What’s in a Name

I’ve had several names throughout my life.

As expected, the first was given to me by my parents. My surname represented my father’s family (also assumed by my mother when they married). My middle name was a common one for girls of my generation with a Catholic family background. I was one of a significant number of girls at my high school with Anne or a variation of Mary as a middle name. 

My first name was chosen by my mother at the last minute, when asked by the hospital staff for the name of the baby (or so the story goes). Up to that point she had planned to name me Bernadette, but instead in the moment of truth another name was given. I’m kind of glad for that – that my name wasn’t one she claimed and cherished as she approached the birth of her first child. Given everything that has happened since that moment, I’m glad my name doesn’t feel like something precious that she and I share somehow, but which she retains ownership of. I am me, with a name allocated at random that I’ve made my own. 

The second ‘name’, a minor variation of the original, was gained when I married at the age of 22. I took my now ex-husband’s surname without no thought of considering the options. A church wedding, Christian background, early 90s social expectations. It wasn’t even something I thought about, other than looking forward to having a surname that was easier for people to spell (my maiden name was of Irish origin with a ‘Mc’ invariably spelled as ‘Mac’ and generally requiring repeated spellings to ensure accuracy if I had to give it over the phone). 

I was married for 22 years and that second surname (my ex-husband’s) was a label for ‘adult me’  in the same way the first surname (my father’s) represented ‘childhood me’. 

Then I left my marriage in my early 40s and that second name no longer seemed right – it no longer represented me and it was a reminder of a version of myself that I no longer identified with. I know many women revert to their maiden name in such circumstances, particularly if they are trying to emotionally distance themselves from an abusive relationship (as I was), however my parents made it clear that they remained connected with and supportive of my ex-husband, and my childhood surname no longer felt safe. It was just a further reminder that I was defined by my connection with people who didn’t value me and treated me like an extension of themselves instead of someone with value in my own right. 

I felt like neither name was the right fit for the transition into my new life, but picking a name at random also felt wrong, like assuming someone else’s identity. So, I continued to use my married name, changed ‘Mrs’ to ‘Ms’, and tried to suppress the wave of revulsion whenever I saw it written anywhere (or had to write it myself). 

This revulsion became a particular issue as my third book was published, almost 18 months after I left my marriage. I had one book published pre-separation, and another that was in the final stages of production during those first months after I left the marriage. Both of these books were published under my married name.

[Side note: interestingly, this revulsion was never triggered by my children’s names, perhaps because there is no sense of them being something that belongs to me (like the books I’ve created or my own identity). Instead, their names reflect who *they* are and aren’t connected with the challenges and internal conflicts I face as I redefine myself.]

For the third book, where I had time to consider options, I decided to use a pseudonym, but I once again came up against the challenge of what name to use. I didn’t want my parents’ or ex-husband’s surname on my book (the thought actually made me feel physically ill), but I didn’t have a name that felt like my own to use. In the end, I chose a pen name that was a variation of my own first name and a surname that was a connection with my grandmother. It appears on my third book, and is linked by the publisher with the other two. If I write more books in this genre I will probably use it, but it doesn’t really feel like my name. It’s more like a label. It’s something functional created to solve a problem, not something I feel a connection with. It doesn’t really represent me, any more than my other ‘hats’ of wife, mother, sister, friend, secretary, writer, or any of a dozen others do. It’s a fragment of a whole. 

I’ve married again and now I have another name, once again taking my husband’s surname as my own. This time I thought about it. I considered my options. I’m still working out how this name fits, but it’s a name I selected by conscious choice, shared by someone who made it clear that I was welcome to claim this outward connection to him, but it was certainly not something that was expected or requested. 

And at the other end of the spectrum is this blog, a place where I chose to have no name, because I needed to feel safe and needed a space where I could simply be, without having to conform to or protect a particular identity. There were privacy issues too, of course. I wanted a space where I could write honestly and directly without worrying about extended family, who were actively trying to undermine me, taking things out of context. And I wanted to minimise the possibility of my writing being connected with my children and further complicating things for them as they processed the impact of the separation and divorce, and their father’s past and ongoing abuse. 

