widowed
classmate paid us a visit that summer, and when my husband suggested that
he might like to stay on for a while with us, nobody argued. All that
summer -- as my husband continued to rebuild his shattered wrist, and
I cared for our newborn baby, and my other two children -- it was the
widower who kept me company, coming along with me when I brought the children
to the beach, or preparing dinner.
On rare occasions,
we'd head out by ourselves to the waterfall down the road, or to a brook
I knew, in the woods behind our house. "Affair" strikes me as
an odd word for what took place that summer, but if my husband were telling
the story, he could call it that. Though the better terms for what going
on would be "betrayal," "abandonment." The very words
I later used, in my head, to describe what he had done to me.
When the summer ended,
the young widower returned to New York City, and slowly resumed his life.
I stayed in my lonely marriage -- lonely for us both, I now recognize.
The only indication that anything unusual had happened that summer lay
in how we never talked about it, how his friend's name never came up,
until the day -- a full two years later -- when my husband asked me, in
the middle of an argument, if something had been going on between me and
his friend that summer, and I told him yes.
We never spoke of
it again, until a few years after that, when our marriage was breaking
down for the last time, and we were in counseling, and I brought it up,
because he hadn't. Otherwise, the fact of my infidelity lay like a piece
of rotten food in the crisper drawer of the refrigerator, or a pair of
blood soaked gloves, in the back of a murderer's garage.
And when I think
back over the many small deaths it took, before our marriage was finally,
irretrievably, over, the events of what happened that long ago spring
and summer, with my husband's newly-bereaved friend, are as much a part
of the list as the one -- much more prominently featured over the years
of my storytelling -- about the night of Charlie's birth, and the broken
wrist on the ski slope, and the babysitter.
Selective editing.
It transforms the story, of course, and not just for the listeners. For
the teller, too. Because every time, over the years, that I recounted
my version of our divorce, I locked it more firmly in place, until it
was hard to remember what I had ever loved about this man, what had been
good, and what aspects of what had not been good were my fault, as much
or more than they were his.
Anger and bitterness
breeds more of the same. I look back with huge regret now, on the years
from age thirty five to forty eight or so, as having been filled with
a foolish and wasteful measure of self -- righteousness and blame. The
fact was, the man to whom I was once married, and I, both did a poor job
of treating each other with love, a poor job of being partners to each
other. We knew nothing of stepping outside of our own stories with sufficient
imagination and compassion to recognize what the other person's story
might have been.
Somewhere around
age fifty -- having lived longer divorced from him than I did, married
-- with our children in their twenties, and the son who was born the night
of that costly cigarette approaching the age his father was, the night
he said "Let's get married and have babies" -- something changed,
finally.
I was immersed, that
year, in writing the story of a woman my age who had murdered her husband
after a thirty year marriage. (With a hatchet, yet.) And so I was thinking
a lot about rage, and bitterness, and the stories we tell ourselves about
what was going on in our lives, that may be easier to stomach than the
truth.
The story of this
particular woman, the murderer, was that her husband had been abusing
her for years -- an idea only one of the couple's two adult sons supported,
while the other laid out a very different version of what had gone on
in their family all those years. And though I had entered into my exploration
of the tragedy with a certain predisposition to sympathize with the wife,
I ended up viewing her as a liar. Though I knew too, she probably believed
her own story, she'd been spinning it so long.
It was around this time that I found myself having a conversation with
a young woman going through a divorce -- and practically dripping with
bile, she was so angry at her children's father. The thought came to me
that I must have been a woman like her once, and I was ashamed.
I looked at my children
-- at how they loved their father, and at the kind of adults they'd become,
many aspects of which were easily attributable to him -- and because I
loved them so much, I had to love those parts of the man who'd produced
them. So many things about them -- the way they tackled demanding physical
endeavor, the unconventional eye they brought to the making of art, or
music, or the formation of ideas -- were things I had once loved about
him. Even the part of our life that had caused me so much grief in the
past -- the shakiness of our finances, over the years, and my husband's
role in that -- had, in some ways, contributed to a set of values in my
children that I felt proud of now: their refusal to view material success
and comfort as the measure of a person's worth, or to determine his or
her happiness.
