avatarColleen Sheehy Orme

Summary

The article discusses the complex nature of love and relationships, emphasizing that leaving a partner does not necessarily mean a lack of love but can be a decision made for personal well-being and emotional health.

Abstract

The narrative revolves around a conversation between the author and a friend who has recently ended a long-term relationship. The friend's tears are not for the lost love but for the realization that love alone is insufficient to sustain a relationship amidst other life challenges. The author shares her own experience of divorcing someone she loved due to the relationship's detrimental effects on her and her children's happiness and health. The article highlights that while the heart feels deeply, it does not have the capacity to resolve complex relationship issues. Love, though central to the story of a relationship, cannot repair the human condition or mitigate factors such as conflicts, resentments, and personality disorders. The author, drawing from her research and personal journey, asserts that it is crucial to leave unhappy and unhealthy relationships for the sake of one's well-being and to set a positive example, especially for children.

Opinions

  • Love does not guarantee the success of a relationship; other factors such as emotional health, compatibility, and external circumstances play significant roles.
  • It is possible to love someone and still choose to leave them for the sake of one's own happiness and health.
  • The heart's capacity to feel does not equate to the ability to think rationally or solve relationship problems.
  • Emotional strength is required to exit a bad relationship, and it is important to allow oneself to grieve the loss.
  • A relationship ending is not indicative of a failure of love but rather an acknowledgment that love, while profound, has its limitations in the face of the human condition.
  • Setting an example of joy and emotional wellness for children is more important than maintaining an intact but unhealthy family environment.
  • Difficult decisions are part of life, and choosing to prioritize one's well-being is a valid and necessary choice, even if it involves leaving a loved one.

I Divorced a Man I Loved

Leaving someone doesn’t necessarily mean we don’t love them

Photo by Yan Krukau: On Pexels

I call my friend to check on her. She’s broken up with a guy she’s been seeing for several years. She shed a few tears the night before.

“I’m calling to check on you,” I say.

“I’m fine,” she says. “Thanks for calling. I don’t know why I cried. I’m not a crier.”

“I get it,” I say.

“The tears aren’t for him,” she says. “I don’t regret leaving him.”

“Just because we leave someone,” I say. “Doesn’t necessarily mean we don’t love them. It means we’re smart enough to know they aren’t good for us. I still loved my husband when I left him. I didn’t want to be unhappy or unhealthy anymore.”

“I guess it’s good to get it out,” she says. “It’s good to go through the stages of a relationship ending.”

“A lot of relationships end,” I say. “And it’s not for a lack of love. It’s all of the other mitigating circumstances that crawl into our lives.”

“Yes,” she says.

“It’s good that we had the strength to leave bad relationships,” I say.

“I know,” she says.

“I sometimes forget that a remnant of me, did still love my husband. It’s why it took me years to leave him,” I say. “I don’t have any feelings left for him now. When he was willing to inflict brutal abuse during our divorce, he exited my heart completely. A man who is willing to hurt his children to hurt his wife, is not a man I could hold emotion for.”

“I’m glad I broke up with him,” she says.

“It’s still grief,” I say. “Allow yourself to feel it. It’s okay to give into it.”

I empathize with my friend.

There are some things in life we can control.

We can control some of our thoughts. We can talk ourselves in, or out of things. We can make rational decisions we believe are in our best interest. We can strive to be emotionally healthy.

We can’t control the heart.

The heart feels, it doesn’t think.

It’s why we feel out of control when it’s broken.

The heart runs away from us…while falling in..or out of love.

It’s why we get butterflies. It’s why we get nervous. It’s why a single touch can be felt throughout our entire body. It’s why attraction feels so visceral. Our heart is feeling, not thinking.

It’s why I swore after my divorce, I would never need a man again.

And then I met a man.

And I needed him.

I wish love alone could keep two people together.

But it can’t.

A failing relationship, isn’t necessarily a match for love.

The tears, arguments, ugly words, and raised voices are symptoms of a relationship falling apart. They were the postscript to my marriage, and the forward to my divorce.

Love was the middle of our story.

He was my best friend and my college sweetheart.

I didn’t want our ending.

But love wasn’t enough.

Love couldn’t put our relationship back together. It couldn’t repair the human condition that took down it down. Love couldn’t move that complexity.

It couldn’t field the ugliness that was happening before it. Love was the bystander. It couldn’t think for us, it could only feel for us.

Instead, it simply bore witness to its own demise.

I divorced a man I loved. Leaving someone, doesn’t necessarily mean we don’t love them. It means love doesn’t think, it feels. It can’t solve all of a relationship’s problems.

The human condition can turn love into unhealthy love.

Two people aren’t always able to solve their problems, even if they want to. There are conflicts, resentments, control, addiction, personality disorders, and other mitigating factors that crawl into our lives.

People can tell us to stay married.

They can insist an intact family is better. It isn’t. It’s an unhealthy environment. It’s not setting a good example for anyone, especially children.

I’ve spent more than a decade in the counseling and research of love, relationships, and divorce. I didn’t want this path. I resisted it for years. I finally had to surrender to my truth.

I didn’t want my children to have half-happy parents.

It wasn’t the example I wanted to set. I wanted them to live in a joyful environment. They deserved the happy mother they once knew. Not the emotional loss of both parents.

We have to make difficult and painful decisions.

We have to choose to leave unhappy and unhealthy relationships.

Love is the heart.

We can’t control the heart.

The heart feels, it doesn’t think.

Love
Relationships
Self Improvement
Life Lessons
This Happened To Me
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