But it’s been almost 3 years since the end of my first marriage, and my children have largely worked out what boundaries they need to maintain for their own wellbeing (although this is under regular review). The anonymity of the blog, though necessary, has always felt like a contradiction to its purpose, which was to help me feel less ‘invisible’ after decades of relationships that forced me to suppress who I really am. So, as I head into the New Year, I’m claiming back another piece of myself by establishing some tenuous links between these words and myself. 

Hello world. My name is Susan. 

An Open Letter to a Former Friend

I almost ran into you at the shopping centre today. Twice. 

The first time could have been written off as simply not noticing each other – a crowded shop, busy sales assistants, browsing clothes to select Christmas gifts. It’s easy to not notice someone you know as they walk by, especially if they’re not looking in your direction.

The second time is a little harder to pass off as a failure to notice each other. You were parked next to me in the carpark. We arrived at our cars to unpack our shopping at almost the same time. We loaded up our cars, dealt with trolleys, got ourselves and the child with us into the car and drove away, all without making eye contact or acknowledging each other.

I’m not sure why you made no effort to say hello to me. I can speculate, of course, but I can’t be sure. It could be anything from lack of interest, to feeling awkward, to disgust. We have a reasonably connected backstory, so I know it wasn’t because you didn’t recognise me. I’ve spent enough time at your house and we’ve had enough long conversations for there to be no chance that you mistook me for a stranger. You ignored me on purpose. 

I ignored you too, of course, but I know exactly why. You were one of the Christian friends who chose to disconnect from me and my children after I separated from my abusive husband. You’re one of the people who was supposed to be one of my Christian family who never followed up to make sure the children were okay, or that I was okay. I know that you were there to support my ex-husband, but you obviously chose to believe his version of events without any attempt to contact me.

I do wonder sometimes what version of events he shared with you and other Christian friends and family. I wonder how many of the actual facts he shared, or if he just gave you the same distorted self-focused version of things that he tried to convince me was the truth. 

Did he tell you I kicked him out of the house and took away his home, his children and everything he had to live for? He told me that, repeatedly, forgetting that I was there the night he left, when he crowded me into a wall and demanded that I hit him because he knew that I wanted to. I left instead and when I came home hours later he had a bag packed so he could stay at his parents. 

I am the one who ended the marriage, of course. I can’t and won’t deny that. I told him it was over because I’d finally realised that being with him had robbed me of all hope of ever being happy; because I’d realised that being with him was giving my daughter the message that her happiness was irrelevant as long as her husband was content with his life, and teaching my sons that as long as they were happy, then the happiness of their wife and children was of no consequence. I left him because he made me feel invisible and because I finally, finally realised that I deserved better than that. 

Did he tell you that he visited the house all day Saturday and every Thursday night to spend time with the children? Did he mention that I facilitated this by leaving the house during those times? Did he mention that he used his unsupervised access to the house during these visits to vandalise my belongings and go through my personal paperwork? Did he tell you he regularly spent time in my bedroom with the door closed even though none of his belongings remained in the room and I’d specifically asked him to consider this room as my personal space in exchange for me making the house available to him so he could relax with the kids? Did he tell you that when I changed the lock on the bedroom door, he threatened to break it down (in front of the children) unless I gave him access to ‘his’ room?

Did he tell you I was possessed by evil spirits (the only possible explanation for me saying that I didn’t love him and wanted to end our marriage)? Did you offer sympathy and prayers because he was the victim of spiritual warfare? Did you recommend he purchase books on how to cast out demons? (I know he bought these because he used my customer loyalty card to do so.) Did you know he believed he was getting direct instructions from God about how to convince me to return to my faith and turn my back on Satan? Did you know he did this in front of our children and told them that God couldn’t be with them if they were in the house with me? Were you oblivious to his distorted Christian ravings, or were you encouraging them? 

