Tag: DIVORCE

  • Sixteen Years

    I keep showing up
    like I have not been emotionally
    dragged behind a moving car

    A dress that says
    I am fine
    in three languages

    A little perfume
    on the neck
    as if I am not allergic
    to everything now

    weather
    men
    dust
    memory
    the small humiliations
    of wanting too much
    from people
    who speak in crumbs

    This is the part
    no one respects enough how much glamour
    is actually discipline

    How many times
    a woman fixes her hair
    while her insides
    are somewhere in the corner
    throwing furniture

    How many times
    she paints herself
    back into a body
    because the world
    still expects her
    to arrive recognizable

    How many times
    she walks into a room
    beautiful
    because collapsing
    would be inconvenient

    There is a reason
    women are tired

    Not delicate tired

    Not take-a-nap tired

    Generational tired

    Bone tired

    Tired from being
    the continuity

    The meal remembered
    The appointment made
    The child answered
    The bill paid
    The birthday saved
    The grief folded
    and put somewhere
    no one would trip over it

    Tired from carrying
    the invisible inventory
    of everyone’s life

    Who needs milk
    Who needs medicine
    Who has a fever
    Who has practice
    Who needs a form signed
    Who has a meeting
    Who is breaking
    Who must not be told
    they are breaking
    because then they will break more

    Tired from holding
    the emotional roof
    over everyone’s head
    while someone asks
    why we seem anxious

    Anxious?

    Of course we are anxious

    We are keeping
    the whole sky
    from falling
    and still expected
    to choose earrings

    This is for the women
    who stayed too long
    because they were trying
    to be fair

    For the women
    who left
    because staying
    was teaching their children
    the wrong definition of love

    For the women
    who are still there
    counting the cost
    in the dark

    For the women
    who never married
    but still know
    what it is
    to mother everyone
    and be mothered by no one

    For the women
    raising sons
    raising daughters
    raising themselves
    between laundry cycles
    and legal papers
    and school mornings
    and grocery lists
    and the quiet storm
    of being the only adult
    who notices everything

    For the years
    we try to make a home
    out of a room
    where no one is helping us
    hold up the walls

    For the child
    that belongs to two people
    but somehow
    becomes one woman’s calendar
    one woman’s body
    one woman’s remembering
    one woman’s exhaustion

    And yes
    we try

    We try until trying
    starts to look like madness

    We try until our tenderness
    becomes a second job

    We try until we are managing
    the child
    the house
    the money
    the meals
    the moods
    the silence
    the resentment
    and the grown man
    who keeps needing instructions
    on how to be grown

    We try until love
    turns into logistics

    Until the marriage
    becomes another room
    we have to clean

    Until the person
    who was supposed to help us
    carry the life
    becomes one more thing
    we have to carry

    And then one day
    the math becomes
    so clean
    it almost feels cruel

    If I am already doing everything alone
    why am I doing it
    with someone beside me
    making it harder?

    That is not bitterness

    That is a woman
    finally telling the truth
    without decorating it first

    The best thing I ever did
    was leave

    I know how that sounds

    A woman is supposed
    to whisper divorce
    like an illness
    like a failure
    like a stain
    she could not get out
    of the good sheets

    But no

    The best thing I ever did
    was get divorced

    I gave myself
    the largest blessing

    I signed my name
    and called it mercy

    I walked out
    of the life
    that kept asking me
    to disappear politely
    and I became
    someone I could finally
    come home to

    Sometimes divorce
    is not the end
    of a family

    Sometimes it is the removal
    of the thing
    that kept the family
    from breathing

    Sometimes a woman leaves
    not because she wants
    to be alone

    but because
    she already is

    And then sixteen years pass

    Sixteen years
    since the paper
    the silence
    the door
    the strange new air

    Sixteen years
    of learning how to sleep
    without listening
    for disappointment
    in another room

    Sixteen years
    of carrying children
    bills
    birthdays
    school forms
    fevers
    holidays
    grief
    and my own name
    back into my own mouth

    The sixteenth year opens
    like a window
    I did not know
    I had survived long enough
    to unlock

    Some days it feels longer

    Some days it feels
    like I just left yesterday
    with my heart in my hands
    and no instructions

