10 May 2007

I sorta alluded to some of this a couple of posts ago. I sometimes feel like there's all this "stuff," important, sad stuff that's happened in my life, stuff that I'm just not talking about. And it seems like I somehow need to talk about it. I think that just avoiding it, or acting like it's unspeakable makes it more damaging. And really, why not talk about it? I think I'm just somehow protecting people who don't care about me. Here's an example: just over three years ago, I didn't get married. I was engaged, and J. waited to decide that he didn't want to marry me, waited until the last possible second. Seriously. He waited until there we were, in front of our families, in this public forum to say, "Oh sorry--don't want to marry you after all." OK, that was a paraphrase, but you get the idea. I suppose it would be more accurate to put it this way: he said something like this, as he dropped the ring he was supposed to put on my finger: "I'm really sorry, but I just can't do this." What he said isn't my point however; my point is that he chose to do it in a very public and thus extra humiliating fashion. He chose not to deal with me; he broke up with me, in front of, like, 50 people. But here's the part that I'm getting to. A week or so later, when I told some colleagues of both of ours that we didn't get married after all because he changed his mind, he got all bent out of shape. He got mad and told me that I had not right to tell people, especially people with whom he had a professional relationship, as did I, that it was his decision. That, he said, was too much personal disclosure. So that made me really angry. I mean come on! One: it was his decision, and I didn't want the additional pain of having my character called into question as the one who didn't keep commitments. Two: he did it in this oddly public way anyhow. I mean, after that, I think that any reasonable expectation of privacy was gone anyway.

The more I write about this whole situation, the more I feel absolutely disgusted with J. He'd be horrified, I think, that I'm posting this publicly, and I'm proud to say that I've gotten to the point (finally!) that I really don't care. It's somehow therapeutic and helpful for me to say it all publicly. The more I think about how he dealt with the situation and what he's done since (he lives with his mom. He's 35 and lives with his mom, not because he has to for any reason, but just because he's kinda pathetic like that). . . oh, the more I think about what he's done since, the more I just feel really, really sorry for him. And so there it is: I was in love with a pathetic loser. He was the love of my life. And I'm sure that I'll never be quite the same. But still, at least I've moved on and actually have a life of my own. Oh, his mom's quite wonderful, but that's not really the point. I've found a career that's mostly fulfilling and that I'm mostly successful at. I've forged other meaningful relationships. I have friends. I have interests outside of work. I guess I don't know where I'm going with all this, just that I need to get it out.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

My Dear Drennan,
You say you'll never be the same - I maintain you are and will be better! Now, just go ahead and blog about "C" if it makes you feel better or, if in the words of the other C,it will be funny! Yikes, I guess I have been watching too much Dr. Phil, because referring to "C" as "C" makes me think of the so-called "C word" (which I didn't even know)often thrown around by guests on his show. Can we just refer to "C" as "the C word". It could alternately mean "creepy", "crazy",
"crappy", "cruel", "cheater",
"corrupt", "contaminator", "catastrophic calamity" - you get the picture!
Love, Mom

Anonymous said...

Having gone through a messy public thing myself, yeah, everything is up for grabs. It's your life. Speak as you wish. It's quite therapeutic. The other party has lost all right to normal discretion with the humiliating public breakup. Plus, it feels good to dish.

gocarcarcar said...

i love love mom's list of c's. especially being one myself hehe.

since we talked about the whole public/private thing i'm so glad you did. i could feel some theraputic purging just reading that. and the thing that strikes me is that j. did this really crappy thing to you and then somehow made you apologetic about it and then banned you from expressing any kind of emotion about it. like what he did was so awful and he knew it so you couldn't possibly expect him to be accountable. total crap! another c!

anyhow, let it go.

and no, you won't be the same--but a smarter, sassier version of you. who has in so many ways that you dont even begin to give yourself credit for--moved on and up!

and as o. says: i heart you! (he's actually saying it now while he gives me a dump truck) so although i have no motor vehicles to share i send some heart!

c.

gocarcarcar said...

oh i mean "let it go" in this write freely and you go girl kind of way not in the "just let it go" get over it kind of way.

just clarifying. another c.

c

Zee said...

Wait a minute! What about the TIME HONORED "all's fair in love and war" rule?

In fact, you get BOTH. Love (well, it was?) and war (disagreement via metaphoric hyperbole -- my fav).

Words of More Depression?
Wimps at Mixing Deception?

I dunno.
But, my point is... NO RULES!!

I suppose we could go back to the Four Agreements which I sort of like, as "rules" go. As long as you are impeccable with your word (and I'm assuming the wedding break up scenario is true and factual), you get to say whatever you like.

And he... initial-et-al.. needs to apply the "never take anything personally" part of the rulebook.

I find that one very hard, but essential to living a mellow life.

Summer's here and the time is right
for dancing in the street.