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I cannot recall what it was like to see my parents smile at one another. I’m sure that it must have happened, that I had to have borne witness to such an occasion at least once, but when I peruse my thoughts and memories for an image of my mother laughing near my father, or my dad grinning at a joke my mom had cracked, I come up short. It’s easy to find the cookie-cutter mirage of their happiness, it exists in the glossy photographs that I don’t have the heart to do away with. Now, if asked, it would be far simpler to talk about a fight, about a night of arguments and yelling, trials completely admissible if not for the quantity. I always hear stories, of dinner table dad jokes and pasta appreciation, and I always wonder what those people are hiding. Children of divorce learn so many lessons, but namely, they learn that there is no single person who is not hiding something. A closed door is a secret, a locked door is a secret well kept. A smile is defense mechanism and nothing is real. I suppose that’s it. You stop feeling real. I stopped feeling real eight years ago. As though my emotions were replaced with the urge to feel something. Somehow I must have located the off switch on my heart, yet it continued to beat. And all I could do was think Why could I feel angry even when I was smiling? Why did I want I want to cry after every time I laughed? How come when my parents told me they failed I decided that it was my fault? … The days came when I stopped Weeping over the dead flowers of my childhood. When I learnt to bask in the light And the warmth And the simplicity of just being. And instead of thinking about the mistakes and the fighting and the fact that I had no dad jokes to share I could instead think that I wanted something better for myself.
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Apr 30, 2018
Apr 30, 2018 at 3:00 PM UTC
The Cookie-Cutter Child of Divorce
I cannot recall what it was like to see my parents smile at one another. I’m sure that it must have happened, that I had to have borne witness to such an occasion at least once, but when I peruse my thoughts and memories for an image of my mother laughing near my father, or my dad grinning at a joke my mom had cracked, I come up short. It’s easy to find the cookie-cutter mirage of their happiness, it exists in the glossy photographs that I don’t have the heart to do away with. Now, if asked, it would be far simpler to talk about a fight, about a night of arguments and yelling, trials completely admissible if not for the quantity. I always hear stories, of dinner table dad jokes and pasta appreciation, and I always wonder what those people are hiding. Children of divorce learn so many lessons, but namely, they learn that there is no single person who is not hiding something. A closed door is a secret, a locked door is a secret well kept. A smile is defense mechanism and nothing is real. I suppose that’s it. You stop feeling real. I stopped feeling real eight years ago. As though my emotions were replaced with the urge to feel something. Somehow I must have located the off switch on my heart, yet it continued to beat. And all I could do was think Why could I feel angry even when I was smiling? Why did I want I want to cry after every time I laughed? How come when my parents told me they failed I decided that it was my fault? … The days came when I stopped Weeping over the dead flowers of my childhood. When I learnt to bask in the light And the warmth And the simplicity of just being. And instead of thinking about the mistakes and the fighting and the fact that I had no dad jokes to share I could instead think that I wanted something better for myself.
divorce
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Apr 30, 2018
Apr 30, 2018 at 3:00 PM UTC
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