    But look

    I made a life

    Not a perfect one

    Mine

    And no
    it was not graceful
    in the beginning

    At first
    he hated my guts

    Let us tell the truth
    without making it prettier
    than it was

    There was bitterness
    There was anger
    There were years
    when the air between us
    had teeth

    That is what happens
    when a life breaks open

    People bleed
    People blame
    People become strangers
    holding the same children
    by opposite hands

    But time
    if it is kind
    or if we are lucky
    or if everyone finally gets tired
    of carrying the old knife
    does something strange

    It does not erase

    It rearranges

    The man who once
    could barely look at me
    now stands beside me
    in photographs
    at graduations
    birthdays
    holidays
    the ceremonies
    our sons keep making
    out of their lives

    We are not friends
    in the small-talk way

    We do not sit around
    chattering
    over coffee
    about the weather
    or what any of it meant

    But we are connected

    We will always be connected

    There are children
    walking around this world
    with both of us
    written into their bones

    That is a cord
    no court can cut

    And sometimes
    there is light
    at the end of the tunnel

    Not for everyone

    But sometimes

    Sometimes the bitterness
    gets old

    Sometimes the anger
    loses its posture

    Sometimes maturity arrives
    late
    limping
    but still arrives

    Sometimes two people
    who could not stay married
    learn how to stand
    in the same room
    for the people
    they made together

    And sometimes
    I look at him now

    happy in another life
    married again
    for almost as long
    as I have been free

    and I think

    God—

    I did the right thing

    Not with hatred

    Not with longing

    Just a clean knowing
    inside my chest

    Because some people
    cannot be alone

    They run from one marriage
    into another
    as if marriage itself
    was the missing piece

    as if the institution
    was the love

    as if a new ring
    could explain
    why the old house
    was burning

    But I did not run

    I stayed with myself

    I did not remarry
    just to prove
    I was still wanted

    I learned the shape
    of my own silence

    I raised my children
    I built my days
    I became the woman
    waiting for me
    on the other side
    of that door

    And now
    when he looks at me
    when his eyes pause
    a little too long
    on the woman I became

    I do not need to know
    what he is thinking

    Mine is this:

    I left

    I lived

    I was right

    I have walked into rooms
    star-studded
    and half-dead

    I have said
    I’m okay
    with such good lighting
    even God almost believed me

    There should be awards
    for this

    Not trophies
    Nothing ugly

    Something small
    Gold
    Sharp

    Something a woman could wear
    near her collarbone
    and not explain

    For the mornings
    we get up anyway

    For the years
    we hold everything together
    with one hand
    and still use the other
    to put on mascara

    Do not ask me
    how I survived it

    I don’t know

    Some days I am all woman
    Some days I am a loose sequin
    hanging on for dear life
    to a dress
    that has seen too much

    Some days I am the dress

    Stretched
    Pulled
    Zipped up over grief

    Still flattering
    from certain angles

    Still dangerous
    in the right light

    I have been loved badly
    and still picked the right shoes

    I have cried
    and then checked my reflection
    because suffering is one thing
    but looking insane in public
    is another

    I have carried ache
    like a clutch purse
    into restaurants
    doctor’s offices
    parking lots
    and conversations
    where everyone pretended
    not to notice
    how much of me
    I was holding together
    with one hand

    And still—

    I shine

    Not because I am happy
    Not because I am healed
    Not because the night
    has been kind to me

    I shine
    because something in me
    is vulgar enough
    to insist

    Because even broken things
    catch light
    when they refuse
    to stay buried

    Because I have never known
    how to disappear quietly

    Because every time grief
    tries to make a home
    inside my mouth
    I put on lipstick
    and speak around it

    Because I am tired
    yes—

    but I am not finished

    There is a difference

    A woman can be exhausted
    and still be holy

    She can be heartbroken
    and still be hilarious

    She can be divorced
    undone
    unanswered
    overstimulated
    and still somehow
    look like the main event
    in a room
    that did not deserve her

    That is not vanity

    That is resurrection
    with better lighting

    That is survival
    with a little shimmer
    because why should pain
    get to be the only thing
    that leaves a mark?

    Look at us

    Still here

    Still dressed

    Still ridiculous

    Still making beauty
    out of whatever
    tried to flatten us

    Still walking in
    like the floor
    owes us applause

    Still star-studded
    with every place
    we almost didn’t survive