Saturday, December 28, 2024

Several year ends

I have been thinking for months about how I would write a year end type letter- how to answer the question of "How are you?" when people have asked me. How do you sum up years of experience and confusion to clarity and explain where you are now without just way too much detail? 


Almost two years ago was the final end of my marriage, a moment that I never had wanted to come, but I knew it was the end when I saw how much the girls were hurting and how things just weren't getting better. Every few years felt like another midlife crisis, but I didn't know back then about mental health or trauma and I didn't know what was happening. 

By the end, maybe I still didn't fully know what was going on with him, but I knew that the multiple times that I had tried to have a conversation about (for instance) *how can we work together better the next time we move* and how difficult it was to be patiently sitting and waiting for him to speak as he held his head and swayed in the corner of the room trying to use his "feeling words" he said. It was difficult to follow whatever he was trying to say when so little was said out loud for over several hours. 

I always believed that marriage was about cooperation. Facing life together, enjoying the beautiful parts of life and supporting each other in life's journey. When he told me a little over two years ago that he didn't want to be married. He said that being a husband and father was an obligation that he didn't want. That he had felt "forced" to marry me-- He had said the forced thing a few years before which sent me into a deep depression at the time (around Valentine's Day in 2020) for a few months until I had convinced myself that he hadn't meant it. But this time. I knew that it was the end.  If I had known two decades ago that he felt "forced" to marry me (translation, that he didn't WANT to marry me) I never would have married him. The absolutely lowest of possible bars is wanting to be with the other person. I had just enough self worth at that point to realize that I deserved to be with someone that wanted to be with me.
 As painful as this is to talk about and admit-- (Who wants to admit to anyone else, let alone themselves, that they are unwanted?) it was worse at the time and trying to accept it. Even after he said he wanted a divorce and was very very sure of this, I would wake up from a dream where in I thought I was loved and have to remind myself over and over again, that I was not. I told myself his words over again -- "he doesn't want to be married to you" -- radical acceptance of the truth. I have been grieving my marriage since 2018 when he first told me about his depression. It started out because at that point there were 14 years of marriage where he had hidden how he felt! I never wanted him to be miserable, but it turns out that there was nothing I could do. I expected less from him as a partner so he wouldn't be stressed, but that didn't matter in the end. I helped him get his car, which he turned into another obligation and stressed himself out with cleaning it. I couldn't ask questions right because somehow even asking him how work was would be triggering. I could literally be whispering and he would get upset and tell me I was yelling.  His perceived reality just didn't seem to match the reality that I saw. But even though he said over the years that I didn't ask questions right, he never could tell me how I was supposed to do it.

 I remember the years previously, how I had so loved having people over! Because when friends were around he would actually seem happy and talkative! He would talk about his day when other people would ask what work was like and I got to hear stories that I never heard when it was just us. 

"Grief is love persisting"-- I have such a great capacity to love that it has taken me a while to accept the truth and let go. You see, he said he felt forced to marry me, but he had asked me to marry him hundreds of times! And he moved half way across the country to marry him-- does that seem like I "forced" him? People choose what they want to think and they choose how they will respond. It is possible that he never loved me at all, or maybe he loved the version of me that he had imagined and I just wasn't good enough for him. He said as much in that first year we were married. For years I remembered that first year as the year of contempt. I would plan dates for us and he wouldn't talk, or he would tell me how he missed his friends and why wasn't I more like them? The contemptuous looks were so numerous, but when I asked he wouldn't admit he was upset or anxious (I only knew for sure when he told me 15 years later.) There was one moment in that first year where he looked at me with love. I would hold on to that moment so hard! But now I understand just how anxious I was around him and how dysregulated my nervous system truly was. I wasn't myself, but because I was so in love I couldn't see clearly. 

The years of living in Dallas away from any emotional support as I poured myself out to my girls took its toll on me. Every time I visited family I would be renewed though and could go back and keep going. I so often wished that things could be better but I couldn't at the time point to or express what felt off. 

