Skip to main content

When "Love" Destroys

Valentine's Day. The day that singles everywhere hate. It reminds them that they still don't have the relationship they want while everyone else seems to be happily coupled off. If that sounds WAY too familiar to you, then please read the rest of this. Sometimes it helps us all to have a little different perspective.

In thinking about writing this blog I decided to be honest about some things that have been very painful in my life. Sometimes it's so hard to open up about things; hiding can be so much easier. But I don't know if I can heal completely that way, and if I can somehow help other people by sharing parts of my story, I'd like to.

I got married a little over 5 1/2 years ago on a hot June day. My dress and my hair were perfect, and I was thrilled to be marrying the man I was head-over-heels in love with. He was clearly crazy about me too. I didn't buy into the idea that life would be perfect, but I thought it would be pretty amazing with a lot of hard work.



Our marriage turned out to be a disaster, for a lot of reasons. Some things I just don't want to say on here. Maybe later, but not right now. It's hard to explain to someone who hasn't experienced something like this. But I would describe it this way:  as time went by, it's like he was slowly crushing my soul. A year into our marriage I started having migraines. After another year or year-and-a-half, I started having insomnia too. You can't convince me they aren't related to the increased emotional stress in my life.

At times I tried to get some help for our marriage, but sometimes "help" isn't truly helpful. I was in a marriage that was sometimes mediocre, sometimes, bad, and for a long time, I didn't have the level of support I needed. My family has always been behind me, but most people believed my husband to be a fine, upstanding guy with a few things he needs to work on. (After all, aren't we all human?) It's only been in the last 6 months that he really showed some of his true colors and everyone rallied around me like never before.

I left him in January, and I'm getting on with my life. Already I'm so much happier, and I'm sleeping better. I'm confident my health and emotional well-being will continue to improve as time goes by.



So I guess what I want to say to the singles today is this:  It's totally OK and normal to long for something you don't have yet. But be aware that today there are married people out there who are so cynical about this day that's supposed to celebrate love. Because they thought they found love, and now that "love" is destroying them. Somewhere there is a terrified girl wondering if her boyfriend will beat her again. There's a wife weeping because her husband won't stop sleeping around. There's a man who just doesn't know what to do about his wife's alcoholism. Again, it's OK to want more. Just be thankful you're not in a situation you desperately need to get out of. So try to smile, and have some good-quality chocolate.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

What Must They Think?

It's been too long since my last post. I have nothing to say for myself, except that life has been happening. I've had a migraine today, so this may not be very eloquent. But something has come to mind a few times lately that I want to discuss. If you've read my blog before, then you know my story, or at least part of it. It's not pretty by any means! I was a young woman hoping and praying to meet an amazing man who would sweep me off my feet. Then I met someone who seemed so amazing, and we were both smitten, and we got married and lived happily ever after. Except we didn't. We got married, and after a while I slowly started to realize what a huge mistake I had made. I was in a painful mess. You probably know that, but it's a recap for any first-time readers. (And please check out some of my other posts) Every once in a while I'll be in a conversation with someone about things that I went through in my marriage, and I can't help but think, "W

Marriage Advice That Is Wrong If You Are In a Toxic Marriage

If you're married or even seriously dating you might read books and blogs with marriage advice. You'll hear advice from pastors, family, friends, maybe even strangers. A lot of that advice will be good for some, or even most situations. The problem is when you are hearing and reading advice that isn't good for you. The person giving the advice will mean well. But they just can't see the full picture. Today I want to talk about some advice that can actually be harmful if implemented in a toxic marriage. I'm not listing these in a particular order. I'm just writing as I think of these.  Don't talk negatively about your spouse to other people. See the problem with this? If you are being abused in some way, keeping quiet about it is the last thing you should do. This just enables the abuse to go on. Tell people what is happening to you. Some may not believe you. Find someone that will.  Don't focus on the change your spouse needs to make. Focus on

Safe People: What I'm learning

No, I haven’t died. Life is just happening.  Lately I’ve been reading Safe People by Dr. Henry Cloud and Dr. John Townsend. It is the first of several books I want to read as part of my healing process, and it is a real eye-opener. I’m not even finished with it yet, but I have seen myself in some of the pages.  One thing I recognized in myself is what the authors refer to as the false solution of doing the opposite. I was once deeply hurt by a guy who was dominated by his mother and just couldn’t cut the apron strings. So when I met the man I married and he was rude and unkind to his mother, I didn’t recognize that as the red flag it was. I was just so glad he didn’t let her push him around. In that regard, I was drawn to the opposite of what I had before when neither extreme was healthy.  The book talks quite a bit about people who close themselves off from relationships, both romantic and platonic, because they have been hurt in the past. I’m certainly in that posit