Tuesday, June 5, 2012

A Letter To My Husband

It's like I'm dancing around the house in a dress and pearls with a smile on my face but underneath the facade my skin is decaying and my heart is slowing because inside I'm dying a slow death of guilt, anguish, confusion, pain, and frustration.

When no one is looking though I take my dress off, I lay my pearls in the box and the one man who is supposed to get the best of me gets the worst. My tongue lashes at him when he offers to help me do something, my eyes roll so hard they almost fall back in my head when he does something "his way" instead of "my way."

When I lay to sleep at night I can't feel him touching me because I've rolled over and shut down, not ready for another night of scripture reading or prayer that feels so empty because my heart is so empty.

I'm scared for him to see my heart, because if he does he will know that it's different, he will know that it's not what it was the day he met me, and it's not what it was the day he married me, and it's not what it was the first day we took that test and it was positive.

It's not what it was the day we watched an empty ultrasound monitor, it's not even what it was the day we watch a motionless ultrasound monitor.

It's worse.

It's dark and twisted and jaded.

My pearls look so pretty with my work clothes. They look good with my swimsuit. They look even better in my new house.

I cover my pain with the excitement of a new job.
I cover my pain with a vacation.
I cover my pain with a new house.

Baby clothes hang in the closet, but office furniture sits in the room.

I can't cover the pain when no one but him is looking. It spills out. It erupts from my body with foundation rocking force. Sometimes it doesn't erupt at all, it simply boils deep inside and forces silence. This silence builds a stone wall between us that makes me wonder how it will ever break down.

Couples entrenched deep into the joy of pregnancy are surrounding us. Their excitement is contagious, yet temporary. Each time the story breaks I feel the sting. The twinge of pain deep in my heart that crys out to God, why not us? I am fearful they will see the hurt wash over my glazed eyes, I don't want them too for I fear they will feel guilty for their joy and I cannot be responsible for stealing it. The emotions compound one on top of the other until I feel like my pearls are strangling me.

I spit hurtful tones at the giver of my pearls. He swallows them and looks at me with a rage in his eyes that I've never seen before and couldn't once imagine was in him. I have brought this out in him. This crazy.

I realize the rage in those eyes is his pain that I've failed to acknowledge. He isn't a father any more than I'm a mother and in that moment if I could have seen those eyes as hurt instead of anger I might have changed my tone. I might have backed down. I might have grabbed tight of his hand and pulled him to his knees and cryed out to Jesus to break this wall we've built.

I might have realized he isn't my enemy, he is my friend. I might have remembered they weren't just my babies, they were our babies.

I might not have drank so much wine that night.

Rebelliouness rises up within me with such force that I stop guarding my heart. I start letting stuff back in that pushes Jesus out.

And night after night, in my pretty little gown, in my king size bed, I fall into the blissful sleep where I can forget all that has happened in the first year of our marriage. Where I can pretend that Satan isn't creeping in and trying to destroy. Where I can dream of a new day that I don't wake up and wonder how the man I fell so crazy in love with and married in less than half a year has become this body that I walk through life with motionless.

I wake up and realize it won't go away. I can't continue to avoid it. I can't continue to be strong. I can't continue to walk along and allow people to think that just because I'm wearing a dress and pearls that I'm gracefully handling the turmoil seated deep inside my soul.

I want to go home. And strip it all off. To let him see me without my pearls. Without my dress. To hold me as tears well up in my eyes with so much force that I can't choke them back. To rock me back and forth as I tremble and finally seek comfort in accepting the empty womb.

To seek peace.
To seek mercy.
To stop looking for reasons.
To stop questioning.
To just accept.
To just breathe.

I want to love him. I want to embrace him with that fierce desire that used to consume me about him. I want to feel the way I did the moment he walked in my front door. The moment he kissed me in the car. The moment he fell to his knee. I need to love him like that.

I imagined our first year so different.

If I take my dress and my pearls off, will you pick up a hammer with me and start breaking our wall down?

3 comments:

  1. Bless your sweet precious heart. What a very real, raw post. I have been there dear friend. I have danced the danced. I have worn the mask, worn the dress, worn the pearls, worn the ugly shoes of infertility. They are painful shoes, tight and ugly all at once. Shoes that are so hard to walk in you just desperately want to take them off, trade them in for something different. And yet your in them. Continue to walk forward, run if you can, push through the pain of the shoes and run, fast as you can straight into the arms of Jesus. You'll sweat, you'll cry and probably even scream out in anguish from time to time. But run. It's always easier with those who love you. Let them hold your hand, run alongside you, pick you up when you fall from the pain. Pass the baton if you need to, allow someone else to finish this leg while you catch your breath, but don't turn back and head toward the starting line because you're closer to the finish line than you realize. And there He waits, your God, my God. The one who created all. The one who gave you these shoes. He will trade them in for the beautiful, glorious shoes of motherhood, He will. But you'll always keep the first pair, ugly as they once were, they somehow become beautiful. You'll tuck them away always remembering the race you ran while in those shoes, thankful that you didn't quit. You'll even take them out from time to time, not to wear them, but to touch them, to remember them, to thank God for all He taught you while you wore them. It's hard to imagine I know, but just keep running. I'll run with you. I really will. You don't know me, but I've gone before you and while God may lead you a different way than He did me, the finish line will indeed be in the same spot. I'll help you find it. I'll start by praying you there. Maybe someday we could talk. It helps sometimes to just let go with someone who doesn't know you in your everyday life, someone who you won't have to see at church on Sunday and worry that they now feel sorry for you. Someone who has been right where you are, wearing those shoes. You let me know, and if you need me to take the baton and help you run this leg of the race, I sure will...
    Contact me anytime... mcmegs@hotmail.com

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  2. Previous commenter...what a heartfelt and beautiful way to relate to Keisha. Your description of the shoes is so perfectly inspired and true.

    Keisha, she is right. God will bring you through every last bit of this. Trust Him. I have faced hardships in life that felt overwhelming, but I promise you that God delivered me and He IS faithful. Even when it doesn't feel like it. He is. I am praying for you.

    Please keep us posted?

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  3. Hi, Keisha! I am so delayed in responding to this post, but just want you to know that you have been on my heart. The roller coaster you are on is all too familiar to me. I clearly remember how the many doctor appointments related to infertility as well as just thinking about it nonstop took both an emotional as well as physcial toll on me. I am so sorry that you are going through this. I firmly believe that the obstacles we encounter in life make us stronger and make us who we are. One day you will look back on this time with a different perspective, but for now, know that you are in my thoughts and prayers. Michelle Sharp

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