Commitment.

This journal entry was written on 11 July 2007.

Marriage is commitment. That’s the defining difference between it and other types of relationships. When you marry, you commit to travel through the rest of your lives together. You commit to doing everything in your power to work through the turbulent times and the times where you really don’t like each other.

That’s why I’ve been hurting. We committed to spend the rest of our lives together. We brought both our biological and our chosen families to witness and participate in a ceremony that strengthened our bond and announced before the world just how serious we were about staying together.

So certain were we that we gave those families a modicum of control over that relationship. We gave them each their knot, representing our union. If our union were to end, every knot-holder would have to be convinced to untie it. Every memory of those so important to us would have to be confronted, and would have to know the full truth of whatever situation it was that would be immense enough to drive us apart.

We involved our community.

At the end of those six months, you were ready to divorce me, to hell with the knots. You had acted to me as if nothing were wrong. You had gone through the motions of love with someone that you were no longer sure that you loved. Maybe I didn’t see it because I didn’t want to see it. Maybe I felt secure in our relationship, so secure that I took it for granted. It seems a possibility; I was operating under the idea that we had committed to spending our lives together.

Now, you have told me that to be true to yourself, you must express your love for another. You have, by your own choosing, suppressed this since you had an inkling of it, before we were married. This is where my brain has been forced to consider the abstract. I knew that some quality of marriage made this situation unreasonable, but I could not grasp it. I considered the pros and the cons, both emotionally and intellectually. I could see both sides, as I’ve told you before, and it didn’t help. Nothing in the abstract helped me to decide whether or not I could handle this.

If you and I have committed to spend the rest of our lives together, this situation makes no sense. You and I should be together by default, no matter what, and the question should be whether you get involved with her or not. The default should not be that you and she will be together, and the question should not be whether you and I will remain married.

There is something broken in our relationship. I have problems trusting you, because you have deceived me. I have problems with your driving and your attitude about car insurance because they continually add stress and problems that never needed to be there. I have had problems (up until very recently) with your habit of not doing what you say that you are going to do – living room, bathroom, front yard, bills, dishes.

These things can be worked out.

You had a laundry list at the end of those six months. I, and we, have worked much of that out. I’m sure that there are still things that do not make it easy to be my wife.

These things can be worked out.

You are being more honest with yourself than you have ever been, and that makes me ecstatic. I have been more honest with myself than I have ever been, and that makes me proud. I have thought about how much easier it would be for me to live alone. I have been tempted by it. I’ve realized – in a flash that felt like getting hit by a bus – that I really, truly, and completely want to be your husband. That clarified things for me and gave me orientation.

I am still committed to spending the rest of my life with you.

I have asked myself, if this were in the situation that seemed correct, if our marriage were going to be there no matter what, and you wanted to express your love for another freely, physically, how would I react? Immediately, I knew that I would be totally against it. This is not something that I would be able to deal with under “normal” circumstances. That leads me to the belief that the only reason that I am considering this is because of your threat to leave.

But we haven’t been that committed to each other since those six months. How can I see our commitment as stable, or as reliable, when you were going to ignore the knots completely? What do the knots mean now? Why do we even keep them?

I want for us to be at a place where they mean something. I want our commitment to each other to be strong again. I want our marriage to be the “of course” when we think about ourselves in the world.

I don’t want you to go, but I don’t think that I am ready to share you. I don’t know that I ever will be. If this is immense enough to break us apart, I ask you to have the knots untied. If it is important enough to you, then it is worth confronting our families about, both biological and chosen.

She texted me the other day, pestering me about meeting to sign papers. How ironic. They’re signed, and I file tomorrow, assuming that my forms are all in order.

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Checklist update.

Done:

  • All of the knots are untied.
  • Divorce filing forms are copied, awaiting practice run.
  • The house.
  • Getting copy of marriage certificate.
  • Practice run of paperwork.
  • Meeting with her for paperwork.
  • Typing up paperwork.