Once I knew about the depression, his lack of emotional support made more sense. How can you be an emotional support to others if you can't even be that to yourself? Truly any other awful thing I could imagine cannot compare to the trauma of having a suicidal spouse. At the time, I described it to myself like having a spouse with a terminal illness-- I felt like I needed support and people offering casseroles but he said it wasn't my secret to tell people. So I desperately tried to calm myself and tried to reach out, but at the time, just didn't have the bandwidth to try and get people together. The idea of organizing a lady's craft day at church was an expressed idea and wish and then I literally couldn't move forward. It seems odd to remember now, but simply getting myself not to shake in panic during choir was all I could do at the time. I wore essential oils and sniffed them to calm myself multiple times and hour. The layers of that trauma as well were so difficult. Being lied to is a betrayal, and every time that I asked him what was wrong or what he liked or didn't want and he lied, that was 14 years at that point of inaccurate information. How can you show love to someone if they hide who they are?
 Other layers of trauma were that I was dependent on him financially, I was "following" his lead, I didn't have any other support there really. I didn't know till later how often he would refuse invites (that we got) without telling me. I also didn't understand why people treated me "weird" until later when I put the pieces together that they had only known me through his distorted mentally ill (depressed) lens. He presented me to people as if I were always mad at him or always depressed. 

I was desperately in need of comfort and love, but I gradually had found ways to cheer myself up over the years. I did so much to try and cheer myself up that I really didn't know how depressed and low I was. My mom sent me this beautiful glass cup for my birthday and I knew she loved me and I knew she wanted me to have this glorious cup, but I also knew that something was wrong with me when I saw that cup and thought to myself that I couldn't drink from it. Like I wasn't worthy to drink from such a beautiful cup. Somehow I had grown so starved for love and care that I didn't feel worthy of a cup!  It seems almost silly to me now. I no longer feel like a failure as I did then-- I couldn't figure out at the time how to feel better. I kept trying to avoid the foods that hurt me, but there must have been something else and I didn't know what it was. How would you feel if the person you loved and was supposed to love you behaved like they wanted away from you? It is hard to reach out and make friends if even the person who vowed to love and cherish you doesn't seem to want to be around you. The place where you are supposed to feel secure and safe just isn't there. So I didn't know what was wrong with me. I felt like a failure.

I tried to make things work better down there, but just kept blaming tx instead of acknowledging how unloved I felt. He seemed to get mad whenever I was happy. He said once that my potted garden was a burden/obligation to him. Do you know, I love to see the people that I love enjoy something! Even if I don't enjoy it myself-I love seeing the people I care about happy. So comments like that were always confusing to me. I would use money from groceries as I budgeted or from my own earnings, so it wasn't like I was a big spender on my hobbies. 

Once I knew about his depression though, I was able to learn about mental illness and besides learning to not blame myself for his choices, I also learned techniques to help myself and my girls. 

Because he had been in the mental hospital and I didn't know what the future would be, I knew I needed to get a job at some point. Sooner rather than later. But trying to be there for the girls and easing their anxieties while also trying to calm my own anxieties and figure out how to start working again was extremely stressful. 

The first sewing job I got in 2021 though started because I felt a strong sense to google search for one. I was following the lead of the Holy Spirit in that moment and just woke up one morning and felt compelled to look. I got the job working for a woman with an etsy business. It didn't pay much and was very part time, but going out to pick up the sewing and coming back to do it gave me some courage and a tiny bit of money-- it felt like getting unstuck from the pandemic enclosure and just making good progress. That led me to getting a better car as well (my old one kept needing dumb and expensive fixes!) I didn't know at the time that God was preparing me to be strong enough to leave. 

