Finding Freedom From Fixtures

After recently taking a workshop with Marylee Fairbanks (http://maryleefairbanks.com/) I have decided to begin my own "24 Things" challenge (http://maryleefairbanks.com/24-things/). The rules are simple: each day for 24 days you let go of something that has been cluttering up your house, something that no longer serves you, objects that will be better suited at a yard sale, donation box, or in a trash barrel. During the 24 day release, one should only purchase necessities-- food, medical care, etc. All other material desires should be added to an ongoing list. If you are able to remember the items on your list at the end of the 24 days, then you are free to purchase them, otherwise they are likely to have been unimportant. According to Marylee, "The clutter in our house reflects the clutter in our hearts." Are we clinging to mementos of past relationships? Unwanted gifts that we were too polite to turn away? Clothes that haven't fit for years? Objects that no longer reflect who we are currently in this ever-changing body and mind of ours? Are the things we surround ourselves with keeping us rooted in the past, preventing us from blossoming into the future? In order to invite abundance into our lives, we must eliminate the unnecessary clutter that surrounds us.

Although Marylee recommends four cycles, corresponding to the four seasons, of 24 Things each year, the timing of her most recent workshop and the significance of this period in my own life could not have been better. I will be beginning my solitary 24 Things today, April 29th exactly one year after my (ex) husband told me he was moving out. In exactly 24 days I will turn 28 years old. I cannot think of a better way to mark the end of a year of transformation and to usher in another year of abundance, love, and gratitude for this life that constantly challenges and inspires me.

"One good thing to remember when clearing out is this: If you have an object that makes the past feel more important than the future then you should let it go. The past is gone. Your present is all that need be nourished." ~Marylee Fairbanks

Monday, August 12, 2013

56: Pamphlets

When I was seven the disease that I was born with nearly killed me. I kept the pain in my back a secret for as long as I could. It started like a pulled muscle, warm and tender. Then it spread further up my back until I felt like I couldn't stand up. When I finally admitted I was in pain my parents rushed me to the hospital. In the waiting room I tried to refuse the wheelchair that the nurses brought over for me, but was too weak to physically protest when my father effortlessly lifted me up and placed me in the leather seat.

I spent two weeks in the hospital, wheeled around from one test to another--MRI's and CAT scans where I had to lie still or breathe on command, drink giant glasses of disgusting dye, avoid touching the IV needle in my tiny arm. When I was finally released from constant care and allowed to go home, I had to see my doctor daily for months. I wasn't allowed to go back to school, so a teacher came to my house to tutor me. She held up cards with words for me to identify. I could never remember the word hospital and the the teacher would always prompt me: "You were in one." When I was allowed to go back to school I told my friends that the doctors didn't know what was wrong with me. As soon as I was old enough to understand that I was different I was given clear instructions never to speak of my disease to anyone.

The fact that only my immediate family knew made it easy to pretend I was healthy until an upcoming doctor's visit reminded me of my plight. When I was younger I visited the nephrologist every six months. Once a year I would have to lie still while the doctor smeared jelly over my torso for the ultrasound. Before I was hospitalized I would kick and scream and fight, anything to escape the cold room. After enduring daily tests and needles, going twice a year was insignificant. I stared silently up at the ceiling and counted the tiny dots in the tiles during the ultrasound and sat stoically as the nurses drew my blood.  Starting when I was a teenager and still today I make a yearly visit to the doctor to discuss the results of my most recent blood test.

For years I've allowed myself one week a year to feel self-pity as I anticipate my upcoming appointment knowing that I will hear that my kidneys are steadily losing function and causing other systems in my body to degenerate. The doctor's office always has pamphlets hanging on the wall and every year I take one of each, shoving them into my purse before the doctor comes into the room. On the train ride home from the hospital I read about kidney failure, dialysis, transplantation. I send myself into a fit of anxiety thinking about what life would be like having to sit several times a week in a room while my blood is pumped and filtered by a machine. Each year after the anxiety and self-pity have worn away and I've lost the pamphlets somewhere in my house, I cling to something that I think will cure me--raw food, Reiki, Ayurveda, and yoga are just a few of my most recent attachments-- and each year I am deflated again by a new set of blood tests, another visit to the doctor.

