The Longing to Leave – 3

Written by john

sfw nic beach pan 450x155 The Longing to Leave   3

Reading the comments that appeared at Beyond Blue about The Longing to Leave-2 has been a continuing inspiration. I realize how different everyone’s experience is about the impact of depression on marriage, and how desperately hard everyone works to reach what is for them the right answer about staying married or not. For some, the “longing to leave” is a justified move to safety from a destructive relationship. For me, though, it was a fantasy borne of depression. I often wonder how it is, given where I began in my struggle to build a loving relationship with another human being, that my wife and I have stayed married for so long. “Marriage is survival,” I once heard a pastor say at a wedding, and the uncomfortable laughter in his large audience confirmed the truth of it. Despite all our struggles, we’ve managed to survive the worst of times.

For so many years, though, and long beyond adolescent dreams, I was searching obsessively not for the real work of two people always learning about each other but for a drug-like love that would give me a shortcut to salvation.

Depressed and full of shame at who I was, I searched desperately for someone who would make up what was missing, gifting me the worth I felt I lacked, so that I could feel like a whole person at last. Of course, I didn’t think of it that way. I simply imagined I was falling in love. It would start with an attraction that soon became obsessive for a woman whose spirit and warmth I reached for instinctively – almost like a predator – to take in as my own. This was falling in love in a strangely one-sided way. I needed the responsiveness of the other person, to be sure, but only to a certain point. I can try to explain with a story, really a moment when something began to get through to my isolated mind.

……..

I had, or imagined I had, an intense bond with R for two years in my early twenties. Her loving me meant everything. She was beautiful, talented and lively, and deep down I felt not just proud that she was part of my life, I felt alive and justified because of her presence. More than that, I projected into the minds of everyone I met a judgment that I had value because such a woman loved me. That was the reality of what I needed from her – the sense of self-worth that I lacked on my own. Then I had to take a one-year job in another city, and after some months, the strain was evident. I ignored what was clearly happening – so desperate was I to believe that we would be together forever. After all, I was nothing without her.

I was visiting, and we were up early, getting dressed and ready to go out for breakfast – avoiding deep talk though clearly ill at ease with each other. The windows were open to a fine New England spring morning. I was dousing my face with cold water in the bathroom when suddenly I was startled by a beautiful singing voice floating in through the window. It was a woman’s voice pouring a haunting melody into the air. It seemed to surround me, and the feeling and the sheer beauty of the tone put everything else out of my mind. I relaxed into its flow for a few still moments, and then I started to move – I had to find out where that was coming from. It seemed part of the air I was breathing for that short time, but all of a sudden it was gone! Don’t stop, I thought – where could that singer be? I leaned out the window but could only glimpse shut blinds and blank walls through the low-hanging sycamore branches. I walked back to the bedroom and found R quietly sweeping a brush through her long dark hair.

“Did you hear that?” I asked.

“Hear what?”

“That incredible singing – it was the most beautiful thing. Where could it have come from?”

“Oh,” she laughed, “that was just me.”

“Just now? Just right now? I mean, it stopped a few seconds ago.”

She nodded slowly, still brushing.

How could that be? She had a wispy speaking voice that didn’t carry well across a room. I didn’t know what to say.

”… I … I never knew you could sing.”

“Oh, I sing all the time.”

“I mean … I never heard you sing.”

She smiled into the mirror. “Well… you have.”

She finished brushing her hair. We got our coats and left. And she was gone for good._

…….

To say I crashed when she left is putting it mildly. What could happen when my sense of who I was and what I was worth in the world walked away? Gone! There was nothing left! I drank heavily, fell into complete depression, couldn’t sleep, couldn’t work, cried a lot, burned with the obsession of having to get her back. For the second time in my life, I went to a psychiatrist. He treated the immediate breakdown of functioning and tried to assure me it was a natural grieving over an event that had the emotional impact of divorce. I suppose that was all I wanted at the time – to heal enough so that I could function. Then I’d be able to resume my obsessive quest for a woman to make me feel whole again!

And so the pattern continued for years. When I met L and we married, things seemed so different. But as soon as we got past the intense early years into the time when the relationship gets real or gets broken, I picked up again the habit of obsessing over that shortcut to fulfillment. I could dream of other women, other places, other careers that would end the inner fear, emptiness and pain. It was the sort of dreaming that would always keep me from hearing the song close by. The dreams gave me a way out instead of opening up and talking to the woman who loved me about the real crisis I was in. There was always a fantasy person elsewhere who wouldn’t need all that talking and honesty!

It took many years, but finally the escape artist in me called it quits. Those fantasies came in such abundance that I just couldn’t take them seriously anymore. Only then could I get on with the work of recovery and the work of marriage.

What has your experience been like? What have you tried in order to get past the voice of depression and reach out to another person?