In 2022 I woke up again with that overwhelming nudge to search for a sewing job and that is how I found the job at the fitting room! I really loved that job, even though it took me so much courage to even go to and try to get it, and then to keep going back. It felt like this death of an era (which it was) of me being a stay at home homeschooling mom. I was now a working mom, while still trying to homeschool. And then packing up the entire place for the move to the junky apartment. By December of 2022, all that I had earned that year, some $16,000 was no where to be seen. His overspending, the cost of moving, the more expensive rent, just all the things. I was so exhausted. Again, my efforts were not enough. I had been working and saving in order to pay off my car (to save that monthly expense) and to save up for emergencies or moving costs. But we didn't end up in a better or cheaper place. Trying to improve our finances did nothing. All that year as well, he had grown more distant and rejecting as well. I think I know why now, but that isn't my secret to talk about. Suffice to say that I was unwanted and rejected and I felt it even though he hadn't said as clearly yet. 

That Christmas we saved a kitten. And this cat that I ended up taking to my moms (Mitzi) was such a comfort. I had forgotten what being comforted and loved felt like. The peace of a cuddly purring cat that desperately wanted me (she crawled in my hoodie!) and was so happy to be with me was God's love to me in that moment that I will never forget. I still had hope that our marriage could get better, but the clues that he didn't want that were pretty clear. He asked or middle daughter once when they were alone if she would want him to stay in tx while she and us girls moved away. It was quite traumatizing for her to be asked such a question at the time. Especially since all of us girls were traumatized by the thought of him dying since he was suicidal -- He was gone so very often when she was little, working late almost every night. Our youngest says that if it weren't for the pandemic (where he had to start working from home) then she wouldn't have known him at all. And even then, he didn't make eye contact with us and played on his phone constantly. 

I can't explain fully how small and invisible you feel when the person who is supposed to love you ignores your presence to that extent.

 It still surprises me sometimes when friends here actually look at me. When people respond to me in mentally healthy ways (like being emotionally independent and not take everything I say in a negative way)-- I have an old journal entry from several years ago where I wrote that my deepest desire/dream was to be able to be myself. To feel however I happened to feel in a moment and not have my emotions effect him. 

There is a movie called "The prize winner of defiance Ohio" (great movie!) anyway, one line in it resonated with me-- She was happy and doing her own thing and her husband was upset about something, anyway, it causes a catastrophe and later she says "I don't need you to make me happy, I just need you to leave me alone when I am." I sometimes felt like that-- that I wasn't allowed to be happy. Maybe it was too loud, I don't know, but I got into the habit of not singing as much and just being quieter. The girls felt this oppression as well. When we were driving up here together there was a point where we were all singing at the top of our lungs to Pentatonix Christmas music (in August!) and they commented about how they felt like it was okay to be loud now! 
But I am getting ahead of myself. Back to Christmas 2022 and the cat I took to my moms. Even though I had worked so much that year, I didn't have savings for a plane trip. I used my credit card to make the trip happen and paid it off after I got back. But that trip-- I can't describe how it felt to look at people who WANTED to be with us. Who wanted to see us! The girls slept better than they had in years! Everyone's anxiety levels went down. It was such a contrast. 
And then we went back. 
He greeted us with the usual fake smile and then in the car the tension was so thick, everyone felt it. I felt myself shrinking smaller as I tried to ask questions "the right way" only to get short irritable responses back. (He had talked to his mom on the phone so I was asking the usual questions of what did she say and how is she doing etc.) But apparently I couldn't ask in a way that he approved of because he just seemed mad that I would even ask anything. It wasn't that he didn't communicate well (he had told me in previous years) it was that I didn't ask questions right. I didn't see how I asked questions any different than anyone else, but he seemed to think so because that is what he told me. 