I found a stack of pamphlets when I was cleaning my apartment recently. I put them in the recycling bin without opening them to the pictures that I could recreate freehand having seen them so often. Today, as I was walking away from the hospital with fresh gauze taped to my inner arm I felt the sun on my skin, looked up at the blue sky and noticed for the first time in a while how beautiful it was to be alive. Today, I let go of more than just pieces of paper, I let go of obsessively worrying over what will happen someday in the future and focus instead on where I am in the present. With my eyes on the pages of a pamphlet and my mind on the future, I would miss all that is happening here, now.  I would miss out on the life I have left to live. 

Saturday, August 10, 2013

55: Folgers Coffee Ad

I was in high school English class when the World Trade Center was hit purposefully by planes. I was sitting in the last seat, first row when another teacher poked her head into the room and motioned to Mrs. Guerreiro to step outside. She returned with a look on her face I had never seen before. She stepped slowly behind her wooden podium, said, "Don't worry. You have no reason to be afraid unless I am," and went back to teaching the lesson. Word spreads fast in high schools and by lunch everyone was talking about how the twin towers had been bombed.

I had French class after lunch. The history teacher next door had borrowed a TV from the library and was showing the local news to his class. Our teacher opened the door between the rooms and we all crowded in to watch the same clip of the planes hitting the towers again and again. I thought it was computer generated. I didn't believe it was real. The entire school was dismissed early. We were rushed through the halls and told not to stop at our lockers.

Outside it was beautiful, uncommonly warm for mid-September in New England. I always stopped at the Dunkin Donuts beside the high school and ordered a medium iced coffee with skim milk and two sugars to drink on my walk home.  As I approached the store that day I noticed the blinds were drawn. When I tried the door it was locked. The twenty-four hour Dunkin Donuts that was open on every major holiday had closed.

When less than a month later I watched the green, grainy footage of the US bombing Afghanistan nothing made sense to me. We didn't learn anything in school about the Middle East beyond Mesopotamia. I remember walking by the war memorial park that I would get married in six years later and seeing yellow ribbons tied around the trees. Somehow I knew this war would drag on for years. I started taking photographs with intentions of creating an album so that I'd someday recall what it was like in the beginning. I had no idea then how the war would impact me personally in the future.

Although we didn't learn about modern history or the Middle East in school, we spent months on both world wars. I wondered if the so called War on Terror would ever be so widespread. I wondered if we would fall into another Great Depression or if we'd have to ration food and goods. To prepare, I started stockpiling coffee.

In the summer time my mother would always make herself glasses of instant iced coffee.  She'd scoop the brown Folgers crystals into her glass with a teaspoon, add sugar, and swirl them together as she held the glass under the kitchen sink. She'd add in milk, take a single sip, sigh audibly, then leave the glass on the yellow counter-top to go outside and smoke a cigarette. The bubbles that had formed from the stirring at the sink always looked delicious and I would sip them secretly before my mother returned to the kitchen.  So began my addiction to coffee.

By my junior year in high school I would start each day with four shots of espresso, black with sugar. I had my second coffee on my way home from school, and sometimes drank a third at night after dinner. Looking back now, it's no wonder I could never sleep at night.

Back when newspapers only cost a quarter or two a day, my father used to buy The Boston Globe. On Sundays it came filled with advertisements for local stores. The Folgers ad was in one of the coupon books. The top had a round scratch and sniff circle that smelled like coffee. I kept it in my Calculus book senior year and would take it out to inhale the scent mid-morning every day.

Even though the war in Afghanistan is still going on twelve years later, we haven't had to deal with rationing and for most Americans the war may as well be over. Newspaper articles slowly made their way from the front page further into the paper until they became almost non-existent. My high school students who were just infants on September 11, 2001 don't even know we are at war. In college, when my coffee addiction reached an all time high, I drank the pounds of coffee that I'd been storing in my bedroom. The Folgers coffee ad resurfaced weeks ago when I was going through bins that I'd been storing at my parents' house. I no longer need the scent of coffee to get me through the day and no longer need pointless pieces of paper to remind me of the past. 

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Day 54: Unsuccessful Sleep Patterns

From a young age, I learned to recognize when I was dreaming while still asleep. I remember once having a nightmare and noticing something about it wasn't consistent with reality-- something in the location, the people, the occurrences, stood out to me. I was five or six at the time and being chased by a large yellow monster who I referred to as the "cellar monster" since the dark and unsteady basement steps of my parents' house were the first dream world where he appeared. He was chasing me through the funeral home parking lot where my mother would leave her car to pick me up from kindergarten. I stopped running, turned to look him in the eyes, and when he was feet from my face I consciously brought my index fingers and thumbs to my eyelids and lifted them so that I was no longer gazing at his hairy face but at my cracked bedroom ceiling. From then on I was always able to wake myself up when dreams became too unbearable.

