psyche777

psyche777
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Sausalito, California, United States
Birthday
December 31
Title
President
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www.psychceu.com
Bio
Katie Amatruda, MFT, EMT, BCETS is a mermaid, writer, and psychotherapist

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Salon.com
Editor’s Pick
JANUARY 3, 2012 10:45AM

Four Stages Of Divorce: Break-up, Breakdown, Breakthrough an

Rate: 16 Flag
I wrote this, and it was published by Huffington Post 12/29/11 at:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kate-amatruda/four-stages-of-divorce-br_b_1171500.html?ref=divorce


From my professional and personal experience, I have observed four phases to a divorce or the ending of an intimate relationship. Mine started with the:

n break-up
1. a separation or disintegration

I can't forget that Tuesday night call, even though we spoke every night. I was in Hawaii, working at a six-week Department of Defense contract at Pearl Harbor, when my husband called. "We have to talk," he said, followed by, "I want to separate." He said, "I Love You But I Am Not In Love With You," which I have since learned is known as The Speech. Every man in America in Midlife Crisis who is about to leave his wife, except maybe two or three, parrots these words. Almost every woman who hears them thinks that her husband has a brain tumor, and worse, we wish it were so; at least then we would understand.

He said my name in such a cruel way, with such hatred in his voice, that I vowed to change it. 
I recovered long enough to say, "But two days ago you told me that you loved me."

No, he was done, and said he'd be gone by the time I returned home in two weeks. I had believed we'd mated for life, sworn "till death do us part." We had our season, as Mourning Doves do, loyal through courtship, pregnancy, and building our nest. We'd incubated our young, and cared for him until he was ready to fly. It's just that it takes eighteen years to raise a son.

When I asked why, my husband spoke of the Other Woman, assuring me that, "nothing physical has happened." He'd known her for all of two weeks, and was smitten. His voice dropped to an awed whisper, "She's my soul mate. She's the bravest person I ever met; she rides motorcycles all over the world," as if my comforting a screaming child as her fingers were being amputated in a field hospital in Haiti wasn't courageous. I offered to come home, but he said, "No."
No matter the cause, the truth is simple and brutal -- he was my everything, and, unnoticed, I had become his nothing.

The devastation that occurred led to a:
n breakdown
1. an act or instance of breaking down; collapse
2. (Psychiatry) short for nervous breakdown

I was gutted, strung up like a deer on a car bumper, a victim of a hit-and-run. Later, I read in Huffington Post that Susan Pease Gadoua calls this, "the most hurtful, hateful and heinous way to exit your nuptials.... A hundred per cent of the people who come to see me after their spouse has dropped this two ton bomb on them have been nothing short of devastated, bleary eyed and incapacitated -- often for a long time."

And I was. I cried every day for nine months, long enough for a pregnancy.

The me of today was gestated in tears, brined in salt water. I grieved as though he had died, which, in some ways he had. The man I had loved was gone, replaced by one who freely revised our history, and who lied to our friends and family, and to me. I couldn't work, and could barely function. I sunk into a soup of grief, losing so much weight that I became gaunt, a ghost of myself, and a ghost to myself.

It would be easier to be dead.

Thick trees, telephone poles and cement overpasses beckoned, and it took all my will not to crash into them. Dissociated and distant, I feared that I was a menace when I drove, but it was our son, our precious boy, on the cusp of manhood, who had the accident. Driving too fast around a curve on Highway 1, he'd overcorrected, landing the car in a ditch. I can't help but imagine the car soaring over the cliff, cannonballing him into the cold waters of the Pacific Ocean. My son was shaken; the bottom of the car torn open and the radiator crushed. He'd dropped out of all his classes, and I was distraught that our marital implosion had derailed him.

My recovery began with a:
n breakthrough
1. a significant development or discovery,

When a child trusts his wings and flies away, it is a time of rejoicing. When a husband lies and skulks out, it is not. It is shaming and shameful. I fear he is doomed to remain a chicken -- quailing, frightened, and small. No matter how bad things were, ending our marriage over the phone, with no warning, is not a Midlife Crisis. Call it what it truly is -- Midlife Cowardice.
I realized, no matter what I had or hadn't done, that I didn't deserve this. No one does. The shame is his, not mine.

My insights catapulted me into a:
n. Breakover
1. A term coined by the editors of Huffington Post to describe reinvention, a make-over after a break-up. Breakover is what arises after one's life is re-examined and transformed.