We got back to the junky apartment and one child had a full panic attack just about the idea of showering. Others were crying about missing family and Mitzi. One was sad about how he had moved her pets out of the way. I was going around cleaning because everything was so disgustingly dirty. Our fluffy cat was throwing up a bunch! The girls later said he hadn't given her the medicine she needed correctly. Her health never fully recovered and we had to put her down before moving here. I was trying to comfort my girls as we all sat on the couch watching "The Chosen" because none of them could sleep... except their dad who was in the other room sleeping. As all three were hugging me and sobbing they begged me to move them to be near family. 
But I knew. 
I knew that if I told him that I had to move the girls, (and I truly saw in that moment how desperately they needed me to)- I told them that I was afraid that if I told their dad that I had decided to move them to be near family, I told them that I was afraid that he would divorce me rather than come.
The middle thought he would choose divorce (because of what he had said to her a few months before) but the oldest and youngest thought he would decide to come! 
The next night after work I talked to him, that I had to move the girls and did he want to come too or did he want a divorce? He said it was better to be truthful than keep telling "kind lies" (For the record, lies are never "kind"- and I would have been saved a lot of trauma and pain if I had known the truth sooner) Anyway, that is when he said he didn't want to be married and being a husband and father was an obligation he never wanted. I saw hints of this for years, but chose to focus on the positive. The last few years for me has been trying to reconcile the cognitive dissonance of all the lies and his words that didn't match his behavior and just a hundred other tiny confusing moments gathered in two decades of time. 

I am no longer the "Incurable optimist" that I once was, but I am wiser now. I am at least glad that I know for sure there was nothing more that I could do. If you love someone, you can't love them "enough" to make them want or accept that love. Just like how we can't expect someone to want and like a type of food that they don't want-- You can't give them more of what they don't want and expect them to eventually want it. Likely, they will just dislike whatever food it is even more. 

We agreed to divorce because that is what he wanted. And I didn't want to be married to someone who didn't want to be married to me. Pretty simple really. 
In that first week though after he said that, I ugly cried every drive home from work. Anyone driving past me probably thought I was crazy. But all the grief came fully forward. Any hope I had before was gone. This was the end of the end. 
And then, somewhere near the end of that week, I felt the holy spirit say to me "You don't have to be hurt anymore" and even through my tears, I had this feeling of surprise and amazement. What would that even feel like to not be on the yo-yo of rejection and being pulled back again? I could see the patterns by that point and getting off the merry go round of his emotions sounded like such a relief!
I didn't have to be hurt anymore. I could let go.
But I still had to learn to let go and stop loving him.

 Some nights when the girls and I were listening to our song list of praises and worship music, I would feel so desperate and lost. How in the WORLD was I going to be able to save enough and move us by myself back home? It was terrifying. The Lauren Dagel songs like "Rescue" and "He gives me everything I need" and others were the promises that I clung to with my finger nails. I had hope that even if he didn't want to be married to me and needed to stay in Dallas, that he would at least be consistent with the girls and be able to reassure them that they are loved. I couldn't be the middle man anymore though, their relationship with him had to come from him. I can't describe how truly disappointing it was to see him continuing to be inconsistent and uncommunicative even with the tiny amount of expectation at that point.. a weekly tv show with our oldest-- forgotten, a promise to another-- ignored.. then he moved out to a hotel-- more rejection. Not to me at this point, but to the girls. I saw him reject them just like he had with me and I knew how much it would hurt. I kept reminding them that he was making his own choices, that it wasn't anything they had done.
Then he randomly showed up to get something at the apartment and they went from being peaceful with him gone to having panic attacks when he came back. I would get a text to come home early from work and hug a child until her heart rate went back to normal and she could move and function again.

Months before this when the girls were meeting with a counselor, the counselor asked me if I could at all move them away sooner. I wasn't sure how I could! I was saving and paying off my car and just really needed that time to prepare for such a big move, but it was so extremely hard on them! 

His rejection felt final when he canceled their good bye dinner and just said good bye to each of them through text. I wish he could have reassured them. Maybe that they are loved and valuable and he was protecting them by staying there? That he needed to focus on his own mental health and healing and didn't want them to be hurt? He didn't say any of that. He didn't give them the reassurances they needed. He blamed them instead of taking responsibility for his own choices. When he and I were at that same counselor together discussing the decision to divorce. She asked him how he felt about us moving away and he said "In my deepest depression I knew they didn't want to be with me."-- that was never true. I said. The therapist repeated that as well. It truly wasn't! The girls and I always wanted him around. We were sad that he seemed to choose other people (friends for game night, working late, volunteering when someone asked)-- why was it that he could say no to us but never ever say no to anyone else?