Did you know he touched me, repeatedly, when I told him not to? That he entered the house, repeatedly, when I asked him not to? That he sent me text messages, repeatedly, sprouting prayers and, when these didn’t work, demands and abuse and false accusations? Did you know that I had to contact the police, repeatedly, to find ways to keep myself and the children safe? Did you know? Did you care? 

Did you know that I endured 22 years of a marriage that made me feel insignificant, inadequate, and invisible and when it ended, people like you who I thought were my friends simply confirmed that I was all those things? Do you know that almost three years later, I’m still attending regular trauma/PTSD counselling to help me process the awful years of my marriage and the abuse that followed my decision to leave (and the childhood that taught me to believe that I deserved to be treated that way)?

Did you know that you weren’t alone in deciding that I wasn’t worth the effort it would take to get in touch to check that what my ex-husband was telling you was true? There was the woman I thought of as one of my best friends who told me I should go back to him despite knowing I was attending domestic violence victim counselling (because marriage is a covenant promise to God that can’t be broken). She and her husband also helpfully offered to pray for wisdom for my children when the kids asked them (and you) to not believe everything their father was saying and to not encourage him in the delusions sparked by his distorted faith. And the woman who thought I should see it as a sign that the relationship could be repaired that after years of saying that we had no emotional connection, my ex-husband was sad to the point of threatening suicide (repeatedly). Wasn’t that what I wanted? For him to connect with his emotions? I should be grateful and return to the relationship to support and encourage him to continue to be more emotionally aware.

And my parents, of course, who have accepted his version of events, informed me they love him as much as they love me and will offer him support, and who have abandoned me and neglected their grandchildren in order to show me that I can’t expect their love or support unless I do things their way. 

That’s why I couldn’t talk to you today. Because I don’t know what you know, and I don’t know if you’ve believed the lies, and I don’t know if I’m safe with you. Because if you’ve believed his lies, and if you’ve chosen to accept his words as 100% of the reality of our situation, then I can’t trust you. It’s not pettiness because you chose him instead of me (which is an insulting concept from all angles), it’s because you never even made an effort to see if the kids and I were okay. Not once. I can only presume it’s because he told you I didn’t deserve your consideration and you believed him. Or maybe you never really cared for me in the first place. Either way, I deserve better than your indifference and I choose to no longer connect with people who treat me with such disrespect and disregard.

I hope that you and your family are happy. I really do. And I hope that you really have been oblivious to all the things I’ve mentioned above (and so much more) that have been my reality for the past 3 years. I hope that you’ve already stepped away from my ex and his toxic narcissism and distorted faith. You deserve better than he is capable of offering. 

I hope all these things, but I’ll probably still pretend I didn’t see you if we come across each other again at the shopping centre. I’ll feel bad about it (as I did today), but ultimately I’ll choose protecting myself over making sure I don’t offend you. 

I Should Feel Happy

In less than 12 hours the divorce hearing will be over and my application for divorce will be processed and approved by the court (I hope). In one month the divorce will be finalised.

I should feel happy.

Instead I’m remembering that the feeling of being released from a cage when I made the decision to leave was counterbalanced by an incredible sadness and sense of failure that I hadn’t been able to make the marriage work.

I’m remembering what it felt like to describe my marriage to others, honestly and openly, and have them react in a way that made it obvious that what I’d accepted as normal – what had been my normal – was not normal at all. That my relationship had been twisted and dysfunctional and the effort I had made over so many years to make things work had been futile from the outset. So many wasted years.

I’m remembering the awfulness of the separation. Of having someone who professed to love me respond to my claim that he’d never really liked who I was as a person with “you’re right, but I’m okay with it now”. That he believed I only thought I wasn’t in love anymore because evil spirits were manipulating my thoughts and deceiving me. So many awful words and accusations and lies.

I’m remembering that somehow, despite all the horrible words and actions, one of the things that made me the saddest was his gift for flowers a few weeks after our separation. Flowers that were apparently supposed to make me feel valued, but instead made me feel even more invisible because after 22 years of marriage, the best he could do was a cheap bouquet from the supermarket that were predominantly flowers that I was allergic to.

