Twenty-four days since the end of my career as a
restaurateur. I've spent the time resting, sleeping (I took a two-hour
nap this afternoon….aaahhhh!), nesting, fussing a bit with the
ending-of-the-business details, and putting distance between myself and
the husband at any possible opportunity.
My feelings surrounding
the un-success of our venture, as they relate to my
business-/life-partner, are complex and not altogether sanguine. I
haven't really wanted to confront them (and him), so I've made it a
priority to make myself scarce. I feel like I need to clear the fog of
exhaustion from my brain, and the pool of unshed tears from behind my
eyes, before I can take on these issues with any hope of
improving—rather than destroying—what's left of our relationship.
Unfortunately,
he's not making much of an effort in that direction. While I feel that I
have lightened up remarkably in the past three weeks, he doesn't seem
to have released one bit of five years of pent up tension. He's still
wound as tight as a python around a rat, and he's about as willing to
ease up as that python would be to let loose of his dinner. And I have
no idea why.
Which has led me to contemplate, lately, who we are,
individually; and what there is left of shared interests, goals,
desires, habits, needs—to keep us bound together. What drew us together
in the first place? Was it a common love of…anything? If it was, what
happened to it? Is there anything that we both enjoy and value anymore?
I
know our relationship was never based on how alike we are. We found in
each other things that we were lacking. We each have strengths that
negate the other's weaknesses. Under ordinary circumstances, we
complement each other; under stress, apparently, not so much. We handle
stress in completely different ways. I'm not sure I could even describe
the specifics; but I do know that the whole experience has served to
drive a wedge between us that is, evidently, going to be very difficult
to extract.
Do we still love each other? How do you define "love"
in the context of a relationship that has spanned three and a half
decades? Certainly, our love is vastly different now than it was in the
beginning. The fire and spark have been replaced by security and habit.
Which is not necessarily bad. It's entirely appropriate, at a certain
age, to prefer the comfort of an old pair of Easy Spirits to the flash
and glitter of a brand new pair of Gucci stilettos. After the
debilitating drain of the past five years, I'm absolutely ready to sink
back into the well worn, familiar shoes of our marriage. The problem is,
I'm not sure we haven't kicked, scuffed and abused the poor things so
much that they won't keep out the rain.
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