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Related posts:

  1. The Longing to Leave – 1
  2. The Longing to Leave – 2
  3. The Longing to be Close – 1
  4. The Longing to be Close – 2
  5. Why Depressed Men Leave – 2

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17 Comments to “The Longing to Leave – 3”

1. Posted by stephany, November 25th, 2007 at 1:37 pm

This is a brilliant piece of writing, pure emotions translating into a learning process that many people never realize in their lifetime. When you write/admit to having needed someone to give the sense of self-worth that you didn’t have on your own, has got to be one of the most profound life lessons we can learn. I truly feel that is key to success in any relationship, whether it’s marriage or friendship, that we must know who we are, be all we need to be for ourselves, and then as a result, we can then have a real, honest and equal relationship with another person. To be able to be alone, rely on one’s self for life joy, and fulfillment– is the key to success for a whole relationship with another person. I say this, based on life experience of my own. The longer I alone, I feel I am learning the most about myself.

Your blog is the only one I’ve read yet, that causes tears to run down my face.

I’ve been reading other posts, and your honesty and revelations are amazing, thanks for sharing.

2. Posted by john@storiedmind.com, November 26th, 2007 at 1:01 am

You leave me kind of speechless, Stephany. For now I’ll just say a simple thank you for your support. I’ve been reading your blog and it gives me a model for unbelievable courage and honesty. The way you are handling and writing about your ongoing struggle is a powerful inspiration. Thank you for that!

JohnD

3. Posted by http://zathynpriest.com/blog, November 27th, 2007 at 5:38 am

Finding honesty in ourselves and admitting it silently is difficult enough, but admitting it on a Blog to others takes on a whole different perspective.

Reading about other people’s lives, the lessons learnt, the lessons still in the process of being learnt, is something that triggers a part of our mind to re-evaluate ourselves and where we are in the present moment. Where we might be in the future.

Thank you John for another insightful post.

Best Wishes,
Zathyn Priest

4. Posted by thorsburg@gmail.com, November 28th, 2007 at 11:50 am

Oh, John. You shouldn’t have asked.

You know those holiday letters people send out? Two pages of nonstop braggadocio about their jobs and cars and kids and vacations? This post is nothing like that. In fact, just writing it down makes me want to go put my head in an oven (check out the recap of my favorite scene in “Crimes of the Heart” here to put that last comment in perspective: http://sneakpeeks.typepad.com/blog/first_of_the_month_musings/index.html)

Ok, here is is. Fall madly in love at 19 with a man, he left me and married someone else. Reacted just as you did after your breakup with R, although the therapy and meds that had kept me alive against my will this year weren’t available to me in 1981.

1984. Meet a man who becomes platonic friend. He proposes; I don’t feel “that way” about him until 1) my father suggests there might be something to a “nice” man instead of the emotional cripples i’d been dating and 2) i get laid off my job and panic. I marry the guy. Despite having been friends with this lovely, funny, kind person for over a year, he becomes controlling, belittling and emotionally/verbally abusive.

I take this for four years, decide to kill myself, friend suggests I see her therapist who has five dogs. Since I like dogs, and figure the car and garage will still be there after I meet this lady, I do. She saves my life.

I get divorced in ‘91. Make one more stupid mistake where therapy and meds couldn’t save me from myself, but I got out before he punched me and, despite the relapse, I was finally “getting it.”

Got a new job in a new town. Loved my life. Felt the most mentally healthy I’ve ever felt. Met a wonderful man; got married. Had two or three great years before he lost his job and fell apart. Got pregnant accidentally during brief halt in hostilities; he assured me that he WAS in the marriage for the long haul and he DID want the baby. Was great until she was born, then relapsed after a number of years of being a posted boy for NA. Divorced him when my daughter was a year old.

Had started seeing a therapist when the marriage started getting rocky; still am, plus I take my meds and work like a son of a gun to get my head on straight.

But I am now the thing I swore I would never be: a single parent. Last fall, met a man who is also a divorced single parent. He had four kids and one dog; I have four dogs and one kid. Lots of things in common, including depression. Match made in heaven. We fall in love … plan to get married as soon as he gets some things worked out, including finding a job. Spend blissful Thanksgiving and Christmas together. Four days before Valentine’s Day I get an IM from his daughter that he had a woman over to watch movies the night before. I call him and he says everything’s ok; we’re still good — the next day he calls and says he’s leaving me for her.

Spend six weeks in an outpatient mental health program … continue to see my therapist and take my meds … and Friday would have been my 22nd anniversary (1st marriage). David’s been gone 26 years … Brad’s been gone 16 … Mark’s been gone 7 … Steve’s been gone almost ten months. I have tried to understand and heal myself … to learn from past mistakes … to pay better attention to warning signs … to educate myself about healthy relationships (and I actually did have one) and to not make the same mistakes over and over.