For a while, I started to control my dreams. When my fiance was stationed in Germany and Iraq I would conjure him into my dreams so that we could be together. I looked forward to seeing him every night in my sleep. I couldn't always change the location, but he was sure to show up if I just imagined him present.

Working full-time and taking more than the recommended amount of college courses each semester wore me out and I soon stopped wanting to dream. I hadn't yet found stillness in yoga or meditation and sleep was the only time I could shut my mind off and finally rest.  I went through a period of time where I wouldn't dream at all.

After my fiance returned from Iraq and just before our marriage, I started having nightmares that he was having an affair. They went on for months, even after the wedding when he returned to Germany. I didn't tell him at first, but they became so persistent, so troublesome that I finally confessed to him that these dreams that I could no longer control were causing me to begin each morning in a panic that carried over through the rest of my day. He assured me that they were just dreams and that I had nothing to worry about. Although they became less consistent, they never stopped haunting me.

When I found out about his first affair six months after our wedding the nightmares returned at an even greater intensity and there was nothing he could do or say to soothe the wound he'd opened wide. What he referred to as issues with trust I called intuition and my fears were confirmed when his lies surfaced toward the end of our relationship.

Over the past year after he left, I had become a passive participant in my dreams. I no longer cared to control them, and didn't bother to trace back my unconscious conjuring to what happened throughout my day.

During one of the final weekends of yoga teacher training, an Ayurveda specialist came to discuss the ancient system of Indian health and healing. One thing that stayed with me was how different hours of the day correspond to the three major doshas. She explained that the hours of 2-6 AM were Vata dominant and the best time for spiritual practices. Beginning at 6 AM, or at sunrise depending on the season, heavy Kapha sets in until 10AM. Waking up during Kapha hours can make us feel more sluggish than waking up earlier.  Immediately after the class I vowed to listen to my first of three alarms and get out of bed before Kapha could set in. My resolve worked for a while, but eventually I let my sleep hungry mind talk me into staying in bed long past my third alarm.

A month ago today something happened that triggered a part of me from the past that I haven't been able to let go of. I have been having violent nightmares, all of which I wake myself up from only to fall back to sleep into another round of horror. I wake up feeling anxious and unsettled.  This morning, I woke up very suddenly from a dreamless sleep just before 6 AM. I felt refreshed and ready to begin my day. When I rolled over to look at my clock and saw that it was 5:55, I thought it was too early to get up on my second Saturday of summer vacation and went back to sleep.

From 6 AM until 8 AM I woke myself up, panting for air from the worst nightmares I've had all month. Each time, I fell back to sleep against my will. At 8 AM I felt like I hadn't slept all night and was far from the calm, refreshed pre-six-o'clock feeling I'd had earlier. I felt my heavy eyelids closing again and forced myself up, fearing another round of nightmares.

I don't think it was at all coincidental that I woke up naturally before six this morning, or that when I forced myself to go back to sleep I had terrible dreams that haunted me throughout my day. When tragedy rattles our existence it is easy to lose sight of or push away the things that we need to nurture us. It is in these times of change, however, that we should cling to what we know to be good or helpful despite how we may feel we don't deserve them or think they won't help, or when we just don't have the strength to take care of ourselves. A well-known yogi once said that when we teach we say the things we need to hear ourselves, the things we know to be true in our hearts. I write so that I can let go of the ego-fulfilling emotions that are keeping me from hearing the sound of my own voice.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Day 53: Habit

When I was a child, my parents would bring my brother and me to a hill in Boston where we could see the fireworks on the fourth of July. We would park the car at my father's workplace and walk to the spot. My father stuffed beer cans and  cigarettes in his pockets and socks. I remember one year he insulted someone nearby and his beer cans broke free of his thin black, gold-toe socks and rolled down the hill. He chased after them and the family nearby moved away.  My mother would say his name in a way that told me she knew things were getting out of control. She'd hold my brother and I close and "oooh" and "aaah," say "pretty" at all the fireworks. Even then I was hyper-sensitive to those around me. Despite my mother's attempts to appear happy, I knew that she wasn't. With each empty beer can I felt my heart grow heavier.

