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  • Mother to three beautiful children. Oldest child surrendered to adoption. Reunited in 2005.Writer, designer, jewelry maker, reader, searcher, friend, sister, deep thinker, INFJ, chronic hair colorer, considered EMO, pierced, tattooed, a gemini, and a recovering catholic. Love travel, languages, books, fonts, pens, cool paper, color, solitude, and oh yeah, coffee.


    For more information on me, consult my About Me page.
    “...lukewarm acceptance is far more bewildering than outright rejection” - Martin Luther King

    "I am the horizon
    you ride towards, the thing you can never lasso
    I am also what surrounds you:
    my brain
    scattered with your
    tincans, bones, empty shells,
    the litter of your invasions.
    I am the space you desecrate
    as you pass through.
    - Margaret Atwood

    It costs so much to be a full human being that there are few who have the love and courage to pay the price. One has to abandon altogether the search for security and reach out to the risk of living with both arms. One has to embrace life like a lover. One has to accept pain as a condition of existence. One has to court doubt and darkness as the cost of knowing. One needs a will stubborn in conflict, but apt always to total acceptance of every consequence of living and dying.- From the play, Courting Darkness, by M. Longley
    “Out of suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are seared with scars.” –Kahlil Gibran

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  • "Regrettably, in many cases, the emphasis has changed from the desire to provide a needy child with a home, to that of providing a needy parent with a child. As a result, a whole industry has grown, generating millions of dollars of revenue each year..." - Commission on Human Rights, resolution 2002/92; E/CN/2002/79; page 25
  • "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire
  • "Anyone who knows anything of history knows that great social changes are impossible without feminine upheaval. Social progress can be measured exactly by the social position of the fair sex, the ugly ones included." - Karl Marx
  • "The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself."- Friedrich Nietzsche

  • "Adoption is a violent act, a political act of aggression towards a woman who has supposedly offended the sexual mores by committing the unforgivable act of not suppressing her sexuality, and therefore not keeping it for trading purposes through traditional marriage. The crime is a grave one, for she threatens the very fabric of our society. The penalty is severe. She is stripped of her child by a variety of subtle and not so subtle manoeuvres and then brutally abandoned." - Joss Shawyer, Death by Adoption, Cicada Press (1979)

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  • Banner artwork and profile picture: Gustav Klimt,The Tree of Life, Stoclet Frieze, c.1909 and Mother and Child (detail from The Three Ages of Woman), c.1905

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December 17, 2007

Divorciada

“A divorce is like an amputation: you survive it, but there's less of you” - Margaret Atwood

Yes, I am divorced. Rather recently in fact. While the filing happened a year ago, the actual process took a few months and it took this past year to finalize.

It was quite amicable. For that I am glad. My ex and I found it incredibly hard as it was to decide to end our marriage. To make it more difficult and fight over who got the stand mixer versus who got the Saeco coffee machine made no sense to either of us. It was all “stuff”. Stuff that could be replaced, repurchased, or simply discarded. It didn’t matter.

What did matter was that we had two wonderful boys to co-parent. Reenacting The War of the Roses wouldn’t have benefited our children in any way. Their well being was always at the forefront.

Our pro se divorce was so good in fact; many questioned why we even divorced at all. If you can divorce so nicely, why can’t you stay married?  Ah, good question. I won’t disclose the issues that occurred in my marriage. I will try not to place blame or point fingers.  It is not fair to my children or their father. I can say with total confidence (and believe he would agree) that we were both very much to blame. It takes two to tango and tango we did.

One of the most troubling aspects for me in contemplating my divorce was my daughter.

Yeah, my daughter. She doesn’t even live here. I have never spoken to her or met her yet in making major life decisions I still consider her.

  1. Would she be ashamed or embarrassed by me if she were to learn I was divorced? (And is that any reason to stay in the marriage?) Does my marital status have anything at all to do with the state of our reunion – past, present or future? If she were to tell her adoptive parents about me – her conservative Catholic adoptive parents who have been married for a long time – would she choke on the words “divorced” or would she just avoid it all together? Why does this matter to me at all? If she hasn’t embraced me in three years is being divorced or not going to make any difference?
  2. How could I possibly separate two more children (my sons) from their parents after having separated my daughter from hers?

The second issue was extremely hard for me to contemplate. Somewhere, somehow, some part of me felt like I was again, abandoning my children.  I was going to hurt my sons like I hurt my daughter.

Daily, nightly, even hourly I was plagued with questions like :

  • Is it better to come from a broken home or live in one?
  • What affect will my divorcing have on my sons and their future relationships with women? What affect will staying in my marriage have on them? How will they mirror the relationship I have with their father in their own relationships?
  • Will my sons worry that I will give them away now since I won’t have a husband? My oldest son is very aware that one of the reasons I lost his sister to adoption was lack of a husband and support. What will he fear if his father and I divorce? How do I address those fears?

On and on and on the questions came. Rarely were their any answers.  In the end, to settle this topic of my children and their view of my divorce, I had to think of the following:

If my sons or my daughter were in the type of relationship I was in, what would I tell them to do? What would I want them to do?

I concluded that I would tell them to get out of the marriage. I would also support them in doing so before, during and afterwards.

Once I came to that conclusion, once I realized that it is what I would tell my children, it became what I told myself. If I would tell them they deserved to be happy, why wouldn’t I expect  - no, demand – the same for myself?

Yes, my daughter knows I am divorced. I did mention it to her in an email. Nothing big. Not a big drama story, just a data point. In her typical style, she did not respond or comment in any way. I have no idea if she even read the email.

It doesn’t matter.

The type of mother/woman/person I am has nothing to do with my marital status.

I wish I knew that 22 years ago.