I looked around,
at all the trouble people I loved were struggling with: health problems
and money problems, career disappointments, depression, ailing parents,
sadness over what was happening in so many parts of the planet -- and
the idea that I would still be sitting in a coffee shop somewhere, recounting
the story some injury inflicted over two decades back, seemed petty and
foolish and wasteful.
I was sick of my
story. And if I were truly to hold onto the habit of talking about it,
I knew, I would have to add the other part to my telling: the part that
I had played in the whole mess. The betrayal that was mine.
My children had evidently
forgiven me for the many years they'd lived through, of witnessing my
anger at their father. It seemed fair to forgive him, then. It had never
occurred to me before, but I needed his forgiveness back.
This wasn't a totally
new concept, I should add. Many times, over the years, I'd imagined a
scene in which some large and dramatic truce occurred between my children's
father and me -- something along the lines of the Japanese surrender aboard
the USS Missouri.
More than once, I
delivered some dramatic pronouncement: I won't talk about it any more.
One time, I concocted the plan that we might all of us get into a raft,
in class five rapids, and barrel down the American River together (or
cross the San Francisco Bay in a kayak, to Angel Island). If we could
traverse some large and chilly and even dangerous body of water, and reach
dry land, maybe then it would be over, I thought, though each of my plans
was rejected, ultimately, and wisely too, I suspect.
But when the sense
of forgiveness finally overtook me, I felt no need for large dramatic
gestures. I didn't call anyone up and talk about it. I did not notify
my ex husband that a change of attitude had occurred. It was enough to
know this was so.
There was a time,
when people asked why my marriage ended, when I used to say, "My
husband fell in love with our babysitter." But this was not the answer,
any more than it would have been the answer to tell them, "I had
an affair with his friend." It was never about the babysitter, or
about the young widower, or about the cigarette, or about his playing
softball and my folding laundry, or my earning the money and his not doing
that, or my failure to recognize -- as I do now, so many years later --
that plastering the bedroom, slowly, and carefully, by the old traditional
method, to mark your tenth anniversary, was in fact a beautiful gift.
And one I rejected.
Though in another
way, that was it precisely. What he offered, I didn't value. What I offered
back, he also missed. We were two people who loved each other, I think,
but we had such different ideas about how to express it. The other people
we sought out (both of them long gone from our lives now) were really
just a way of making the connection, somewhere, that we couldn't make
with each other.
I was in Michigan
recently, researching the book about the woman who murdered her husband,
and talking with a young man, age nineteen, who had loved and admired
the murdered man. This young man was debating whether or not to trust
me enough to participate in my book. So he had agreed to meet me at a
restaurant, for the purpose of putting a series of questions to me, he
said.
I had supposed he'd
be asking about my career, my previous books, my credentials as a journalist.
So it took me by surprise when this not particularly savvy or worldly
young man had begun his interview of me by asking, "Why did your
marriage end?"
It was a question
I'd considered a thousand times, of course, and one for which I'd supplied
abundant data, over the years, in coffee shops like this one, on a few
hundred blind dates and visits with friends. Now he was asking, I suppose,
as a way of assessing where my loyalties might lie in the story of this
particular disastrous marriage I was writing about. Maybe he wanted to
know if I'd been a battered wife, and therefore, inclined to sympathize
with a woman who claimed to be one, herself.
But the fact was,
his question left me without words. I sat there in the coffee shop, unable
to form a single sentence. Something about the openness and guilelessness
about this young man's face, and the simplicity of what he was asking,
made it unthinkable to haul out my old stories.
"We both screwed
up," I finally told him. Nothing particularly profound there, But
it was true.
Alright, he said.
Then, evidently believing my story, he told me his. And we moved on from
there.
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