Wednesday, October 31, 2018

How will you know

I'm trying to wean myself off of these articles since the divorce has been final, but they are sooo good. A good word to describe them: "validating."

From Flying Free website

How Will You Know Your Relationship is Over?
Let's pretend for a minute that your relationship is like a game of tennis. Can you visualize you and your partner on the tennis court? The game has just begun, and the ball is going back and forth. Back and forth.

Once in a while, the ball drops. This represents relationship conflict. Sometimes the ball drops on your side, and sometimes it drops on his side. When it drops on your side, you take the initiative to resolve the conflict. You pick up the ball and try again.

But when the ball falls on his side, and you ask him to pick up the ball and lob it back, he responds with, "Well, it fell because of how you hit the ball. Not my problem. Not my responsibility."

Hmmmm. That's odd. Not really how you've experienced other relationships, but whatever. You want to be cooperative and make this game work, so you walk around to his side of the net AND PICK IT UP FOR HIM. Then you go back to your position to get the ball going again. Because the game matters to you. The relationship is important, and you took your vows seriously.

But life happens. The ball drops again on his side of the court, and once again, he makes no move to pick it up. You make the logical point that if he doesn't pick up the ball, you won't be able to continue the game. He scowls at you and tells you it's your fault and your problem, and if you cared about the game, you'd figure it out. You argue with him because what he just said sounds a little insane, and you wait longer, but he refused to pick up the ball. So you sadly walk over to his side and pick it up. Again. You made a commitment for better or for worse, right? Well, this must be what "worst" means. Bummer.

And this goes on for an entire year. Two years. Five years. You pick up all the balls on your side, and you pick up all the balls on his side. You feel resentful because the entire game is up to you. The responsibility to keep the game going falls completely on your shoulders, and that's a heavy weight to bear.

All the books you read, your church, and your spiritual friends tell you that if your partner won't do it, the godly thing to do is to do it yourself! You CAN keep your relationship alive! Don't let bitterness creep in. Do it with a cheerful heart. Let him off the hook. He's a guy, and guys are not like girls. Be okay with the differences! Get over there and PICK UP THE BALLS! God will give you the power you need to make that man happy! It is your duty as a female, and you will eventually be rewarded with an awesome game.

Besides, your partner is always so happy. Smiling and waving at everyone who passes by. Such a friendly, sweet man. If someone outside the court needs help, he interrupts your game to help them out. He is an incredible human being with a magnanimous heart. Johnny-on-the-spot for everyone. Then he returns to you and requests that you get the balls going because his are oh, so very tired.

Ten years. Fifteen years. Utter exhaustion sets in. Panic, even, as you contemplate doing this with gray hair and crispy bones. The future looks grim.

Now you are stomping around. Complaining. Frantically waving your hands. Frowning. Yelling. Your eyes are bloodshot, and your hair is a tangled rat's nest. You look and sound like hell while he looks happy and rested and helpful to everyone who passes by.

And then this idea hits you. You'll stop picking up the balls. Why not? Everyone already thinks you're a lunatic. Why not see what would happen if you didn't cooperate?

The first ball drops on his side. He looks at you like, "Well, aren't you going to get your tushy over here to pick up the ball?" You stare at him triumphantly, crazily, almost drunk on this strange sense of power, and say, "NO!" He waits. Surely you are bluffing.

But you're not.

Time passes. He looks around uncomfortably and waves at people. The ball remains at his feet. Someone passes by and yells at him, "Hey! The ball is at your feet!" He waves back. "Yup! Got it covered!" They walk away, assuming the problem is taken care of. But it's not. The ball remains quietly lying there.

You sit down on the tennis court pavement and wait. He gets an idea and goes to the back of the court where a huge bin of balls sits. He grabs a brand new ball and lobs it at you. You aren't expecting that, and the ball drops. But at least the game is moving again, so ever (if not insanely) hopeful, you haul yourself up, grab the ball, and lob it back. It falls. You wait.

He leaves the ball on the ground along with the other one, and grabs a second new one from the bin and starts the game again. You play like this for another "pull-your-hair-out-in-frustration" five years until the entire court floor is covered with balls, because you've decided that if he doesn't want to pick up any balls, you're not going to pick them up either. The game grinds to a halt as you both trip and stumble around the balls. No conflict ever resolved.

Stupifyingly enough, it doesn't seem to bother him. He's fine with the ball-covered pavement as long as everyone that passes by thinks he's amazeballs. And they do. After all, look at his long-suffering patience in the face of utter negligence on the part of his wife. He smiles sadly, almost pathetically, and waves a friendly hand at all who pass by.

Meanwhile, you are thinking. Thinking. Thinking. Thinking about how this game never changes. Thinking about the fact that your head hurts from banging it on the same damn wall over and over and over again. Thinking about the fact that this man never picked up a ball in twenty years, and the chances that he will pick one up now are dismally low.

You are thinking.

And then you decide. You're done. You don't want to be done. You've invested twenty years of your life picking up this guy's balls, and you really REALLY wanted it to be worth something. But you know now that you could pick them up for the rest of your life and die an early death, or you could walk off the tennis court and find something else to do with the last remaining days of your life.

So you do. But before you go, you stand by the fence of the court and yell in at your partner, "Hey! I'm leaving now! But if you want to pick up your balls and try again, I'm still open to coming back!"

He looks angrily at you because you talked about his balls that way, and he sullenly chokes out, "WHAT? Look around me! I'm doing my best, but you can't possibly expect me to clean this whole thing up by myself! You made this mess too! Why should I be the one to have to clean it up?!"

You walk away. Your spiritual friends grab you and tell you you're crazy to leave such an amazing man, and what is your freaking problem, anyway? What a QUITTER! You must not know God, and now your kids will go to hell. So you hesitate, worried about these things. You look back at the court where some men are talking in hushed whispers to your partner.

Suddenly you see some movement. What? Is he going to pick up a ball? Seriously? Why, YES! He DOES PICK UP A  BALL! It's a miracle! You stare with mouth gaping open as he walks toward you with the ball. He's actually going to take responsibility for something! Maybe there IS hope, after all! They must have convinced him that to play this game, you need to be willing to pick up some balls!

He gets to where you are standing, looks compassionately at you, and says, "See this ball here? It's a real problem. I see that now. I'd like to get rid of it, but I'm pretty sure it's yours."

And that, dear Christian woman, is how you know. It's game over. For really and truly real.




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