 What's more, I knew he was stressed and encouraged him in doing fun things. I still wished that he wanted to be with me back then though. The girls talk about that now as well. How they used to wish he would play with them or pay attention to them. It was such a rare thing. Neglect is such a squirrelly thing to try and understand-- because the problem isn't in what someone does but in what they do not do. It is harder to point to as a problem. Sometimes you don't even know yourself how to explain what isn't there if you don't fully know what should be there. I had hoped he would choose to call them regularly, or set up times to play online games. He did that once in an entire year, but that is all. We all wondered if he would plan a visit. But any time any of us text that question he stops texting back. Just ghosts completely. So the girls don't ask anymore if he is going to visit or if he has plans to. 
The pattern of before, the lowest possible bar minimum continues. Though they have actually said that he is a better father now. I truly cannot tell you how sad this all has been to watch. But people make their own choices. They choose what they value and their words do not always align with their actions. You can "want" to run a marathon and yet not want it enough to do any amount of training or building habits in order to do so. Maybe that was how he had "wanted" to be married to me while also feeling "forced"-- he said he wanted to marry me, but when it came down to it-- time to run the marathon, he didn't want to anymore. 

Our own thoughts also affect our emotions and our actions and then our own outcome. He told me that he kept thinking "I won't make it to twenty years"-- I mean, yeah, not when you tell yourself that you won't. Imagine telling yourself that your family doesn't want to be around you. It could create the emotion of sadness (for instance) and then your behaviors will be rejecting because you believe your own narrative, whether it is true or not-- 

I have to remind myself that the life and family that I created, even though it turned out to not be a lifestyle that he wanted, it wasn't a bad life or a failure. Someone else would have loved the life I had built-- they wouldn't have yelled at their wife for trying to kiss them goodbye or been mad at her for being happy, or tried to avoid family dinners. So many confusing moments.. one stands out especially. After he had come out of the hospital and gone back to work, I was trying to figure out how to hang his shirts so that they would be easier for him to reach. Our youngest (about 8 at the time) would sleep on the floor and hold my hand so she blocked the closet door in the mornings and getting shirts out was then a struggle. I was kicking around my ideas, should I get a free standing coat rack or something that attaches to the wall? He confidently says I should hang his shirts in the coat closet downstairs by the front door. What? really? Yes he assures me how that would be the perfect spot. I am unsure, but okay, so I move them there. A few days later he sounds dejected and says that with his shirts by the door it feels like I am trying to get rid of him. So I moved them all back upstairs and later he thanks me for moving them all back. The problem of how to hang them in a more convenient place though wasn't solved. But, the confusion and swing from assuring me to hang them downstairs to being sad that I hung them downstairs.. just, I don't know.. it might take a team of psychiatrists to make sense of just all the moments that I remember and experienced with him. I don't actually know if he remembers any of these things. Because so very often he would tell me something and later when I would have thought about it and tried to make sense of it (or even just wanted to discuss something) he would tell me he never said that or he didn't remember. I wouldn't argue, because really, how do you convince someone of what reality is? Not remembering because he truly didn't remember OR pretending not to remember are both concerning. I just added those times to the other confusing bits of data. I worried that being depressed really had effected his memory, but he poo pooed those worries and said his memory was fine. so.. 🤷 I am glad I journaled and can see my own moments of clarity even among the confusion. 

Now, he tells people that he is "cured" of his depression. And maybe he is? I wouldn't know. He acted so differently around other people than around just us, that I really would have no way to know from the outside. But you all don't want all this back story, right? You want to know where we are now. 