But this last one has broken me. It doesn’t seem to matter what I do, I end up with a broken heart. I can be strong enough to set boundaries and enforce them — yippee. There’s a ringing endorsement for healthy behaviour: I’ve kicked four men out of my life and now I’m all alone. I spent years knowing that there are worse things than being single – now, overwhelmed by single parenting, I’m no longer so sure.

And all people can offer me are platitudes, suggestions that somehow my daughter is a sufficient substitute for an adult companion (i’ve seen those emotionally incestuous parents and have no desire to be one, thank you) or blather on about how I don’t need a man to fulfill me.

Thanks, but I am not a 20 year old ingenue anymore who’s looking for someone to complete her. I’m a 46 year old woman who knows she’s not getting any more “marketable” with every day that passes. A single parent who wants to give her daughter every good thing I had growing up, many of which I can’t provide without, yes, two incomes AND a father for her. I’m a woman without anyone to talk to about funny things the dogs did or my daughter’s last report card.

And as I watch my father’s declining health and realize that he’d be in a nursing home if it weren’t for my mother … well, despite my best efforts to stay in the moment, it’s hard not to picture a bleak future where I end up dying alone in a “facility” somewhere.

I’ve tried to get past the voice of depression and reach out in the healthiest ways I know how … this time, I don’t know if I can ever get up from knocked on my *ss, which is where I’ve been since last February. Or if I even want to. And since I can’t live this way but I can’t … check out (my folks and my daughter depend on me) … I don’t know what to do. And that feeling of being a rat in a trap with no escape only makes me more despairing of this life.

Jesse Kellerman wrote this in his last book and it spoke to me, so I wrote it down: “At what point did bad decisions cease to be an interruption of life and become life itself?”

I dunno … but that’s how I got here …

5. Posted by thorsburg@gmail.com, November 28th, 2007 at 11:52 am

oops … that should have been “poster boy for NA.” Apparently depression can also affect one’s proofreading skills …!

6. Posted by Louise Yeiser, November 29th, 2007 at 9:47 am

This link will take you straight to the link mentioned in thorsburg@gmail.com’s comment above, without having to wade through all the other stuff:
http://sneakpeeks.typepad.com/blog/2006/11/the_bad_day.html

7. Posted by stephany, November 29th, 2007 at 2:42 pm

I love this blog. I’m about to turn 48 and feel like I’m 17. I fear being alone, admit to wanting a man in my life, and the fear of never having a man like me, or love me often rules my soul like a guard at the door of a bank vault. Letting go of the fear and doing a freefall into that emotion-filled abyss is not easy. One day recently, my mother told me “You’re not getting any younger you know.” I felt like the 17 year old again. Then I thought, well I’m not perfect. I have 3 daughters, have made it through a nasty last 6 months, and hey, I’m still here. If I had a singing voice I’d crank out that song. Oh, and that is what made me cry when I read this article the first time. When he said he never heard her sing before.

I don’t think any one has ever heard me sing. I hope one day some one will.

I also am taking time to listen to my innerself, my spirit and soul. It’s the only navigational tool I’ve got to lead me to “my safe harbor”.

The compass, that still holds that 17 year old heart. She knows from experience now, and without experiences we never learn.

8. Posted by john@storiedmind.com, November 29th, 2007 at 11:50 pm

Thorsburg – I’m with you about the platitudes from friends – though it’s interesting that you have friends who are trying to talk to you. I know when I was overpowered by those feelings that you describe so well, I literally couldn’t hear what my friends were saying. One of them told me right to my face that she loved me and asked if there was anything she could do. I never heard those words until my wife reported them to me later on. Another time when I was recuperating at home after a hospital stay, some friends brought food over to help my wife. When I thanked one of them, she just looked at me and shrugged – you know, the food – it’s just love. People can’t always put it in words, or I can’t always hear what they’re saying. But they’re trying. Of course, there are also friends who run at the first sign of serious trouble, as if they might catch a dread disease by getting too close.

I’m curious – you write really well. Is writing one of the things you do when you “work like hell to keep your head on straight?”

Thanks for that story – it must be really hard now, but I hope the telling of it was helpful.

John

9. Posted by john@storiedmind.com, November 30th, 2007 at 12:20 am

Stephany – I’m glad you’ve come back – and you’ve got me wondering, as your writing usually does. “Letting go of the fear” – I do hear a lot about letting go, especially of fear or anger, but I confess that I’ve never been able to do it. What happens to me is that the fear will go away because something else has replaced it. And that something often arrives without notice, like an experience of religious conversion. Wham, all of sudden, I’m in a different place. It’s not like a choice – that seems too rational to me in dealing with a powerful emotion. (I suppose connecting with the right person is like that – all of a sudden this dreaded intimacy thing is here! Where’d the fear go? Why did I ever think this was so hard?) That change sometimes happens when I start doing something – taking action in spite of the fear of doing that very thing. There are (a few) times when I can step through the fear – and suddenly I’m on the other side of it, and, hey, I’m still alive! But those rare moments are the gleaming exceptions to my ingrained obedience to most fear. It’s just so hard to shift it. I hope you can get there.