I’m remembering the family and friends that in those early days I thought would be by my side at this point, who have instead made it clear that they can’t see past all the ways I’ve disappointed them to offer love and support when I need it most.

I’m remembering how having my signature witnessed on the divorce application made me feel like throwing up, right there in the foyer of the office where the JP worked. That I was almost overwhelmed by feelings of failure and, in that moment, that I struggled to believe that real love was possible.

I’m remembering all the tears of the past 16 months and the worries for the future.

I might not be happy, but I’m relieved that we’ve made it this far, that the kids and I have survived such emotional turmoil able to love each other and believe we’re heading for a better future. By this time tomorrow I will have passed another significant milestone in the process of freeing myself from the sadness of my past. That’s enough.

Milestones and Mirages

Yesterday I signed the Application for Divorce paperwork.

Today the paperwork was delivered to my lawyer.

In two days it will be the anniversary of the day I officially separated from my ex-husband.

In four days the Application for Divorce will be submitted by my lawyer and the process of legally and permanently ending my marriage will begin.

I should be happy. I thought I would be. I want this divorce. I need it. My marriage was miserable and the separation has been almost unbearably awful at times. I’ve longed to reach this point, where I can feel like I am finally actually DOING something to separate myself from a man who has  inflicted significant emotional damage over way too many years. I want to be free. I want to start the next stage of my life. I should be happy. And relieved.

But…

When I signed the form, it was all I could do to not throw up. I felt physically ill. I barely held back tears and even thinking about that moment now has brought the tears back again. I’ve felt a dull ache in my chest and fluttering anxious thoughts for days as I’ve completed the paperwork.

Ending a marriage is a serious thing. I was married for more than two decades – it’s a long time to have your life connected to someone else. I have three children. So many memories of my children, my family and my friends are connected with my marriage. Ending the marriage means disconnecting from parts of myself in some ways. There is loss and grief and regret. Signing the paperwork didn’t feel like a release. It felt like an acknowledgement that I’d failed in so many ways; a reminder that my bad decisions had significant consequences for myself and my children.

And it didn’t feel like the milestone I thought it would. I didn’t feel like I was transitioning from the ‘past’ to the ‘future’. Instead, it made me realise that this is just a piece of paper. That the legal process can proceed, but I’ll still have to worry about how his words and behaviour will affect the kids. I’ll still know that no matter what happens, he’ll see himself as the victim. He’s always created his own version of the truth and refused to acknowledge anything that isn’t consistent with that ‘truth’ and that won’t change.

And even though what he thinks, feels and believes is no longer something I need to feel responsible for, our children will always connect us and the way he treats them and speaks to them has an impact on me, especially while I am still responsible for their everyday wellbeing. The divorce application can be submitted, I can wait three months for my hearing, and then one month for the divorce to be finalised. I can redefine my goals, prioritise myself and get on with building the amazing life I deserve, BUT there will always be a part of my life that is connected with the man who made me so unhappy for so long.

I know that time will make a difference. The children will get older and become adults and they will be able to manage their relationship with their father themselves. I’ll only need to have contact with him on very rare occasions. My memories will fade and become more soft focus. My sense of self and wellbeing will be restored. I’ll feel stronger, happier, and less broken. I’ll move away from the lingering shadows of my old life and my new life will dominate my thoughts.

But for now, I’m simply myself, where I am, wishing that signing a piece of paper could really work miracles and close the door on the parts of my old life that leave me feeling so broken and confused and aching. I wish it could absolve me of the guilt I feel for allowing myself to be treated so badly for so long. I wish it could serve as an official statement of truth about who I am and what I’ve experienced. Instead, it’s just a piece of paper that acknowledges a series of dates and logistical details about my marriage and parental responsibilities. It’s a form that will be looked at with disinterest by the various people who process such documents. It is nothing significant.

And the milestone I’ve been counting down to reveals itself to be a mirage.