2023, finally in late August we got the uHaul with the help of a couple friends and loaded it with the help of a little local church. Nothing catastrophic or stressful happened. I had worked out the plan and followed the plan and saw the plan succeed! Never in my marriage had I seen that, so it was kind of stunning to see my plan actually work. No one threw a panicked wrench into it. And I realized that simply following Jesus was enough. Trying to follow my husband all those years just led to bad decisions and frustration. A triplex that he said he wanted then didn't? To saying he wanted his shirts in the coat closet and then didn't.. Just, all the things. 

God also blessed us girls with a new kitten who happened to be born on the day that he said he wanted a divorce. Our Billie kitty was such a comfort to my youngest! She had lost so many hamsters over the years and also struggled with anxiety so much, she needed the comfort of her own sweet kitty. Then in Jan of 2024 I let my oldest get a cat as well because she had lost her Fluffy cat (her comfort cat) that she had for so many years! And guess what? This new cat, Sonia, was born on the day that I took the paperwork into downtown Dallas to give the court our new address (as per the law) which was the day before we filled the uhaul.

 God didn't have to bless us with two sweet comfort kitties that were born exactly on those significant book end days, but he did. God doesn't force us to be good or to be anything. He invites and he loves and pursues, but we choose to accept or not. Coercion is abusive and God is not an abuser. 

When my former husband chose his path, I was not going to try and change his mind. I did ask a few times if he was sure. Would he regret this choice? He hadn't ever seemed this sure before. So that was the end. Now it makes me a little sad to realize that I still would likely be with him if it weren't for the girls needing better. Not because I regret, but because I didn't realize how unloved and unwanted I truly was. My own love was the rose colored glasses I wore and it is only recently that I can look back and see how depressed I truly was. I remember having a dream, a deep desire of my heart (to write and illustrate childrens books) and that dream had been percolating for a long time, but I remember it being so strong one year and choosing not to talk to him about it. I knew that if I did then my precious dream would be trampled. I didn't want him to ruin it, so I said nothing.

 Marriage isn't supposed to be like that. You should feel safe with your spouse, emotionally as well as physically. And as God told me - I don't have to be hurt anymore.

In September 2023 we were finally here. The ladies had a basket of flowers and a welcome home sign. I posted pictures on instagram of our journey. It was mostly uneventful and easy. I got better at unloading the car for each hotel stop and dealing with the animals we brought with us (two cats and a rabbit) -- we added an extra day and pivoted when we needed to on the drive up. No flat tires or issues. 

Getting out of tx that first day of driving was exactly what we needed! The girls had been waiting for so many months that everyone just really needed to be out and on our way! I discovered that I kind of liked the road tripping! I liked being somewhat planned and somewhat spontaneous -- also singing christmas carols together as loud as we could! My middle daughter kept commenting on how beautiful the sky and clouds were each day. Each days sky was different but so beautiful. She said it was like God was giving us a blessing with how beautiful the clouds and sky were. She especially had had a difficult many a year and was quite depressed. Looking back at pictures of her I can see her eyes just look kind of dull and blank, even if she is smiling in the picture, but now, she has sparkly eyes and says how peaceful it is here! 

2024 felt very full, even though much of it sort of felt like we were catching up for lost years. The older two took a driving class. It was good to do, but also quite stressful for them. They still need to practice more and will get licenses in a few years. Lily turned 18 in 2024 and started her Senior year. We probably could do another year after this but she will technically be graduating in May 2025. We plan to have her take a GED test and also get her drivers license this year. That is the plan anyway! I am saving up for a modest car for her as well. She sold things at the farmers market most weekends in 2024 and plans to do the same again with my little bro in 2025. There is a lot of catching up to do-- all the school books and plans that we were going to do before got pushed to the way side for a while, but in the next few months we will finish up her homeschool and shift to the next phase of adulting for her. We have all been through a lot of stress so that balance of moving forward but not so fast that it is too full of anxiety is important. 

