6/01/2010

True Confession Tuesday: Books

(Welcome to a break in our regularly scheduled programming. I just realized that this post is due today - because I have forgotten all of my organization skills - so while it does involve a confession of sorts, it doesn't exactly continue the story of how I became Mrs. Hot Guy. That will continue next week. Unless I've forgotten something else. Sorry.)

So one of the other pleasures of writing for the SVMoms Group is that there's a book club. If you're in the book club, you can sign up to read and write about new books. Last month I signed up for a particular book. I didn't sign up for another book, because I thought it would upset me.

Look, I used to read deeply intellectual books for pleasure. I used to read searing stories of pain and loss, of history, of life. Then I started teaching in a neighborhood where there was already a lot of pain and loss. My book choices turned quickly to mysteries and chick lit. Which is where they remain, because if I am reading to relax I don't want to get confused or upset. Sue me.

Of course, I also got the book that I thought would upset me. But I felt compelled to read it, because taking it was like a promise. And so I stuffed "I Am Nujood, Aged 10 and Divorced" into my purse.

I got divorced at 27 - it seems like a lifetime ago now. I had gotten engaged at 21 (after a month), married at 23. . . I know some people who married that young, or even younger, and are still happy. I think it's fantastic that they made such smart decisions at such young ages. I, however, was not smart at that age. Or in any way mature enough to choose well. I chose poorly and suffered for it. And still it was hard to leave.

I had a career, parents and friends who were more than supportive of my decision,  and still I had moments of doubt. I didn't know anyone who was my age and divorced.

As I read the words of a 10 year old, with little education, who was violated and abused by the sadistic beast of a husband who'd chosen her, I teared up. Our situations were nothing alike, of course, but when she talked about the relief she felt when it was over , I remembered my first day in my first solo apartment. Choosing pictures I loved for the walls, knowing I'd never again have to look at his "art" (collages of magazine cut-outs of naked models - I wonder what his current art history students would think of them?). Knowing that no one was there to complain about what I ate, what I read, what I watched, what I said and what I wore. Feeling relieved.

Divorce has such negative connotations, even in our divorce-friendly country. We feel sorry for people when they get divorced. And I'm sure there are plenty of divorced people who deserve our sympathy. But I think the rest of us deserve a party grander than our weddings.

3 comments:

Jerseygirl89 said...

This is getting spooky - and bravo to you for figuring it out faster than I did. You have such a good attitude about it.

WordVixen said...

I choose books for the same reason. If I want to learn, I tend to choose educational non-fic, not memoirs. If I want to be entertained or relax, it's Fantasy or chick-lit. I won't even read mysteries or suspense or thrillers because, quite frankly, if they're good they tense me up worse than the evening news, and if they're not good, then why would I want to read them?

Thankfully, I'm not divorced. But I only just celebrated my 4th wedding anniversary and I'm 30. When I think back to who would have been my choices? One I'd probably still be married to, but I can't even imagine my life with him, and the others... Lets just say that it's a good thing that I didn't get my way. The offers I had but turned down? Thank goodness I wasn't even tempted (except by the Scot, but only because I want/ed to live in Scotland).

Still, I've known people who were divorced younger than you were, some that should have been, and my own husband was divorced at about the same age as you. See what better choices young divorcees make the second time around? :-D
.-= WordVixen´s last blog ..I Am Hutterite Review =-.

kara-noel said...

One of my cousins was divorced at 26 and I remember her calling me in tears as she was trying to get paperworked signed and documents to the right person, just before my wedding (at 24). She said "You better be sure about this marriage. Because it's a hell of a lot harder to get divorced than it is to get married." Now I wish I would have given her a party... REALLY!
.-= kara-noel´s last blog ..Surfers Healing – Cowabunga Dude! =-.