The Author Wants You to Know...
"I cried the night before he proposed because I didn't feel love..."
For me, freedom began with betrayal. Self-betrayal to be more specific. And that self-betrayal grew and grew over many years, leading to the betrayal of others out of survival. The call to live a life of being true to myself started so softly, and grew and grew like a pit in my stomach. Reversing the betrayal would mean pain. Pain for myself and for the ones I loved most in this life. But understanding that self-betrayal creates a longer burning pain with bigger consequences, I knew what I had to do.
At the age of 23, I discovered I was pregnant. It was the result of a rare drunken night, the father being very much sober. I was in no state to consent. These days they would probably call that rape but in 2004, it was a bad decision on my part. The father skirted all responsibility and I faced the very hard decision of what to do as a first year grad student with a hard core religious upbringing.
Inevitably, I ended up dropping out of school and moving home as a self-perceived failure at life, wearing the shame publicly in the form of a growing belly. I was so angry. I was angry at the father’s ability to run from the situation. I couldn’t run from my own body. I took a job that I hated, because that was the responsible thing to do. I met a very nice man at that job and we became very good friends. Underlying the friendship was a pity for the other and meeting a need in ourselves. The baby came. We went from suddenly being friends to family. And now here I had a very good man who was kind and hard-working, wanting to marry me. It was a fairy tale ending. The unwed mother was saved by a man who was willing to raise a child that wasn’t biologically his. Who could turn down such an offer?
I cried the night before he proposed because I didn't feel love, but that didn't matter any more. I was a mother now and that came first. My son’s happiness was more important than mine. And if that meant sacrificing in marriage, I would do it.
And so that’s how I decided to live my life for the next 16 years. We had a nearly perfect life from the outside. We had three more children and moved into a nice house. He was my friend and we were very good partners in day-to-day life. We lived very much as roommates while I essentially sleepwalked through life. I would get sad about it from time to time, but I had turned that side of myself off a long time ago and just shoved it away, living my lucky fairy tale ending of being a rescued woman.
Something began to awaken within me a few years before I turned forty. I realized how little of my life I was truly living. I realized how little I knew myself. I was living for my children and my husband. I had no idea who I was as a person. And so I set out on a journey of self-discovery. While this journey was messy, parts of myself became alive. Parts that I didn’t know existed. I started to feel happy as a person, not just as a mother. My business started growing with this new energy. And I so desperately wanted to turn this energy to my marriage and fought so hard to make it something that it wasn’t.
Over the course of more than a year, I wrestled with the idea of leaving. I told my husband what I was experiencing and tried to make him someone he wasn’t. Things just got worse as a result and I felt more trapped than ever. I wanted to be loved in the way I knew was possible. I had been loved as a friend, but I knew there was something more for me and I was worthy of experiencing it. And so exactly one year ago to the date that I’m writing this, I booked an airbnb said goodbye to my marriage, and to a partner that I very much had love for, grieving everything it would never be. I was choosing to be free to live the life that I desired.
Oh, but freedom isn’t free! On the very first night of moving out, I was enamored at my ability to do anything I wanted. No one would be questioning me. No one would be going through my phone. And so I went on a date that I knew from the beginning would be a bad idea. It left me feeling so much worse. And over the course of that year, so desperate to experience the love that I knew was possible, I experienced more and more heartache. I ignored red flags if I felt passion. I looked past obvious incompatibilities when I was told the right words. I paid dearly financially to rent a house. I lost friends who didn’t agree with my decision to leave my marriage. The price of freedom runs deep.
Yet, I wouldn’t go back. I continue on my journey of self-discovery, forgiving and learning, surrendering to the lessons I get to learn. I am more content than ever.
Steven Pressfield wrote, “The truly free individual is free only to the extent of his own self- mastery.” And so in year two of this freedom, I acknowledge that freedom is self-mastery. Looking further within and finding the satisfaction and love and answers from within myself, instead of from without, is the way forward. Building systems of self-discipline and having the self-awareness to say no to the allure of love that is not for me. It’s a process and a journey that I will continue to live for the rest of my life.
Yes it’s messy and non-linear but it’s full of adventure and the price to live in alignment instead of betrayal is worth every cost.
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"I'm sharing this self-portrait that feels like freedom to me. Letting go of older versions of myself, freedom from what people might think of me."
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