She was old enough during everything that she can remember and see how I had been building our home and homeschool and how the time with her dad in the hospital was the turning point where (she describes it like) he dismantled all the things I was building. 

Renna (middle daughter) turned 16 in 2024 and started her Sophomore year, though she too is pretty behind in math and such. I am pleased to see all three catching back up and remembering things pretty well! Her skills with drawing though are pretty amazing! and she got a drawing pad/computer for her birthday and has some pretty mad skills with using the digital art program! She made digital art this year and turned them into stickers to sell at the farmers markets. She didn't sell a lot, but just doing a little adulting like this is important. 

Natalie Grace turned 13 in 2024-- I had quite the run around all summer trying to get her an appointment at Shriners hospital so they could see her back. She has pretty bad scoliosis and her lungs and ribs hurt when she has been walking around for a while. However she (and the others) had a great time dressing up and going to a Renaissance fair! She has been decorating her room like a jungle garden of herbalist magic-- hanging vines and pretend potion filled bottles. It is beautifully mossy in her bedroom. She has loved going thrifting since we moved here and especially getting all the sweaters she could ever wear! 

I (43) have been doing seamstress work for friends and others here and there.

Then in July 2024 got a job at a little clothing shop (working on the floor, but also doing sewing repairs for them)-- It felt like a lot, just new things to get used to doing, but also, I reminded myself how scared I would have been before, but what I went through and then working in Dallas before driving us up here.. like really, not much can be scarier than what I have already done! And in this season of remembering and of Emanuel -- I can look back at recent years and even decades before that, God was with me. I can keep following Jesus no matter what anyone else chooses to do. 

I am so thankful for being able to stay in this cabin. I love it! Cozy and beautiful and we have found our comfy spots and routines. 2024 felt like a lot of recovery, of healing and rebuilding. 2025 is more of the same, but some steadiness has been built now so continuing and being consistent is the plan.

 Doing the last bit of "real" homeschool with my oldest is a little bitter sweet, but I want to lean into it! The joy of this season and making up for the time lost to depression and the pandemic and so on. One element of forgiveness that is often under valued, is letting go. Forgiveness isn't looking to change the other person or reconcile or punish or really do anything except to let go. It isn't looking for pay back or to make things right. I couldn't do any of that even if I wanted to. Forgiveness isn't about forgetting though. If I forgot then I wouldn't have the wisdom and empathy and growth that I have gained. I don't want to forget (not really possible anyway!) But learning to let go-- People will be who they choose to be and that isn't up to me. They might disappoint us or surprise us, but either is still entirely their decisions and choice for their own life. 

There is so much freedom in this letting go! 
Sometimes I still worry about what the future will hold. But even if I am in this exact same place, trying to love and raise my girls and depending on others for the roof over our head, I know we will be okay. We are safe and loved here. I am seeing slow but valuable progress. It is getting harder to remember just how dysregulated my nervous system felt all those times in Dallas. How panicky and unable to sleep and terrified I was when he first told me about his depression. When I tried to talk about it even to myself feeling my throat clench up and lungs constrict-- hardly able to speak the truth. 
 The terror and abandonment feeling when I wasn't sure how I would save enough to move us up here. The anxiety and loneliness when I drove myself downtown to a courthouse with paperwork. The empowered feeling when the uhaul was filled in record time and all the plans were working out! The tears of relief and gratefulness when I first came into the cabin and saw the welcome home sign and flowers. The comfort and joy of the wild black eyed susans and sunflowers growing along the highways all the way from tx to here. The worry to relief of buying my snow tires last year, the caution to joy of looking for a cat for my oldest and then seeing her turn back into herself again with her new comfort kitty. 

Now, mostly I feel peace. 

One daughter said she felt cozy. This has felt like such a cozy and quiet christmas. I am to the point in my letting go journey that I tore out the unused pages from my christmas ornament book that I got on my honey moon and had been filling with an ornament picture a year and yearly letter. I put it with the other scrapbooks. I didn't mind not putting up the yearly Christmas picture at all. I mostly decorated in ball ornaments of all colors and sizes rather than the memory type ornaments! 