John

10. Posted by stephany, November 30th, 2007 at 7:12 am

I have no idea if this is a depressed mind I write from, but I’ve given up happiness to a place in my mind that has hope for it,and wants it, but I also have convinced myself it will never happen. Giving up is a form of self-preservation, because of circumstance most people I’ve cared about or loved, died, and then my daughter, well it’s like she died too. How does one’s spirit not give up, it’s practically my quest now. To stay in the game. I’ve had one woman friend take the opportunity to tell me I’ve always needed medication. Apparently I’ve been quite manic in her opinion.So I sit here with everyone gone, and wonder what happened.

11. Posted by Miragi, November 30th, 2008 at 3:53 pm

I can’t even begin to tell you how painful it was to sit and read through all three parts of this series. I also can’t begin to describe how it is to be in a relationship where both of us suffer from the same, and yet differing manifestations of depression, or whatever it is that we have.

I think about leaving alot, not to appease my own sense of dissatisfaction, but because I tire of being a disappointment to my husband, my children, my parents and anyone else unfortunate enough to get in my way. And after reading your description of how you felt about leaving and starting over, it’s clearer now to me that my husband experiences things much like you do. That ‘grass is always greener’ syndrome….

While it’s gut-wrenching to read about something so painful, it’s necessary in order to know that neither him nor I are alone in what we deal with. Thank you for having the courage to be open and real about your various feelings and experiences~!

Mi

12. Posted by John D, December 1st, 2008 at 9:36 pm

Mi – It’s true, you’re not alone, and I hope that helps a bit. I’m not clear on what your manifestations of depression are, but it sounds like depression talking when you describe yourself as a disappointment. I hope you can hold onto the fuller sense of yourself when you’re not depressed. That’s made a huge difference to me – to keep in mind that I’m not the monster the illness says I am.
I’m glad you came by – I look forward to reading your blog.

My very best to you – JJOhn

13. Posted by Jessica, October 3rd, 2009 at 10:44 pm

I am so lost…Ive been trying to figure out what is going on with my husband, why he is acting the way he is, why is is running and pushing away from me. and everything I have read here is him. there is nothing i can do……

14. Posted by john, October 4th, 2009 at 8:19 pm

Jessica -

I can well understand the feeling of helplessness and how painful that must be. It’s likely your husband can’t listen to you if he’s in the driven state I tried to describe in this post. That’s not your fault, but I think it’s also true that your words and actions can’t change him. As I’ve mentioned to others, getting help and support for yourself may be the best thing you could do. You haven’t caused what’s going on, but you’re the victim and need to take care of your needs. Your husband is the only one who can begin to turn himself around.

All my best to you ==

John

15. Posted by Victoria, November 27th, 2009 at 11:37 am

Yes; how painful this is. To sit and read so many of my own thoughts, fears, pains, and tears, expressed by so many others, in so many ways.
48 hours ago I began a list of things I was grateful for.
As I look at the list, I can place a similar list beside it mentioning all the things I am not grateful for.
Will they balance, or will this day be another one where the dark outweighs the light?
Someone in my life, who is going through her own series of gray, has suggested we take a vacation; on another planet.
I asked her if there will be ex’s, siblings, parents, or any of our children on that planet.
If so, then No.
I would walk into the woods on this 20 acres and melt into the leaves and fade away into being fungi, if I thought my pups would just leave me there and let me be.
Pups are a gift from the Universe though. They keep me sane and from melting down.
Maybe, in my next life, I will be a Pup?

16. Posted by john, November 30th, 2009 at 9:38 am

Victoria -

Well, I’d leave out the other planet and the next life. ;-) The lists I make are about the specific things the go on when I’m a mess. It helps to write those down – that process starts to defuse them and prevent overwhelm. I’ll have a post on that going up soon on the Health Central site.

Of course, you have plenty more than the pups to keep you sane – and from melting away in those wonderful 20 acres. Woods have a special feeling all their own – I love it.

My best to you -

John

17. Posted by john, November 30th, 2009 at 9:51 am

Hey, Victoria -

It takes a long time – at least that’s what every person I know in your position has told me. I’ve seen it close up in the experience of someone in my family as well. I’ve known a couple of cases where leaving left no doubt and turned a life around – for the better. But for most people – how could there not be second thoughts and grief at the loss of what had been such a great hope.

Getting yourself back together after that experience can’t be easy, and I know that changing expectations in your mind doesn’t change your feelings for quite a while.

All my hopes and wishes for the best -

John

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