Currently in motion:

  • Signatures on paperwork.

Next steps:

  • Filing paperwork.
  • Court date.
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Ruminating about subjective realities.

The rough draft was completed on Sunday night. I met with her yesterday, and she filled in some information, and corrected others.

She’s keeping my last name, because she doesn’t want to be associated with her father.

If I had the choice, I’d not let that happen, I think. I offered my name to her when I proposed. She’s not part of my family line, and has purposefully removed herself from being my family. There are plenty of other names to choose from. But she gets to keep the name. The only response I could think of – “That’s your choice.”

We talked for about an hour. She finally seems to be getting hit by this, emotionally. I’m finding it difficult to feel compassion… as I told her, she disappeared. I’ve been doing this without her, and I’m willing to keep doing this without her. She removed herself from my life, and now she wants back in. I’m not sure that I want her back in.

I’m nearly certain that it’s a bad idea to let her back in my life right now.

George and Lauren think I just need to give it time, and then I’ll know how I feel. They say that it’s finally real to her, where it’s been real to me since the day she took off her ring. The changing reasons for the divorce, the dropping off the face of the earth, the passive-aggressive attacks, and the repeated dishonesty about why we were meeting, or what she’d gotten done and hadn’t gotten done… these things were all very real to me, and still are.

But it’s just dawning on her.

About goddamn time.

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Three weeks before I move out.

Last night, I threw my untied knot into a bonfire.

It followed a rectangle of denim with the words “Te Amo” sewed into it.

One of my circles of friends… some of my chosen family… cheered me on.

Today, my parents were coming through town while I was just waking up. I turned down lunch, as I thought Nikki would be making me breakfast. Nope, I had promised her Fleetwood’s famous hippie hash. While getting our food, I ran into my father-in-law, and then (separately, but at the same restaurant) Jody, my mother-in-law. Also, her best friend, who was last in the country to commemorate my grandmother-in-law’s death. I chatted for a bit, and then zipped out of there, as my food and I had already taken quite some time to be united.

Both interactions shocked me, for some reason. Both unsettled me, and triggered my flight instinct. I wanted to run and hide, though I did stay and chat with the in-laws. Something about all of this made me want to hide my face, or feel ashamed, even though I’ve done nothing wrong. How do I relate to Bill now? How do I relate to Jody? To Brandy? To John? To my own parents? To my brother?

How do I look them in the eye when they’re up here for my brithday? How do I feel, and express that I’m feeling, that I haven’t failed? Which, of course, I haven’t.

Of course, writing projects are flourishing, deadlines are being assigned (who thought I’d cheer for deadlines?), and I love my day job. I am in my apartment, I’m not second-guessing whether or not I’ll be there for the semi-long-term, and I dig the place. I’m even mulling over painting. Which, knowing me, will happen three weeks before I move out.

It’s been days since I’ve had the copy of the marriage license. I haven’t filled out the test run of the paperwork yet. Granted, it’s small-scale avoidance, but it’s still there. So, right now, I’m going to go and do that. And I have Nikki backing me up, which makes it somehow… less daunting.

Still scary as hell.

Checklist update.

Done:

  • All of the knots are untied.
  • Divorce filing forms are copied, awaiting practice run.
  • The house.
  • Getting copy of marriage certificate.

Currently in motion:

  • Practice run of paperwork.

Next steps:

  • Typing up paperwork.
  • Meeting with her for paperwork.
  • Court date.
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I'm on it like Boba Fett on Han Solo.

George tells me that I will feel free once those papers are signed. He says that I will feel like a mountain has been lifted off my shoulders.

My mood lows, my emotional troughs, are more frequent than they used to be. It’s hard to admit this, for a plethora of reasons. Escape works, for a short time. Netflix has been a wonderful provider of fictional worlds to escape into. Heroes, Stargate SG-1 and Atlantis, Battlestar Galactica, movies… I can go home and not think for two hours. Better yet, I wake up with vague impressions about dreaming about what I watched.

