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Divorce Journal – Sex
A willingness to hear each other’s hearts led to open conversations. Open conversations gave way to deeper transparency. Knowing what your partner is feeling, thinking and experiencing inspires compromise. Compromising on a routine basis resulted in comfortability, and the desire to spend more time together. The more time we, two people who were emotionally charge and comfortable with each spent together, the greater the chance we would have sex. (Divorce Journal – S.E.X.)
It seemed that we were more willing to hear each other’s hearts after I declared that I wanted a divorce. The open and honest conversations were some of the best we experienced in nearly nine years. It could be the removal of self imposed barriers built on fear that opened this entryway. We were courageously transparent with each other.
The result of our openness led to a willingness to compromise. I placed the plan to file for divorce on the shelf. She was less defensive. We both accepted blame for our part in the deterioration of our marriage. In the words of Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock, “it takes two to make things go right.” (It Takes Two) It was the height of mutual understanding and compassion in our relationship.
We became very comfortable in eah other’s presence. Somewhere along the journey we begin to look forward to speaking with and seeing each other. It started with daily messages to check-in and forward material that had nothing to do with us. We sent prayers, scriptures, jokes, and news about family and friends.
Our daily contact grew from text messages into hanging out. Soon after, we were in a full on sexual relationship. We both missed this part of our marriage. It took years to adapt to each other’s sexual styles and preferences, but when we did it became magical. What we shared was beyond physical satisfaction as it was a spiritual depth to our connection.
Neither of us had abandoned our positions on divorce. I reasoned that we were still married, thus I felt no guilt in pleasing my wife. She accepted our time together. We decided to live in those moments, and they were good. However, when we were a part I wondered if she felt that I was taking advantage of her. Or, if she was using these moments to further weaken my position. I hoped she remembered that I had never been that weak for sex.
The real tragedy was that the more we had sex, the less we talked. Our meetings became more about the intimacy we shared and less about deconstructing the issues that led us to separation. We realized this imbalance, but it was diffiult to regain the amount of time and effort placed into conversation when their was so much positive sexual energy between us. So, we continued to have sex. And it was good.
What I Did For My Exes
I push people. I push them towards the places, talents, and goals that they tell me about in confidence. Also, I sometimes push them because I see in them what they refuse to see in themselves. Unfortunately, more often than not I end up pushing them far away from me.
It used to bother me when an Ex seemed to do better after our relationship ended. They went on to achieve the success that we dreamed about for them. Yet, they did not do much more than talk about it when we were together. It was a personal blow to hear that she finally started that business, went back to school, earned her graduate degree, completed her licensing, accepted that international post, and actually cut a demo. I wondered if I had held them back from these aspirations when we were together. Or, could I have been the catalyst that they needed to reach those levels?
I look at things from different angles and usually judge myself harshly in the process. I start with the potentially negative views, because I like to end on positives. In these cases, maybe I was too hard on these women. Is it possible that my voice was so loud that I drowned out theirs? Maybe I pushed them to jump before they were ready, or God was ready for them to go. Maybe I failed because they only needed someone to play the supportive role or provide an attentive ear, and it took someone else to do so to fulfill their basic need.
The juxtaposition is that I was not pushing them after all. What if my initiatives had the opposite result of holding these women back? What if I served as the resistance that would actually propel them towards their dreams? If this were the case, then our season served a positive purpose.
Consider that if you hold something back long enough, then when it is released it will have an even greater momentum to hit its target. The analogy that I use is a bow and arrow. If I provide resistance to the string of a bow, and these women were the arrows, then the release of our relationship shot them forward with ferocious speed. No wonder they all seemed to be successful.
Here lies the crux of the matter for me. No one chooses another person’s faith entirely. Whatever impact that I had on these lives is of secondary consequence. In the end, the only similarity between these relationships is that I had the pleasure of dating some wonderful women. Each of them saw something pretty special in me/us, too.
Sometimes it may seem as though you, we, prepared an ex for the next – but we must remember that the blocks of life sharpens both sides of the blade. We gain as much as it appears that we lose. Be grateful for the relationships, and lessons learned. Celebrate your ex’s new found success, and embrace all that your future holds.