I'm Katie now. After a year, I moved to a boat in Sausalito, downsizing from a three-story house to a living space that is ten feet by twenty-three feet, keeping only the things that I loved. My new berth gives me a view of Mt. Tamalpais, Sausalito and Belvedere. I see a skyline of masts. On the boat, I'm gently rocked to sleep each night, cocooned in a blue and turquoise womb. Cormorants and herons visit, and new friends abate my loneliness. I still travel, with myself as my anchor, not him any longer. I try not to think of him. I want to focus on my new life, not his.

I walk every day and have kept off the forty pounds I lost. I finished writing my novel, am painting, and have signed up for a drawing class. Maybe the tears were cleansing, because I feel like a mermaid, swimming in the clearing waters of my psyche, not a pickle as I feared. My life is simple now, and when the fog lifts, the boat is filled with, as John Muir said, "holy, beamless, bodyless, inaudible floods of light." I've found the holy, and am working toward wholeness. And our boy? I know he'll make it, that his sweet spirit will triumph. As will mine. 

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Dear Katie,

I have been through every step you walked - twice. Need I say how much this resonates with me?

Rated with admiration.
R♥
Thank you, Dear R♥ FusunA,
I wish us both the best on our journeys!
Thank you for your comments and rating,
Katie
Every time I hear the words "We need to talk" a chill goes through my heart as I remember the number of times they were followed by words that can best be summarised as: "I'm going to rip out your heart and then stamp on it, but you have a great life afterwards, you hear?".
Rated.
I know this is not the main focus of your article, but I feel terrible for the "screaming child" who had her fingers amputated in Haiti - why was that necessary, what happened to her?
P, not that I'm defending XH, but I can't help but wonder if "the bravest person (he's) ever met" wasn't in fact YOU. The child amputee was just one example; there have to be others, and I can't begin to imagine how you dealt w/any of them, except that that's more courage than I could ever muster.

Perhaps he was jealous of you and so had to be "dway big man" to someone else..?

Regardless, you're well rid of him. Been there, done that too, except I was the one who split from a treacherous now-XH who was worth leaving, and I've never regretted that decision no matter how hard life got (and it did). Neither will you.

In the long run, why do you want someone who doesn't want you? Good riddance to bad rubbish...
I have not been through a divorce, but I have been through an extremely traumatic breakup (he dumped me long distance by letter) by a former fiance. I know the pain and the phases of grief of which you speak. I wanted to die too. I am so happy that you are in "recovery" now. Happy New Year and wishing you much joy. Rated.
Good writing, so aptly describing the damn process. Your re birth is a tremendous feat, I hope you celebrate it as so.
You got Katie back. Yay!

The "breakover" sounds similar to the crossroads scenario some experience when they're content with themselves.
Losing all respect for your (former) mate can surely give a good shove toward moving in a better direction. The direction being away from that person...
Congratulations on what sounds life a sweet new phase.
r./
I loved this. Rated for courage and tenderness, and because it is so well written. Best of luck to you and your son as you head into this new chapter of your lives.
What a coward - couldn't do it in person, hope it didn't screw up your job in Hawaii.

I left my first husband while he was away - I packed up and vanished. HOWEVER, I did it that way because I feared for my life...and I'd given him many warnings over the years that I wanted out (it still, apparently, was a surprise, of course). For me, it was a more prolonged sense of betrayal that I felt, but in the end it's a similar total lack of any feeling on the part of the person we invest so much in that is mind-warping (and heart-breaking).
This process is not limited to women alone. I have experienced an almost identical process, although I am hung up on step three. It seems sad to me that our most painful and tragic experiences are cliches'. Thanks for the insights.
As someone who has been through one divorce, and may be headed for my second, this resonated with me. Well written. Rated.
I have been here too, the same exact words started it. Your life now sounds glorious. I used to kayak among the houseboats in Sausalito and wish I could live there someday. Your spirit has already triumphed and you are closer to who you will be than who you were.
The first time I lost a husband it was his death that separated us, the second time was a lot easier except for the feeling that I must be unlovable.
rated with love
oh sweet jesus, yup, I've heard those words. Only after 51/2 years and no children in. I'm still living with her years later. The other didn't want her. :p Our marriage is done though, and I won't ever do that again (so I say now, we'll see how that revises with time). Good on you for making a clean break and finding yourself. I know it's trite to say we are born alone and we die alone, but it doesn't make it any less true.
I can remember crying on the phone to my mother and her saying get off this phone and go fix your marriage. Laugh. Life is too weird, in so many ways.
Beautiful said. Brava!