When the fireworks ended my father would hoist me up on his shoulders so that we could run and weave through the crowds toward his car, leaving my mother and brother to try to keep up with us. He and my mother would get into a fight over who was driving home and my father would always win. I would shut my eyes in the darkness of the back seat and recite Hail Marys the whole way home. 

After my father broke his back we stopped going to see the fireworks.  Instead, he'd sit in his worn-out reclining chair drinking more than usual. He'd sing loud and off-key to the patriotic songs, yell along to the William Tell Overture and ignore my mother when she would hiss "stop" from the other room. "Come on," my mother would say, leading the way up the winding steps to our attic so that we could crouch behind the window and hold back the thin yellow curtain, hoping for a glimpse of the fireworks above the rows of triple-decker houses and apartment buildings in the distance. "There's one," she'd say when a thin line of light appeared in the sky. I never pointed out the fact that we could see them much better from the living room couch on the TV screen. To her, pressing our faces against the dusty attic window was salvaging some semblance of a happy holiday, taking us temporarily away from my father.

When my brother was a teenager he stopped joining us in the attic and instead went out with his friends. My mother and I kept up the tradition for a while. I went up to the attic for her and I'll bet she did it just for me, neither of us wanted to be there, but we were unable to break the habit. One year when I was fifteen, I went into Boston with my friends to sit in the Common and watch the sky light up. I left my friends and hopped the locked fence to the Public Gardens so that I could sit by the pond in the moonlight and watch the swans slowly swimming around. It was one of the most beautiful and peaceful experiences of my life. I wanted to freeze myself in time so I wouldn't have to return to the crowds, the slow-moving train, my parents at home.

When I started dating my husband I always imagined we'd find a place to quietly watch the fireworks together, but after the war the sounds that filled the sky sounded too much like gunfire and would send him reeling back into Iraq.  I only remember one fourth of July that we spent together-- we watched the fireworks on TV. The local station in Georgia was showing the Boston Pops celebration. We didn't have cable and the one channel that came through would cut out every minute or so. We sat together, drinking, missing home.

Last year, just a month after my husband left me, I didn't want to be alone so I spent the night at my brother's house. My niece was just two at the time and we planned to take her somewhere to see the fireworks. She fell asleep and my brother dozed off on the couch with a beer can perfectly poised in his hand just as my father did so many times. My sister-in-law and I quietly watched them on television.

As I prepare to head to my brother's house for a barbeque today, I vow to let go of habit. I can predict exactly how the night will turn out: my father will buy too much food and barely eat any, choosing instead to drink beer after beer until he can barely stand up and says things that he won't recall and I'll struggle to forget.  My mother will look angry and defeated, then abruptly decide when it's time to go home where she'll put on her nightgown and whittle away the hours reading or, if my father starts a fight, she'll go to bed. My brother will eat too much and grab his stomach, sigh, and point out how much weight he's put on.  He and my sister-in-law will plan to go to a parking lot nearby to watch the fireworks, maybe they'll make it or maybe my brother will fall asleep on the couch again like last year.

For years I have been perpetuating this cycle by being a passive participant in family gatherings, not just on the fourth of July, but every time we get together. I find it too easy to slip back into my old, depressed, silent ways when I see that things haven't changed, that my brother and his family are living out a cycle much too close to the one we witnessed growing up. This year, instead of allowing my father to corner me and complain or spew out insults for hours while I stare into the distance I vow to do something different-- say something, move away, go home. When my brother asks if I want to watch the fireworks with him I will politely decline. I realize now that I don't even enjoy watching them and would much rather spend the night meditating, reading, writing, journaling, or just sitting quietly alone. It's too easy to do things because they are what we've always done, because they are tradition or expected of us. Today I will let go of who I was, who I have always been to my family, and what I would have done in the past.  I will honor who I am now by breaking this cycle, breaking free of habit.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Day 52: Tie and Cuff Links

While my husband was in Iraq, his grandfather passed away suddenly. The funeral was postponed for several months and my husband happened to be home on leave when the services were held at a military cemetery in Massachusetts. He hadn't brought back his Class As so we spent a day driving around to different shops trying to find suit pants that fit his 6'4" 140 pound frame. Men's Warehouse had a seamstress on hand for custom fitting. As he was trying on several different styles the salesman, who might have been working his first day at the store, asked me what the occasion was. I'll bet he was expecting me to say wedding or baptism or something else that would be cause for celebration because his face fell when I said for a funeral. "Oh," he said, "there are a lot of those these days."  He looked so awkward and uncomfortable that I wanted to hug him, but of course I didn't and eventually he just wandered away among the rows of suits.