The alternative is waking up dreaming about family, dreaming about her – always with the theme of betrayal – and I, or dreaming about panic.

I haven’t yet dreamed about the new job. I take that as a sign that for once, my job is not a high contributor to the stress in my life.

The companionship and welcome and, most importantly, love, that I’ve found in Nikki helps more than the escape does. It elevates the baseline, so to speak. I can never hit those really low lows. I can still have a trough, and I still think about the stuff that stresses me, but when I start to nosedive, I hit a net instead of the craggy bottom. I can shake myself loose of whatever’s pulling me down, and start the climb up again.

I’m not going to conventions, because of debt. More accurately, I’ve made the choice to pay back debt, even the stuff that springs up and catches me unawares, before I can allow myself my mini-vacations. The point of going to them isn’t to sell books -at- the con. It’s to get your name out there, get a few people to buy them, or get interested in them, and make sure you’re known in the community. If someone recognizes your name, they are much more likely to buy your book.

That said, I’m missing my favorite convention this year, and it’s adding to the low. Add to that the undeniable pattern of me avoiding writing. Yes, I admit it. I am avoiding writing, and I’ve been doing it for a while. I know why, too.

She used to call my novel prophetic. It was a running gag that was sort of a half-joke. Spiritual apocalypses are always attractive to those of us in seeming “counter-cultures,” and so it stuck. It ended up being true, though to say how or why would ruin the ending for those that haven’t read it. Prophecy seems to fulfill itself in the most strange an unexpected ways, eh? Maybe it was self-fulfilling prophecy, in that she read it, and followed it in that way. Who knows?

Much like fear almost drove me away from Nikki, fear is driving me away from writing. It’s making the purple felt notebook (a gift, but a shiny one) into an obelisk that I’m afraid to go up and touch. I’m fairly certain that the notebook may also have the dimensions consisting of a ratio of prime numbers, but my ruler is at home.

Writing is my vent. It’s the release valve for when the steam pressure rises to critical levels. I can release my darker side into the Steven comic (no, Herod is not my dark side). I’m hoping to release my ideas for new beginnings into the upcoming webcomic project. Also, it has robots. That have been asleep for an undetermined amount of time. I haven’t bothered to find out if this is related to my affinity for old computer tech. Adam…. Adam is run by fear. It’s his bread and butter, his english muffin, if you will. So, Adam is where I put my fear. I’m no longer sure what I’m putting into the sequel of my novel, because… well, because of the ending of the first one.

I need to stop being afraid of my writing. I stopped being afraid of being with Nikki by breaking up with her, realizing what I’d done, and being thankful that she took me back. I don’t want to break up with my writing. I’ve taken a long enough break. I need a new tactic.

Checklist update.

So, she lied to me about getting her stuff out of the house. She lied to me when she said she’d filed – on a Friday, but they’d told her it would take effect on Monday. None of that actually happened.

She hasn’t filed yet. Checklist says… order copy of marriage license from Washtenaw County. Done and done.

She hasn’t gotten her stuff out of the house, and she hasn’t cleaned out the fridge in the house.
Well, I’ve already been waiting for a reply from the mortgage company. Wait, what’s this? Breaking news, there’s a lock-box on the front door of the house, and the back door is barricaded. I’ve also gotten a confirmation notice that a new insurance policy has been taken out on the house, and they’d received the paperwork. So, either this is my answer – say goodbye to the house – or they just noticed that it was vacant, and are taking the normal steps. In either case, unless she breaks in, *headdesk* her stuff is now inaccessible to her.

So, now, I’m back (still?) in limbo with the house. At least I can make progress on the divorce.

Oh, and the dog? Brandy has him, in a rented house. I have to make time to go over and see him. I’m relieved that poor planning and last-minute flailing didn’t end him up in the pound.

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