It is strange how often I am surprised by people's stories. I am not sure I should be at this point, I mean, I have heard many, but still, I find that my assumptions about people are often completely wrong.
I know a woman who is, well, strikingly beautiful I guess would be the best way to put it, incredibly confident, smart, and pretty funny. When I first met her, I assumed she had it all together, and of course, there was my jealousy that came along with the observation of all of the characteristics she is imbued with. Not too long ago, she told me she had been reading my blog and that she had a story for me. I had not considered asking her, and when she offered, I was surprised. I quite mistakenly saw her as someone who might not have a story to tell.
When she walked into the room, I could tell that she was carrying it with her, and as she went about picking her ball, I started to wonder if I was going to be able to handle it. There are times when some of these stories knock me for a loop emotionally, and I have to work through the thoughts and feelings they bring up in me in order to write about them with some kind of clarity. This was one of those.
She sat down and told me that when she was born, her mother was only seventeen and her father was twenty. It had been an unplanned pregnancy, but as her mother was Catholic, she got married and had her child, hoping for the best. While she was still very young, her parents divorced, and she already did not have a comfortable relationship with her father. She vividly remembers being ignored while no one was around, but being the object of pride when people visited. When her parents split, and her mother would arrange for her to see her father, she would beg her mother not to leave her alone with him. She felt, quite acutely, that he had no use for her.
When she was about six, her father moved to Australia, married again, and had children with the woman he married. She did not hear from him for a very long time. When she was sixteen, he invited her to visit, and she went, though she had significant reservations about seeing him. She thought it might give her an opportunity to let him know how his behavior had effected her life. She was to go for a month. During the time that she was there, she got to know his kids and his wife rather well, but unfortunately, spoke about three words to him during her stay, and in the end, got his wife to buy her an earlier flight out a week before her planned departure date. That was the last time she saw him.
Due to the treatment she had endured from her father, she lives her life always doubting the affections of her friends, family, even her husband. She wakes every day with the fear that she is not worthy of unconditional love. She handles each relationship that she has tentatively, afraid that if she does or says the wrong thing, that person will abandon her. She has gone through years of therapy attempting to overcome this fear.
Her desire to feel as if she is worthy of unconditional love, and to trust it when she has it, still seems to her a distant and rapidly shifting horizon. As she spoke to me about her experience, I was impressed at her ability to remain fairly calm and focused. She had obviously spoken about this topic many times before; she deftly articulated her pain and fear in a way that reflected her familiarity with the topography. It was tough, however, for her to get over the idea that one of the people who should have been able to love her unconditionally, could not.
While I am still surprised at the stories I get, I am not ever surprised to meet people who aren't aware of the manner in which they consistently repeat early heartbreak throughout their lives and wonder why. While this woman still struggles with this pain on a daily basis, the point is that she struggles; she is aware of how this fear has changed her behavior. While I sat there listening, heartbroken for her and frankly, for me, I was also incredibly impressed. And where jealousy had been, admiration now resided, and where differences had set, connection now claimed. Her determination was riveting, and I absolutely saw in her a person that could be unconditionally loved.
Date #s 13 & 14: Slightly Intertwined
16 years ago





