therapy

“You seem angry.”

I like my therapist. I started going to him not long after my husband moved out and he even reduced his rate a bit to see me. He never pushes me too hard, or blames everything on my childhood. (I hate that).

And he seems to abhor Dr. Phil as much as I do.

But right now I feel like punching the shit out of him.

“Wow Doc, is that your professional opinion?”

I look out the window and chew on my bottom lip before I have to see him smirk.

I hate when he does that.

(more…)

ghost

After the incident at the house, my husband apologized for upsetting me.

In a text message.

He stated that he could see by how upset I was that I was obviously hurting as much as he was.

Huh.

The mask might be working too well.

He suggested that if it made me feel more comfortable, he could let me know when he needed to stop by the house.

I suggested that he not come by the house at all.

That went over about as well as can be expected.

(more…)

conflict

“Well, I see that you don’t want me here, so I’ll go. Do you mind if I leave the equipment? ”

What?! No you can’t leave it here!

(My inner voice was getting angry).

“…I can come back early in the morning and get it.” he said.

WTF IS HE SMOKING? HE DON’T LIVE HERE ANYMORE! 

(Why does my inner voice suddenly sound like Afro Samurai’s alter ego Ninja?).

(more…)

confusion

It wasn’t long after the holidays, when our “separation” took effect. It wasn’t legal, just physical and I had been holding out for the counseling sessions that we’d agreed to. It was winter and I remember the cold clearly because I could still see my breath in the air, even at night.

I was walking up the block, on my way home from work one day when I stopped dead at my front gate.

He’s here. I thought to myself.

My heart sank a little. He’d barely been out of the house three weeks.

why.was.he.here?

(more…)

amnesia

I haven’t updated in awhile, because honestly, I’m having a hard time remembering what happened to me after my husband moved out and I came back home after Christmas.

It’s like I’ve blocked it out or something.

I don’t remember driving back to New York, but I know I did, because I was booked on a pretty hectic job that week.

I have no recollection of talking to my tenants, but I know I did, because they’d just moved in.

I seem to remember random mundane tasks:

Taking out the trash.

A warm, floppy hat he gave me last winter that I liked to wear.

My favorite pair of fingerless gloves.

The way my youngest cat had taken to finding the most expensive garment I own (cashmere, silk, etc.) and dragging it around the house in some sort of silent defiant protest whenever I worked late.

(more…)

cancel christmas

I wake up the morning before Christmas in a full on panic.

Not about the holiday itself mind you.

Years ago my brothers and I stopped exchanging gifts because of the sheer angst and fights the event would cause.

Nope. My fear is entirely based on one frightening thought.

What if he doesn’t leave?

Now that I’ve gotten on the separation train, I’ve been impatiently waiting for it to leave the station.

But the doors are closing, and he’s still not on board.

Funny thing is. He bought the tickets!

So I do what I always do when I’m stressed or a little confused.

I make a list.

(more…)

leave

“I’m not asking you to take everything that you own, just maybe take 2 large suitcases and your computer and your drives and your shoes and…”

“All right, all right. Stop.”

“Ok. Ok.”

I had both of my palms up facing him in the universal body language for ‘no offense, calm down.’

I’ve swung to other end of the spectrum.

Now I can’t get him out of the house fast enough.

The dance continued until the week before Christmas when my mother had asked for the 10th time whether or not we were coming or not and could we bring our own food, since we don’t eat turkey and she has no idea what to make for us and my brother brought a gallon of soy eggnog for us and we had better be coming because Daddy’s not going to drink it.

So thoughtful, my brother.

(more…)

neon

After weeks of going back and forth, we were living like boyfriend and girlfriend as opposed to husband and wife.

Oh wait, no. Boyfriends and girlfriends have sex don’t they?

So yeah no.

We were like roommates who happened to share a bed.

He would do small things for me, like paint things, but not pay any bills or make any commitments.

Although he’d asked for the separation…

he.just.wouldn’t.leave.

In fact, most days, he would act as if nothing was wrong at all.

It was weird. He was still going to his part-time job, (I think.) Still working on his various creative projects. Acting like nothing was wrong to his family and friends.

He was still coming home every night.

He seemed to be completely ignoring the big-ass neon sign that was now hanging over his head like a mutant SIMS plumbob that read:

THIS MAN IS LEAVING YOU.

(more…)

definitions

He didn’t leave.

Not that day, not that week.

He didn’t even pack.

I wasn’t even sure where the suitcases were.

Are they in the basement or  in storage with the summer clothes? Should I offer him one of mine? How does this work?

He was calmly going about his days as if nothing had happened.

And I was slowly going crazy.

I looked up the definition of separation in my computer’s dictionary just to see if somehow Webster had been brought back to life and had decreed that the word actually deemed a new meaning. Maybe there had been a moratorium on the subject and I missed out. Which is why I hadn’t been informed of the fact that the meaning of separation in the english language had now been rescinded, and the new meaning actually was synonymous with change-nothing-in-fact-feign-amnesia-and-act-as-if-nothing-is-wrong-and-maybe-she-won’t-notice.

(more…)

paint

Over the next week or so my husband became increasingly helpful and thoughtful. Morphing into the attentive loving man that I had missed for months, possibly more than a year.

And I became more and more uncomfortable.

I mean honestly, the man told me that he wanted a separation. I wasn’t hearing things, I wasn’t drunk, I was wide awake when he said it. And I made him repeat the words out loud to make sure the he knew what he was saying.

However one week, four meals and a bouquet of flowers later, I came in the house after work one day to find him painting the stairs going to the ground floor.

I spoke quietly, using the voice I reserve for small children holding sharp objects or escaped mental patients wielding incendiary devices.

“What are you doing?” He looks from me to the paint brush in his hand and then back to me.

“Um…painting the steps.”

“Great! Why?”

(more…)

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