One year
ago this week the world, as I knew it, began to crumble around me. The night I actually looked at the Verizon
bill and found the incredible number of texts to one phone number over two
months I realized that nothing would ever be the same. That same night I learned that he had
reconnected with his first love and had fallen in love with her again. My breath left me as the full weight of his
words hit … that he was having an emotional affair. I cannot explain the depth of emotions that I
battled daily.
I spent
hours, no, days riding waves of extreme sadness and unrelenting rage. I ran on my treadmill with such force during
these rage episodes that I blistered the bottom of both feet. Shame began to take over my every thought … “I
wasn’t enough for him” … “I wasn’t a good wife” … Sprinkled in there was a
question about his girlfriend … “why does she hate me, she’s never even met me?” I prayed relentlessly for God to save my
marriage. I asked God why He allowed me
to have a child if He knew my marriage was going to crumble… ‘God,’ I would
scream as I ran, ‘don’t allow this to happen!!
I will be a better Christian…’
The more pleading with God I did the worse I felt …
I obsessed
over the Verizon bills. Between 2:00 and
3:00 every morning I would wake up and check Verizon only to find that the text
count was even higher, by 100s of texts, than the last time I had checked. I was losing countless nights of sleep over
this. I never told my ex what I was
obsessing over, but I did finally ask him for help in battling this particular
demon … his advice was simple “get it fixed firmly in your mind, stare it down
& scream at it “You cannot control me” … “ I shouldn’t have been surprised that
it worked, but it did. I soon stopped
obsessing over the texts.
That
helped, but it didn’t stop the incredible sadness I felt. One day I was sitting at my desk,
sobbing. I was telling God how utterly
alone I felt in that moment and the calmest voice I have ever witnessed
whispered “hush, child, I am here” … and a peace fell over me, one that I can
scarcely explain. In that moment I knew
that I had been praying the wrong prayer.
It occurred to me that I had not control over this, so I started
incorporating “God, if it is Your will” and “Thy will be done in my marriage,
in our lives” into my prayers. While I
was still sad when I learned that he was moving out and that she was moving in
with him, the peace that I had found never left me.
I knew
that he had made his decision and for the sake of our son, my only choice was
to accept the decision and to let go with dignity. During the weeks between his decision to move
out and her moving in I became friends with her on Facebook and began to get to
know her better. She was going to be a
part of my son’s life, it was another fact I needed to accept. When the time came to meet her face to face,
I thought I was ready … but I wasn’t.
I met her
on a Friday morning when I dropped Mr. Man off at his dad’s … I made it through
the day, still filled with peace. I was
on my way home after work when I was hit by the extremely sad thought “why wasn’t
I good enough”. I had to pull over on
the road because the tears were flowing so hard. I couldn’t face her every morning without
that thought slamming me to the floor. I
appreciate that my ex allowed me more time to adjust to the new situation, but
I knew that I would have to face all of this eventually.
The world
told me that I was within my rights to harbor hard feelings toward this woman,
that it was ok for me to be angry, even that it would be understood if I hated
her ... But, my heart wasn’t built like
that … I didn’t know how to get past everything that had happened, I just knew
I had to. A thought occurred to me and
persisted for several days … I needed to begin to ask God to soften my heart,
to allow me to see both my ex and his girlfriend as God sees them.
I want to
share a verse I came across tonight that seems very timely and appropriate for
this installment:
Matthew 5:43-45New Living Translation (NLT)
43 “You
have heard the law that says, ‘Love your neighbor’[a] and hate your enemy.
44 But I say, love your enemies![b] Pray for those who persecute you!
45 In that way, you will be acting as true children of your Father in
heaven. For he gives his sunlight to both the evil and the good, and he sends
rain on the just and the unjust alike.
Over the
past year I have lost sight of this request a couple of times … but the bottom
line is that once I began to see these two people as God’s reflections of love,
regardless of how they may see themselves, I find greater peace in my life than
I thought possible. Anytime I begin to
experience feelings of resentment or animosity I am reminded that I am just as
human as either of them and if I deserve understanding and love, then so do
they. It’s pretty simple, really.