Divorce Survival Challenge... Yes! Is Your Winning Choice
By Chris Annable
Have you ever been left with a survival situation that requires a single
definite decision? Is the answer going to be "Yes" or "No"?
Look, let's agree that there isn't going to be a "maybe" or
a "perhaps, if I do this or do that..." Just a simple "Yes" or "No".
So, what would your decision be?
Oh, I'm sorry, you don't know what the question is going to be yet,
do you?
Well, let me set a real life scene... Two weeks after my wife's friend's
birthday party, two and a half years ago, my wife informed me that she
wanted a divorce and was leaving to live with another man. She had decided
that her life could only be bettered by living the rest of her life with
this man. The reasons for her to decide to go were her own (I still don't
know for certain) but she had made her choice, "Yes" to go.
It was a good choice for her at that moment in time (although I'm not
sure she would agree with that statement now).
On that evening, I found myself stood beside a fast flowing river not
knowing what to do next. I had run away from the argument and the problem
of what response to give to the ultimatum... My wife was going whether
I liked it or not.
There was no choice left to me. My life was over and there was no reason
to carry on any longer. I just couldn't carry on because there wasn't
any point. My beautiful wife had told me in a single sentence that it
was all over. Instantly, she had made my life worthless. Here was 18
years of love, happiness, hard work, fatherhood... completely wasted.
What was I to do?
What would you have decided to do? Jump in and end it all? I thought,
as I stood there thinking, "It would be so easy and quick to finish
it all now."
In the similar circumstances in your life what have you decided?
Guess what my choice was. There couldn't have been any other choice
really, could there? Death in the river would have would have removed
all choice and time for thought, after which there could be no "Yes" or "No" to
concern myself with. Whereas, at home there was my teenage son concentrating
upon school examinations... he would need to be told, carefully. And
there was our pet cat that would still need feeding... it's strange what
your priorities can be at a moment of crisis.
But, did I want to go home?
"No", I didn't want to return home but it would have meant
running away from my life, responsibilities and sense of value. It would
be an ending... but it would be a nothing ending... no resolution!
"Yes", on the other hand allowed opportunity for a new beginning,
what ever that might involve. A New Life, perhaps, with a whole New World
of opportunities and experiences. With all manner of new people to meet
and get to know and...
Did I really want any of this? No, I did not. I'd worked half my life
with my lady trying to help build a family, provide a home and find happiness
and everything that held value in my mind. But, in a short sentence " I
want a divorce", it was all gone.
It was time to take control, of myself and the consequences.
I decided not to jump into the river. I'm not a terrific swimmer and
I would only have fought to stay alive... It would have been a horrible
struggle against the speed of the current and whirlpools that I could
see in front of me. It wouldn't have been an easy end. It would have
left an incredible mess to sort out and I couldn't leave my family to
clear up the mess. So, the decision had to be "No" to the quick
painless death and "Yes" to life and all the resultant problems
of learning to live life alone.
"Yes", there would be family, friends and his school that
should be informed who might be able to help my son in what could be
a difficult time for him. At work, there were designs and challenges
I still had ambition to complete. And there were friends who I might
be able to talk with and gain personal support from. I was certain that
if I looked hard enough I hadn't lost value, nor had I lost my sense
of worth. There was an awful lot to concentrate upon and a great deal
to do!
Well, as you can imagine this was the first of many tremendous divorce
survival challenges, including...
Hurt and pain
Shouting and anger
Legal battles
An emotionally damaged son to look after
Learning to cook and feed ourselves with good healthy food
Learning to keep the house clean, clothes washing and ironing
And maintain sanity and purpose
"YES", to the challenge of life through and after divorce
was the definitely the winning choice! I'm happy that there could be
no other choice. I have found something of self-belief and I have seen
that I have real value in the eyes of a person that means most to me...
my son.
Don't you agree? Or are you a better swimmer?
Chris Annable is the author of a new book titled: Doc Ingman's "Divorce
And Separation Survival For Men", which tells of one man's remarkable
story of how he took control of his life and helped his son survive the
struggle of separation from his mother during divorce. Contact: http://www.divorce-and-separation.com
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