My husband wanted a solid, Kelly green tie. We looked in half a dozen stores and couldn't find one. He settled on a black tie with red stripes that he pinned down with a gold shamrock tie clip. He wore the black pants, black dress shirt, and black and red-striped tie to the funeral and again to a wedding later that week. The 40 pounds he'd lost in the six months he'd been deployed in Iraq stood out as he cinched the belt around his child-sized waist.

After his two weeks of leave he went back to Iraq. His flight left the airport just as the sun was rising. The corridors were antiseptic and empty. His dusty boots clapped a steady rhythm along the linoleum as we walked through the terminal. The woman behind the counter gave me a boarding pass so that I could follow him to the door of the plane. We embraced behind a large pole, trying to find some privacy in the crowded waiting area. I remember pressing my face into his uniform and wondering if I'd ever see him alive again. I mustered up a smile when his row was called to board and waited until he'd disappeared in the tunnel toward the plane before I allowed tears to slip down my cheeks.

He spent Christmas in Iraq that year. I was shopping for gifts when I found a solid Kelly green tie in Filene's basement. I practically skipped toward the check out counter. As I was leaving the store I felt my phone vibrate in my pocket. I took it out and checked the caller-ID. It was a long number, more than ten digits in length, it was my husband calling from a satellite phone half-way around the world. My finger was on the answer button a fraction of a second away from pressing firmly down when the phone stopped ringing. I pressed the button again and again even though it was too late. I wandered out into the mall and began walking to circles, slipping quickly into a panic attack.

He left me a voice mail saying that he was leaving on a mission that he didn't know if he'd return alive from. I imagined him dying in a fire-fight without hearing my voice one last time. I started to cry, uncontrollable choking sobs that shook my whole body. I kept walking around in the same small squares of tile in the crowded mall. A man approached me to ask if I was okay. I looked up at him with wild eyes and he flinched, took a step back and left me in distress. I left the mall, got into my car, punched the center console, the dashboard, the steering wheel. I screamed and cried and cursed everything. I got lost on the way home from a nearby restaurant where I bought a gift certificate for my brother and his girlfriend. It took me almost an hour to get home that day when it should have been a fifteen minute trip.

He didn't end up dying on the mission, but it was weeks later before I heard from him. Someone in his unit was killed on Christmas so communication was forbidden on the holiday. I walked around in a daze of worry, never letting my phone leave my side. I perched it on the edge of the bathtub as I showered, kept it tied to my arm with an rubber band at work where I wore skirts without pockets, and held it in my hand on my way home from the train station. I changed my voice mail everyday before getting on the train and losing service, asking him to call back in ten minutes, telling him that I loved him.

The tie, handkerchief, and cuff links pictured above were a gift to my husband from his mother one Christmas before Iraq. When he unwrapped the box and looked inside he half-snorted, half-laughed when he said, "Do they come with a dress shirt?" "No," my mother-in-law said angrily, "don't you have one?" "Nope," he said, pinning the cuff links to his ripped and frayed flannel. She frowned and my brother-in-law who had received the same gift in a different pattern smirked quietly to himself.

My husband left the tie and cuff-links in the box in my bedroom before he left to return to Germany. I kept them, but in the frenzy surrounding his return home on leave from Iraq, I didn't think to pull them out for his grandfather's funeral. I'm sure he wouldn't have worn them anyway, even if I had remembered.  He did wear the green tie at every occasion after that required a suit and tie and each time it reminded me of the day I thought I'd let my last chance to say goodbye slip through my too-slow fingers.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Day 51: American Express Coffee Mug

For the most part, I can say that I have lived without regrets, however, I can think of one thing that I wish I had done differently.

Four months after I had gotten married during spring break, I graduated with a bachelor's degree and a handful of minors. I told everyone that I was either moving to Germany or Georgia to live with my husband. He was stationed in Germany at the time, in a damp and depressing south-western city. Living abroad seemed exotic though, and I thought that I'd ride the train to countries all over Europe and publish a best-selling novel or world-changing tour-de-four of nonfiction so that I'd never have to work another day in retail. Things don't always work out as we plan them.

