Addiction Is a Heartbreaker, Part II
(If you're seeing this post first, go back and read Part I before continuing on.)
A few days later, on my birthday, he texted me late in the
day: “Happy birthday. Hope you had a great day!”
Was he serious?
Sarcastic? I mean, I had an awful
day. Well-meaning co-workers kept asking
me about my special plans with my boyfriend!
I went for dinner and drinks with my mom and didn’t see the message
until late. I didn’t respond until the
following morning and all I said was “Thank you.” I’m not a jerk but I wasn’t taking the bait
either.
He also announced on Facebook a day later (he was still set
as a “priority” notification which I didn’t realize since he rarely uses
Facebook) that his endocrinologist said he was eligible for an insulin pump.
I’m sure he wanted me to see that, too.
A few days later, his sister-in-law texted me that she was
sorry to hear about it and if it was any consolation she and his brother had
broken up a few times (they’ve known each other since high school and have been
married for several years) and so had their (now-married-a-year) cousins. So if I needed to talk she was available.
After initially just thanking her, I wound up taking her up
on her offer a few weeks later. I hadn’t
heard from him and the whole thing just bothered me. I didn’t know how long a “pause” needed to be
or what one does in the meantime. My
counselor had been encouraging me to set a length of time for the “pause” and
let him know but I just kept starting to write an email and then scrapping it,
repeatedly. I met his SIL for coffee on
a Sunday afternoon. It basically
confirmed my fears.
He was still camped out on his parents’ sofa (she even witnessed a “ridiculous” fight over
the remote between her BIL and her FIL!).
He goes to work, goes to outpatient therapy, and goes back to their
sofa.
He had a frightening episode in the ER where he went in for
stomach pains and wound up in respiratory distress during prep for testing.
(That had me up in the middle of the night and in tears once that fully hit
me.)
He was pretty much right where I left him. No change.
About two weeks later, I finally worked out what I wanted to
say and emailed him the Friday before Thanksgiving. I told him that I was praying for him, I
cared about him, and I wanted him to have a good recovery. And I reminded him of everything he told me
he needed in order to have a good recovery. I reminded him he said how much he longed to
be married, and a father. If that’s still true and he still wants a
relationship with the person he said he was going to marry, he would have to
show me he’s interested and willing. I
was his biggest supporter and saw the amazing progress he made in treatment and
I knew he can do it if he wants. In the
interest of fairness to both of us, if after three months apart there’s no
indication of change or interest, then we go our separate ways.
I never received a response.
I don’t even know if he read it, even after I also mailed a (small,
nice) Thanksgiving card with a note saying I wrote an email and hoped he’d read
it. I endured a nightmare of a
Thanksgiving compounded by Younger Sister’s ending up in the ER after dinner
and hospitalized another day and a half (she’s fine; it was just cautionary
because she’s due with her first baby in March).
Well-intentioned relatives who didn’t know the news kept
asking where Chef was. I actually had started the week feeling more at peace
than I’d ever been, and after all the questions I thought I might lose it and
have to leave the dinner table.
Friday morning, my maiden aunt (in case you don’t know about
her here’s a typical exchange) called for an update on my sister which then
became a half-hour lecture welcoming to the Spinster Club.
I’m not there yet. In
fact, I resent her enthusiasm. (My mom joked that I should’ve pretended the
kitchen was on fire and I needed to hang up--I’m just not good at those
things. Mom is far more clever in dealing with her baby sister.)
But, I thought he was the love of my life. And it hurt to
find out from his SIL (we had coffee at the beginning of January) that in November,
probably even before I sent the email, he told his SIL, “When I was in rehab,
they said if you’re in a relationship and you go through it, your feelings might
change. So yeah, I guess my feelings changed.” It would’ve been nice for him to
inform me of that. Maybe it would also
be good of him to follow any of the other advice the counselors gave him, because he
really hasn’t done anything they advised for him to have a good recovery.
I have moments where I’m angry, because he went from “I love
you so much and I can’t wait to marry you” to nothing. Because I gave so much and he just took. Which was not like him during the majority of
our time together. And because our
relationship was his “normalcy,” and he threw it away.
He hurt me deeply.
I also have moments where I think about how he and his
family are still very sick. His parents
attended the same required counselor-led session I did before we could visit
Chef. In fact, his parents had more
counseling phone calls and meetings in addition to that.
And yet, when Chef got out of inpatient treatment, they all
went right back to the exact way of living they’d been doing before he went
in. Heck, before he admitted he’d
relapsed. It’s the addicted lifestyle,
only without the substances involved. That’s not really sober living. And I can’t be around it.
Part of me wonders if his mother prefers him this way so she
can control him. Or at least think she’s
being a great mother for doing so much for him that she believes will keep him
from using. I realized how much she had
done to keep me around—he was incapacitated and she was covering for him,
frequently cooking dinner on our “date nights” because he was too “tired”
(drinking) and “trying to save money” (I thought for a ring; now I know it all
went to his substance abuse). After she
turned down my repeated offers to go to meetings with me, I gave up. I left a final message asked her if she was
tired from having to do so much for him—wondering if she hadn’t done so much
for our relationship, where we’d be right now.
