A century of posts - something of a milestone, I guess ...
So, why this dramatic turnaround.
She, herself, called this a Buddha under the Bodhi tree moment - I had termed it a Damascene conversion.
There was an offer from our internet provider to create a little booklet of photographs. She asked me to make a little one up for our boy from his baby photographs - apparently he had been talking about this offer and looking at photographs from his childhood. She wanted me to make it a surprise.
So, I did and left it on his bed one morning. I saw him calmly put it on his mother's bedside table - she and I were still in separate rooms at the time. He did not appear excited.
I was going away for my annual golf week-end and asked my wife to try and find out if everything was ok.
I came back and she said all was good and that I would find out everything the following week-end - which happened to be Father's Day.
So, on the following Saturday, we have had our rapprochement and I am back in our room. Our son bounds onto the bed on the Sunday morning and he is clearly delighted with everything. He then hands me a little booklet - another one with photographs, addressed 'To Dad' and with pictures of him as a baby or him and me together.
Now, I had struggled to get him to sign a card for Mother's Day. Here he was taking the time to create a little book for me and getting his mum to order it for Father's Day.
In the evening he says to me, 'That book was my idea and there are no pictures of mum inside.'
'I know,' I reply. 'You are very brave and I thank you from the bottom of my heart.'
Was it that one moment which lit a light bulb? Did she see that she might lose her child as well as her husband?
The truth is, I don't know. Perhaps this was it, perhaps this was a trigger and a whole host of other assumptions and accusations came tumbling down. Again I do not know.
The point is, we now have a peaceful relationship, she and he are better and he can see that she and I are better.
How long will it last?
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Friday, 30 September 2016
Tuesday, 27 September 2016
99 – A Dramatic Turnaround
It is now September but let’s go back to the beginning of
June. Things have been civil, I am doing my own food, washing etc. and sleeping
in another room.
I go away for a week-end of golf with my friends – our 18th
year!!
I receive a text on the Sunday that she will pick me up from
the station on my return. I ask her not to bother – she insists and so I say ‘ok’.
Very pleasant.
Another week passes – nothing dramatic.
Coming up to Father’s Day and I am taking our son and two of
his mates to a gorilla sanctuary where we will be given a behind-the-scenes
tour thanks to one of my friends.
On the Saturday night she comes into my room and says, ‘Look,
I’ve been thinking hard. And I have come to the conclusion that all of it is my
fault. I have been pushing you and pushing you and I have not been reasonable.
‘I know it will not be easy to forgive and forget but come
back to the room, eat with us and try.’
She repeats all of this the next evening. As you may imagine,
this is late at night, I am working, and I am shocked. All I can say is ‘thank
you’ and ‘I need to think about it.’ Even the next day, having had to go into
work early, feeling that I need to acknowledge the issue in some way, all I can
write is, ‘Dear M, thank you for what you said yesterday evening. It was a bit
of a shock and, clearly, we do need to speak about it. But, can you give me
some time? I am also undertaking counselling at the moment – on a 1:1 – and
need to think this through.’
Her response:
‘Sorry for shocking you last night. Honestly I meant every
word I said and I have thought it through. I understand you will need the
time so there is no hurry...’
Me: ‘shocking’ in a good way …!
Her: ha ha.. take your time.. I will be there..
The
pleasantness has continued. She spoke to one of her friend’s mum who is an
amateur astrologer and told me that she had said that her ‘best connection’ was
with me. She is far better behaved with our son, everything pleasant at home for
the moment. She applied for a couple of jobs but has not yet been successful;
she is, though, starting a volunteering role.
Have
I gone back to her and told her what I am thinking?
I am
sorry to say, I have not. Perhaps that is because I am still confused. Perhaps
it is because I do not want to take a position and be too ‘clean’ in
responding.
We
have tried to get back to ‘normal.’ Planning holidays together. Even tried to
make love but, how can I put it, despite trying, I have not reached climax. Is there still a hang-up there?
I
think I know how I feel but that is for another post.
Some
sort of stasis – how long?
98 - Songs and Other Entries
Haven’t written in a while and there is a reason for this –
which is in the next post.
But our story is clearly not an uncommon one. As we were in
the midst of our terrible times, this song - Love
Yourself – by Justin Bieber kept coming on the radio. Never thought I would
be a Belieber!!
Is my wife in this place? Taking
me for granted
And do I feel like this? Sharing
the Load
Monday, 16 May 2016
97: Counselling Sessions - 2
I was advising a good friend of mine to try for some counselling sessions as mine have been helping me.
As I wrote earlier - http://dear-confidant.blogspot.co.uk/2016/05/94-counselling-sessions.html - there has been nothing revelatory. I think about things and work my way through issues and have had an answer for most questions posed.
But, the other day, one bit hit me - a little self-glorifying though it will sound.
We were talking about the circles radiating out from 'the Self' and who I rely on. Mainly that is me. But I mentioned that, in my perception, it is amongst my closest friends that I feel liked and loved simply for being 'me.' Everywhere else, it can feel as if my value is tied to what I do and provide.
And then she said, 'But what about you? Do you like yourself simply for being 'you'? Or do you feel you have do things to be seen positively in your eyes? Score runs when playing cricket, deliver better than others at work ... can you give yourself a break?'
Can I? Should I?
As I wrote earlier - http://dear-confidant.blogspot.co.uk/2016/05/94-counselling-sessions.html - there has been nothing revelatory. I think about things and work my way through issues and have had an answer for most questions posed.
But, the other day, one bit hit me - a little self-glorifying though it will sound.