After he received orders to transfer to Georgia, I decided I would visit him in Germany to get a glimpse of what I'd be missing out on. He would be moving back to the states the first week in July so the only time I could go would be the end of June. That June, the college I had just graduated from would host my then-favorite author--Tim O'Brien-- and poet--Carolyn Forche-- at a writing program open to all. I was torn between taking a trip to Germany and enrolling in the writing program. I chose Germany, reasoning that the writing program would probably happen the following summer. Although the writing program did continue, the two writers never returned as guest faculty. I always wonder what work I would have produced had I been in the presence of such literary greats. Perhaps I would have written a best-selling book after all. Maybe the program would have been enough to keep me writing for a while, even if I didn't publish anything.

Out of school and having quit my job, I spent weeks researching places to see in Germany. I had mapped out a list of must-visit churches, landmarks, monuments, cities. As I walked past the airport partition to where my husband was waiting for me, the spinning, unsteady feeling of motion sickness washed over me and everything came through my blocked ears in muffled whispers. When my husband asked me if I wanted to take a train north or stay in Frankfurt all I could think of was finding a place to sleep off what felt worse than a hangover. Had I known he was only on a two-day pass from post I might have dragged myself toward the nearest train instead.

We spent the night in Frankfurt, then set out to Trier, a place my husband had visited with friends but not one I'd outlined pre-trip. We missed the connecting bus and when my husband asked a local in heavily-accented German where we should go, the blonde-haired blue-eyed twenty-something-year-old smirked at my husband's over-packed military backpack and worn wool blanket and said he didn't know. Most of the Germans we interacted with on our travels were as cold and unwelcoming as the perpetually overcast skies. It rained the entire two weeks I was in Germany and an all-pervading heaviness hung in the air.

After the first three days of exploring, I spent the remainder of my time in Germany on the military base. I had to climb in through the first floor window so that I could spend the night in the barracks. The city surrounding the base was the most depressing place I've ever been. The only thing that existed in abundance was bars and so we spent most of our time drinking. We'd run up hundreds of dollars worth of bar tabs every day, then stumble back to the base and sleep through the morning. By the end of the trip I was thankful I'd be living in Georgia even if all it had to offer was peaches.

We began our journey back home together. Our flights left Germany and stopped over in Georgia before I went back to Massachusetts. He would spend a few weeks getting settled before I moved down with him. I had a long layover in the Atlanta airport and we walked around looking for a place to have lunch. On the way we passed a table where a man was offering free American Express mugs, duffel bags, and magnets. My husband went immediately to the table to take a coffee mug, and filled out an index card with all of his information despite my warnings that he would receive incessant offers from American Express. Even though he didn't even have an address yet, they somehow found us in Georgia and sent weekly advertisements claiming he'd been pre-approved for a credit card. I found the coffee mug today in a box that has been collecting dust at my parents house since before I moved to Georgia. He never once drank from it.

Monday, July 1, 2013

Day 50: Marriage

To apply for a marriage license it took a single piece of paper, birth certificates, and evidence of the marriage as recorded by the Justice of the Peace, as it was in our case.  The fee was waived, a special bonus for military couples. My fiance returned home from Germany six days before the wedding. We went to City Hall five days before the ceremony and received authorization by the morning we recited our vows. The official certificate arrived in the mail shortly after that cold March morning.

To apply for a divorce in the simplest manner possible it took twenty-one legal documents that my husband and I needed to sign simultaneously in the presence of a notary. We will submit the packet of papers to the area court with a $220 fee. We will receive summons for a trial sometime between thirty days and fourteen months after the paperwork had been processed and will have to appear before a judge who will review our case and determine whether or not our marriage really has suffered an "irretrievable breakdown." One of the forms is meant specifically for us to explain what led to the separation. I sat staring at the paper, unable to put into words what transpired between us in the months that led to the day my ex announced he was moving out.  He suggested we blame the government or that we had developed different views of happiness. I pulled something together using the phrase "irreparable rift."

After months of putting off the responsibility of finalizing and making legal the decision he made over a year ago, my ex finally agreed to meet me today to sign the papers. I spent three hours last night sifting through internet websites, piecing together the necessary forms, scanning legal jargon, trying to make sense of the mess of questions and laws. My printer ran out of ink half-way through the twenty-one documents that could not be saved to my computer so I had to retype all of the forms again this morning after buying another small black cartridge. As my printer was spitting out the final sheet, my ex texted me to say he hadn't filled out the single form I'd sent to him, that he couldn't find the paperwork necessary to answer the questions, and he didn't see why it was such a rush to have the papers signed. I had visions of our failed marriage stretching on for another summer, another school year where I wouldn't have time to draft the papers. I explained how long they had taken to fill out, how I'd put today's date on all of the forms, how he'd agreed to do it today, how it had been over a year since he'd moved out. I persisted with patience and he agreed to meet me.

