Ten years ago if you would've stopped me on the street and said that I'd be stuck at a dead end job, divorcing my husband of fifteen years, and dividing three kids between two houses and twenty miles, I would've spat in your face with laughter.
We never intend to have our life's plans crumble before us, watching our spouses change into different people and our children pick themselves apart because all the words their parents say are fights disguised in jabs and cracks at each other: the time they don't have, the money they don't have, the love they don't have.
And in ten years, two people can fall apart the way a river branches into separate streams, continuously flowing away from their source, navigating bends and crossing the silted mud of life together until they split up.
And everything we take for granted, those necessities of life, are broken down into their basic elements. Water is merely hydrogen and oxygen. A marriage is but two people who can be divided, simplified, classified, jarred up, studied, separated.
Two streams diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not see this coming.
It just happens that way. Life just happens that way.