Maybe that was wrong to say and for all I know she told him what I said,
but I don’t care. It’s the truth. Whether they choose to believe it is up to
them.
And that makes me sorry for him, and angry with her.
But still, they’re all adults and have the power to make
choices. But maybe they’re blind to the
choices they’re making right now. Maybe
it would take a miracle for them to see that what they’re doing, isn’t working. Maybe it would take a miracle for him to
realize he made a huge mistake, throwing away the one thing in his life that
made sense.
Still, that realization would not be enough for me to take
him back. I want to be fair to
myself. I still long to be in a happy
marriage, and be a mom. I thought he
wanted to be married and a dad. He can’t
take any steps in that direction, because he is buried deep under a load of
mental illness--still hasn't gotten that insulin pump probably, because he's terrified to use it even though it would improve his life/health--and we need to go our separate ways. I cared about him, and I hope he gets better
someday. Maybe I just needed to be there
to be the catalyst to start him on that path--where unfortunately he seems to
be standing still--but I’ll be O.K. with that.
And while I’m scared that I wasted yet another two years of
possible childbearing (and for all I know these are my last years), I know that
there was a reason for all this and I’m trusting that God’s plan is beyond my
understanding—but also beyond anything I can design for myself. I’m not going to tell Him the way things
should be. Sure, I’ve complained that I
don’t deserve this. But I’ve also gone
to His Mother and reminded her (nicely) of that novena I prayed in July and
that she needs to finish what she’s started.
And that I’ve placed Chef in her hands.
I can’t do any more for him now. I
am grateful we had some good times. That
he was there for me when my grandfather and The Cat passed away, and that I had
someone to dance with at my sister’s wedding.
Now, I’ve closed the door and walked away.
In the meantime, I started sleeping through the night
again. (And if I can’t sleep, there’s a
rosary nearby for me to pick up and pray myself back to sleep, asking Mary to
handle my anxieties for me.) I finally
bought a (new-ish) car to replace my ailing 14yo one, I’m still teaching close
to 600 children every week, and at the beginning of December I even went on a
Christmas tour of Philadelphia with some co-workers. (All of whom asked about Chef, of
course. It hurt at first, but in the end
it created some closeness with them that I’ve been longing to have since I
started my third year working there.)
I’m cleaning out my apartment, trying new recipes, and hosted a kick-ass
baby shower for Younger Sister. As much
as it is painful to feel left behind again—because I’d hoped I’d at least be
planning my wedding before she had her first baby, and my photo at my parents’
house wouldn’t be on a separate table in the living room because the photos of
my siblings are from their respective weddings (I’m trying to not to take it
personally, because I’m sure it was purely subconscious and unintentional on
Mom’s part)—I’m looking forward to having a new niece or nephew in a few weeks.
I’m also giving serious thought to adopting a cat after over
a year without my dear Cat.
Not that I’m giving in to the “unmarried Cat Lady” thing. However, it is difficult to come home to a
lifeless apartment. I’m continuing to
connect with other people. I joined my
friend’s trivia team and we won a tournament last month with plans to play in another
one this month. I’m having drinks after school tomorrow with
one of the Kindergarten teachers. And I’m
trying to give back—at least attempting to—joined the board of a local symphony
with Library Elf; ran for a seat on the
board of directors with the state school librarians’ association. (The latter one is iffy. While I was flattered to be asked, when the election
email came out I saw three other people running for the two open spots. . . and
I was the only one who didn’t use his/her official school photo and instead had
a friendlier, more relaxed one in front of my library’s shelves. I feel like a foil. And a bit of a fool. But I guess I’ll find out
in about a week if it worked in my favor.)
I also have hope that God didn’t plant this deep longing in
my heart to have a family of my own, only to leave it unsatisfied. I have re-read Meeting Your Half-Orange. I
have revised my “Big Love List” (actually a poster that hangs over my bed.
Under the crucifix). I’ve put my health
on the front burner because some lingering problems from diverticulitis need to
go away. I’m working on getting back to
the good place in my life that I felt I’d been in at the time Chef walked over
to my restaurant table and said hello.
Possibly even a better place.
And from time to time, I take a moment and imagine how I
want to feel in a great, honest, giving relationship with a very good man who
wants the same things I do--what we’ll say to each other, what we’ll do
together, what we’ll plan and hope for together. And I pray I’ll be able to identify that man
when he arrives. For real.
Comments
Also...your mention of trivia reminded me of the night we played trivia together when I was in Philadelphia. I had a great time, and since then I've started going to some trivia nights myself. Sadly, I've never found a team as good as yours!
You're doing trivia? That's awesome! Are they asking any medical or anatomy questions???
Just went to a big tournament with some friends on Saturday night. It was tough but we aced the music round and achieved a respectable 7th place. And it was "British Invasion" themed so it was a lot of fun.