When I woke up this morning humidity was hanging in the air around me and the new yellow blossoms on my zucchini plants were opened wide to drink the first rays of the sun. By afternoon dark clouds covered the sky and dropped drenching rain to the earth below. A tornado warning was issued in a state that rarely sees the whirling winds.

My husband arrived at my back door, soaked in sweat, wearing a faded black shirt with a gaping hole in the right armpit and pale jeans that he got as hand-me-downs in high school. "It's fuckin' hot out there," he said, slamming his summer scally cap to my kitchen table and striding over to the paper towel roll so that he could sop up the sweat dripping down his face and neck. I tried to talk him through the papers, explaining what I'd filled in so that he could voice his objections. He was hardly listening and kept starting unrelated conversations.

He offered to drive us to the local bank where we'd have them notarized. When we were together I drove everywhere since his reckless pedal pushing and corner clipping sent me instantly into a panic attack. I agreed to let him drive the mile down the road knowing that he'd be less prone to anger if he could blast the AC and music of his choice. I clasped my hands together in my lap and silently repeated a mantra as he sped down the street. I glanced in his backseat that was overflowing with boxes, workout equipment, and fishing gear laid out across the two rows of fold down seats. He caught by backwards gaze and said, "Shut up. That's why I bought a truck."

At the bank we entered the metal detector protected doors one at a time. The green light took too long to flick on while I was trapped between the glass doors and I silently started scanning the contents of my purse, wondering if there was something there I shouldn't be carrying. I pushed through with relief when the red light went out. I turned to watch my husband come through behind me. The men behind the glass office partitions glanced up at us and looked back at their desks, trying to appear busy.  In high school I was attracted by his careless way of dressing. As an adult I'd silently wish he would dress up on occasion rather than always wearing worn-out hole filled t-shirts and jeans. When we were apartment shopping in better neighborhoods than we'd grown up in I asked him to dress nice so that we wouldn't be turned away immediately. He ironed creases down the center of his ripped jeans. I never again asked him to dress up.

I could tell the notary in the bank had already made up his mind about us before we walked through the bullet-proof glass into his corner office. He watched me critically as I unclipped the papers and spread them out before us. I pointed carefully to the form, indicating to my husband where he should sign.  As I dragged the pen across the line to sign my name, I felt like beaming and busting into tears simultaneously. What a relief to be rid of this marriage forever; how devastating to see something my life had once depended on come to an end.

I handed the form to the notary who barely glanced at them before handing them back, a smug smile spreading across his face as he said, "You've done this wrong." "I don't understand what you mean," I said, feeling my husband's temper rising beside me. "You both signed the form," he said. "We're supposed to," I answered. He lifted the sheet again, brought it closer to his face, then placed it back in front of me. "You were supposed to sign here and print your name there; he signed where your name should be." I breathed in, something I've learned to do when I need to speak from a place of calm and reason. "We are signing a joint petition," I explained. "I am Petitioner A," I said pointing to the words below the line I'd signed, "and he is Petitioner B. We've signed where it indicates that we should." Seeing his mistake, he lifted the sheet again, muttered a soft, "Oh," and continued to fill them in without speaking. I pretended to be engrossed in the other forms to avoid my husband's gaze. He touched my arm to get my attention. Our eyes met and we exchanged words without speaking. I was thankful he hadn't audibly voiced his insults toward the man.

It didn't take more than two minutes for the forms to be signed and for the man to hand them back to us with parting wishes for a happy holiday. I slowly and deliberately slipped them back into the gold paper clip and manila envelope, folding down the clasp at the top. My husband stood impatiently beside me as I closed the envelope, just shy of bulldozing through my chair to leave the office. We walked out together and climbed back into his truck. By then the clouds had grown darker, more threatening, and the winds were whipping through the trees. He came back into my home to look for something he thought he'd left behind that he found in his back pocket. We spoke for a few minutes longer, a conversation meant to keep up appearances although no one was looking. When he left, I locked the door behind him, glanced up at the clouds on the verge of bursting, and took a deliberate breath in.