We were talking about the circles radiating out from 'the Self' and who I rely on. Mainly that is me. But I mentioned that, in my perception, it is amongst my closest friends that I feel liked and loved simply for being 'me.' Everywhere else, it can feel as if my value is tied to what I do and provide.
And then she said, 'But what about you? Do you like yourself simply for being 'you'? Or do you feel you have do things to be seen positively in your eyes? Score runs when playing cricket, deliver better than others at work ... can you give yourself a break?'
Can I? Should I?
96: Champagne and Handshakes
Had a very nice evening out last week with a good friend S. –
a male, a male, not a female!!!
Dinner mainly consisted of a succession of glasses of champagne. Lovely.
He divorced from his first wife a few years ago and there
were startling parallels. She came from a ‘grand family’, she got a good degree
from a well known university, then an MBA from an international university.
They spent a few years internationally and when they came back to the UK
expected to walk into a senior role – which she did not.
Anyway, he did some counselling which he found helpful. In
fact they did joint counselling and the counsellor came to the conclusion that
the gap was too great. One of the first steps they took was to live in separate
rooms. Which is where we are now.
They did not have children and so, could separate easily.
The reason I cannot is of course my greatest blessing – our son.
‘It does get better,’ S. asserted. ‘And, if you ever want to
talk, I’m here …’
London – where we live – has a new Mayor. He was supposed to
visit our organisation last week and I was in the delegation to meet him and
shake his hand.
Other friends joked about it and said, ‘wow!’
She asked a series of questions: how many people are meeting
him? Are you just in a long line? Bit like the Queen? Not exactly useful …
Of course it would be ‘just a handshake’ but good to be
nominated as one of 20 out of 2000 and, at the least, why be negative about it?
95 - Funny (but sad) Little Reminders and Incidents
This will be really petty but things have been a little
heavy of late.
Preparing some bagel with cream cheese and salmon for our son.
‘Mama makes it better than you,’ says our son. ‘Fair enough,’ I respond,’but
mama is busy, so why don’t you help me to get it right?’ And I made no more of
it.
A little while later, She decides to make a point of
this.
‘So, I make bagel and salmon better than your dad?’ she
asks, looking triumphantly at me. ‘Yes,’ he responds, ‘but (without any
prompting from me by way of words or looks), dad makes better bacon sandwiches,
Bolognese, chicken …’
I do not respond or react but his response was interesting in
that he appeared to be defending me.
She and our son have this very frequent homework drama. She
is busy doing something else when he is doing his homework, doesn’t really help
him, then corrects late in the evening and ritual drama ensues around, ‘you
must take more care, look how long I am having to work because of you etc.’
I would probably let him make his careless mistakes so his
teacher could correct them and he would soon learn; now, he knows his mum will
correct him. Or, as I usually do when I sit down with him, correct as we go
along as I am focusing on him and his work.
So, anyway, he and I work through a work-sheet on Sunday
morning and she sits down to correct on Sunday evening. She does notice one
mistake I had missed but there are several others in another sheet.
‘Look, I thought you and baba had corrected these sheets but
I am finding lots of mistakes. And my show is starting on TV. If I had known
you had not, I would have done this earlier.’ (No, she would not have – history
attests to that!)
My son and I are both compelled to point out that the sheet
with several mistakes was completed under her supervision. There is a
half-hearted attempt at laying the blame with, ‘I thought you would check it.’
But she does not pursue that, knowing she was in the wrong.
This continuous need to be correct, better than another
rather than oneself, to search for blame … how is that the natural state?
Tuesday, 10 May 2016
94: Counselling Sessions
So, I’ve been going to counselling sessions for a few weeks
now. Nothing revelatory really but emerging is a picture of myself and my life that
is repetitive; somewhat alone, withdrawn, feeling not good enough but
self-reliant and finding positive reinforcement in a close group and trying to
do my best.
It is true that behind this bland exterior, I do commit to
things – whether they be friends, family, work or even a childhood hero. And
from a young age I have been ‘warned’ about this; ‘you’re getting too close to
X.’ Similarly, more recently I have been told that I go overboard, including the childhood (sporting) hero!
It did hurt terribly when my previous employer – with whom I
had started as a student and performed well – promised me a global role and
then took it away again – thus changing my life and my having to start again.
I have subsequently ‘invested’ heavily in trying to be a
good husband and a good dad. That is now being thrown back in my face as I
write in 92
- Struggling and Tired . There is a deep sadness in this, just as there was in being
made redundant, and the betrayal that I
feel leaves a hole.
But, actually, what is the point in doing otherwise? Of
never committing for fear of being rebuffed? Yes, it makes one vulnerable but
to half-commit and be polite is to live a half life – perhaps as I am doing
now.
The counsellor mentioned that perhaps I was committing a huge amount to
my son and that I would have to cope with him moving away. And I was thinking
about this on the train into work after the session. Bit of a tangent but a
sports writer called Simon Barnes wrote an article once about how boxing should
be banned. He countered the arguments which stated that sportsmen also get hurt
in other sports by saying that the deaths in them were accidents whereas the
very aim of boxing was to render hurt.
In the same way, perhaps we invest in work, friends, family
sometimes to draw them close and get love and support in return but sometimes
to help them move away. At a mundane level, many of my old team developed
professionally and grew out to bigger roles – that is a good thing; I had no
wish to bind them to me. Similarly, the whole objective for our son is that he
grows up to be a confident and kind young man who goes out with desire, ability
and support.
With our nearest we should feel secure and loved and trusted
– I do not, and there is no blame in this really. Perhaps I am a rubbish person
but I cannot be any better. For my son,
I hope I shall retain his love always, that he will remember me as a positive
influence and that I can always be the trampoline on which he can depend.
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