This christmas has been joyful! Delighting in all the tiny things! I am remembering who I am and recapturing who I was before all the stress and trauma. I still have some food anxiety even from that first year of marriage! Maybe my former husband thought I was less effected by the poverty and stress and food insecurity because I did so much to try NOT to be stressed, but I went through all those things just as he did. My focus was on the girls and caring for them. I didn't want what I couldn't control be a source of anxiety for me to pass to them. There are so many ways to save money if you try-- One thing I am showing my youngest is how to make those kinds of choices. With grocery shopping for instance. Eggs might be expensive, but they are still a less expensive meal than pizza! 

Two years ago, I painted a picture of a man and woman walking away in the rain, down a lamp lit path. I felt at the time that the painting represented a change. Was it a fresh start with my husband? A recommitment? Or a walking away from him to someone else? Over the months I came to realize that the painting represented me walking with Jesus. I can't see very far down the path, but I am committed to walking in the light as he is in the light. It is so easy to become overwhelmed or worried about small things, but God clothes the grass of the field with Lily flowers. And he takes care of us too. Lily was named with this thought in mind-- That God will take care of us, that he sees us and will provide. That we do not need to worry.

 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, from the father of lights with whom there is no shadow of turning. That passage is from James after the part about a double minded man being unstable in all his ways. Renna Yovayla's name means "beautiful song from heaven"-- I am still learning to sing again and to let my voice be heard. 

 Natalie Grace means the undeserved gift. Or Christmas! Or maybe the gift that God wanted to give ❤️ In many ways I feel like things have been hardest on her, especially since the pandemic but even before that. She finally started to connect with her dad right before he chose to leave. She has always had such a loving tender heart and so often was afraid at night.  She had such a fear of being left. She didn't get to say good bye to her best friend because this friends mom blamed me for the divorce and told me I was terrible for "taking the kids" from him and then blocked me. She didn't know about their depression and I guess didn't accept that this was his choice either.

This past year has been the first consistent time in her entire life where I have been able to fall asleep alone and she has been able to fall asleep in her own bed without help from me. I think maybe only two or three times all year she woke up afraid with a nightmare and came to snuggle. If you haven't had a child with severe anxiety, you just aren't going to understand this struggle, but it is exhausting to be the only one reassuring and comforting for years and years and years. It is important though! Our own nervous system regulation is how children learn to sooth themselves. And this is how healthy adult relationships work as well, nervous system soothing and comforting each other. But it is also so good to see progress. My favorite times are when I hear my girls playing together or singing with each other! The oldest and youngest have been playing a game together a lot recently and will sing and joke for hours. 

Right now I can hear the rain falling, the powder puff kitty is sleeping at my feet. It is so quiet that my ears are making their own noise, but my heart is moving at a steady normal pace. My jaw is relaxed and I am thinking about the organizing that I need to do in my room. I am putting off the cleaning that I know I should do. I should probably give the younger two some more elderberry syrup to help them fight off the colds that were coming. 

I can hear our Billie cat meowing so that she will get more pats (that is her new thing, she "yells" at us until we pat her back as she twinkles around for more.) 

The Christmas tree lights are sparkling in the living room and I can read the "Joy" ornament next to my giant sparkly pink bobble. Part of one of the light strands died, but it still looks pretty. Lily wants to keep the tree up past her birthday. 

Dental appointments are planned for next week and I have to return some seamstress work to the shop.

 I am finishing things and starting new ones at this turning of years. I feel very much older this year than I have, like all the years of stress finally caught up to me and the past 6 years of trauma especially. 

Maybe I should drink more water and take more vitamins? I know that helps. And likely also just accept my age and more wrinkles coming and dress for fun instead of to try to be pretty. Not like that's ever mattered or done me any good anyway, so why not wear the colorful sweater and bobble earrings for fun? 

See I am getting wiser all the time.