Do you remember the first time you saw the ocean? How it
just stretched on forever with not a hill, house, or tree to break the expanse?
How exciting and terrifying that felt--all that foreverness-- and how it made
you feel very small and very complete all at once? For me, this is the only
experience I have that feels the same as love.
I first learned love for myself from my mother. The
compliments she gave freely—on my writing, my eyebrows, my waist, my smile.
They are things I continue to love about myself to this day. As kind as she
was, she was easy to love in return, as if I had never known any differently.
Then came love for my first boyfriend. A love that felt
outside myself, crazy and new, like I wanted to be with him all the time but
would wait forever for him, too. It was all butterflies and the thrill of
anticipation. It was the same love I
felt years later for the man I would marry. A type of love that would mellow
into what we know lasts, an enduring love that is as much about the other person
as it is about yourself. A love that gets you through the days of too much work
and not enough money and dirty dishes and breaking cars. A love that is your soft place to land. A love
that feels, like the ocean, endless, that is abundantly passed onto your
children who are an extension of that love.
After my divorce thirteen years later, sudden and entirely
unexpected, I spent a dark period wondering if I ever knew what love was to
begin with. Coupled with some serious health issues I had with two of my
children, I felt acutely what a huge risk love is. For as much as we put into it, it can take
away as much. It can hurt. Oh, can it hurt. From that point, love had to be a
choice I actively made, knowing the risks but deciding the rewards were worth
it. I also had to learn to re-love myself during that time. After trusting,
naturally, so much of my worth to the care of my husband and feeling it end
with our marriage, I had to return to that shell of love my mother first gave
me: I have nice eyebrows. I have a nice waist. I have a nice smile. I can write.
I’m going to be ok. I'm going to be ok...
Love did return. For myself. For my life. It stretched
abundantly back into my dear children. It stretched into new friendships. It
even grew to allow me to forgive my ex-husband, whether he wanted it or not.
And then, five years later, it was ready to try again as I spoke those words,
“I love you” to the man I couldn’t imagine living without. Lucky me, he loved
me, too. He loved my children. I loved his. We were both scared, but the love
wouldn’t let us back away. It reminded us both of all that could go wrong. And
all that could go ever so right. So, we got married!
After a year of marriage, we have learned to be careful to
feed our love with time, patience, and trust. We know the numbers are stacked
against second marriages and blended families, but we are committed. We make a
point to befriend and learn from successful blended families we admire, ones
that are doing it so right you hardly know that they haven’t been together all
along. It is encouraging to hear from their experience and how they overcame
hiccups in the road. We also seek counsel from our church leaders, and would
feel comfortable also seeing a counselor if the need arose. There is a lot of
help out there and we gladly take it.
We are happy that our kids like each other and have strong
friendships (arguments and all), and as for them loving each other—we’re fine
waiting for life to build that emotion with time and trial. My husband still gives me
time to spend with just my children, and I with his, and we make a point to do
a lot of activities as a family. We are also cautious of the love our children
feel for our ex-spouses, their parent, and would never do anything to harm that.
The other day my nine year old asked me, “Mom, why are all
the songs I hear always about love, love love?!” Well, there’s a reason: It
makes the world go round. It makes the world fall apart. It makes you want to
squeal with joy and cry in agony. It goes on and on, but only if you let it. Things
I can’t explain to him now when I can hardly explain his math homework. He’ll
learn all about the complexities of love eventually. For now he knows he loves
me and Minecraft and big spoonfuls of Nutella. He covers his eyes during
kissing scenes in movies. When the time is right, I’ll take him to the ocean
and we’ll stand on the shore, waves lapping around our ankles, the sunlight
in our face, and we will just stare out until I know he’s feeling it too.
1 comment:
One of your best. ♥
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