avatarDarcy Thiel

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-page document, which is crazy because we had the simplest divorce ever. No property, no money, no kids, yet it still required 16 pages of legal jargon. I scanned all of it and shredded it.</p><p id="3307">New years are always a time for reflection so this year will be no different. Never in a million years did I think I would ever be divorced, but then probably no one ever gets married thinking that it won’t last forever.</p><p id="1ed9">It made me terribly sad. Not bitter, just solemn.</p><p id="6cf0">Of course, that leads my thoughts to my second marriage. Never in a million years did I think I would ever be a widow. That is irrational because if we had lived together until old age, there was a 50% chance that I would be a widow at some point unless I died first or we both died at the same time for some crazy reason.</p><p id="22bb">Yet it never occurred to me. I suspect most people don’t think about that much when they get married. But I certainly didn’t think I would be a widow in my forties.</p><p id="78e7">I was at my daughter Emily’s last month with her now eight kids and thinking about how when I married the first time, we planned on six kids. We had zero.</p><p id="d5da">But in my marriage to Tim, I had one biological child but gained three step-kids. Four is a lot closer to what I thought my life would

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look like. If I marry again to someone who has two kids, that would make the six I originally thought I would have.</p><p id="c7b9">Life is like that lots of times. Maybe even most times. I think if we polled a bunch of people in their fifties, the majority would say their life doesn’t look the way they thought it would.</p><p id="00f4">What’s that famous saying? Life is what happens when you are busy making other plans. I keep thinking about Jennifer Aniston in the movie Marley and Me. Her husband is lamenting this very thing and she comes back with a confident statement about how much better their lives are than anything they ever could have imagined.</p><p id="fc40">Makes me wonder what the future holds for me. What will life bring in the next chapter? What will next year hold for me? And will I lament or celebrate how differently it all came out? I vote for the latter!</p><figure id="30bb"><img src="https://cdn-images-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/1*LM6csU93e75sLvJzSnA99Q.png"><figcaption><i>I’m Darcy Thiel. I utilize my professional and personal experiences to increase my understanding and compassion to help others. I am a Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Adult Planning Specialist, End of Life Doula, and author. Feel free to check out my profile to hear more.</i></figcaption></figure></article></body>

Reflections

It happens when you clean out your cupboards

Photo by Adam Birkett on Unsplash

As January approaches, I have started my annual task of going through my filing cabinet. This not only accomplishes purging, but I also prepare for my taxes as I go along. It usually takes most of the month.

This year, there is an added element to it. I am trying to go paperless as much as possible. That means do a lot of scanning, which can be time-consuming.

Today, I came across a folder that I basically forget about until January every year, the divorce papers from my first marriage. I have no contact with my first husband, but there are no ill feelings between us.

I was thinking about him this year more than usual because I am dating someone whose middle name is the same as my first husband’s last name. Back in my twenties, I changed my name to his so I bore that name for six years as well.

It is a 16-page document, which is crazy because we had the simplest divorce ever. No property, no money, no kids, yet it still required 16 pages of legal jargon. I scanned all of it and shredded it.

New years are always a time for reflection so this year will be no different. Never in a million years did I think I would ever be divorced, but then probably no one ever gets married thinking that it won’t last forever.

It made me terribly sad. Not bitter, just solemn.

Of course, that leads my thoughts to my second marriage. Never in a million years did I think I would ever be a widow. That is irrational because if we had lived together until old age, there was a 50% chance that I would be a widow at some point unless I died first or we both died at the same time for some crazy reason.

Yet it never occurred to me. I suspect most people don’t think about that much when they get married. But I certainly didn’t think I would be a widow in my forties.

I was at my daughter Emily’s last month with her now eight kids and thinking about how when I married the first time, we planned on six kids. We had zero.

But in my marriage to Tim, I had one biological child but gained three step-kids. Four is a lot closer to what I thought my life would look like. If I marry again to someone who has two kids, that would make the six I originally thought I would have.

Life is like that lots of times. Maybe even most times. I think if we polled a bunch of people in their fifties, the majority would say their life doesn’t look the way they thought it would.

What’s that famous saying? Life is what happens when you are busy making other plans. I keep thinking about Jennifer Aniston in the movie Marley and Me. Her husband is lamenting this very thing and she comes back with a confident statement about how much better their lives are than anything they ever could have imagined.

Makes me wonder what the future holds for me. What will life bring in the next chapter? What will next year hold for me? And will I lament or celebrate how differently it all came out? I vote for the latter!

I’m Darcy Thiel. I utilize my professional and personal experiences to increase my understanding and compassion to help others. I am a Licensed Mental Health Counselor, Adult Planning Specialist, End of Life Doula, and author. Feel free to check out my profile to hear more.
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