I recently found a blog post that was left in the draft folder on my blog website from many years ago, one which had never been posted. It was from 2013. There were only two paragraphs written and I guess I got distracted and never went back to finish it. By the date it was saved to drafts and by the last paragraph, I can tell you that I had just met the man who would become my husband, Scott. The last paragraph probably tells you all you need to know…I was already fully twitterpated and loving every second of it. And before he died, only a too-short three years and two months after we were married, almost ten years since we’d met, he was the one who was constantly telling me to write a book. He loved my writing and he felt like writing was one of my callings, that God would use it if I did finally write a book.
The first paragraph of the following saved draft (at the end of this post) is because of divorce. Somehow my divorce, my re-marriage, and my becoming a widow all tied together to become the fodder for this very blog, at various stages in my life. I began to blog when I was jaded and trying to navigate life as a single mom of three and still figure out who I was if I wasn’t a wife. It had become an identity and once it was shed, I felt naked beneath. I vowed never to let someone else “become my identity” again. I was ME and I was perfectly happy being just that (most of the time.)
Enter Scott…who made part of my new identity “wife” again. Once I met Scott, suddenly I didn’t mind a bit taking that identity on again. If we were famous, someone would have invented some name for the two of us like ScoJen or Jenott because that was all we ever, ever wanted to do. Be together. A therapist may have called it co-dependent but, if it was, neither of us cared. It sounds mooshy and gross probably, to some people, but we completed each other. We were peas in a pod. Peanut butter and jelly. Insert any other combination where it just doesn’t seem right if the two parts aren’t together: that was us. I loved it. (He did, too, and he would have told you so; I’ve heard him say it many times.)
But it didn’t end up the way we planned and he was quite suddenly gone…without me. I’m sure he’s managing just fine because he is walking streets of gold. Me? I’m down here feeling like I’m lost in an endless, foreboding forest with magically changing paths that continue leading me absolutely nowhere as I try to find out who I’m supposed to be again…as just me. Another new identity: widow. I hate this one more than any other I’ve had, ever.
So, I decided to hit the laptop (not literally, although at times I may have wanted to) and start doing what he had always wanted me to do. I started writing. I’m writing a book, a novel actually. Look at me, being an author.
A part of me will always feel guilty for not finishing it while he was here to see it and glow with pride as he bragged to people about me and my book. He knew a lot of the overall premise of the book and I had started and restarted several times. He thought the prologue was a good hook. If I’d finished it while he were still here, he’d have gone on and on about it; I know he would. He wasn’t into bragging much unless it was about me or our boys, but then all bets were off…if you knew him, you were going to hear a LOT about us.
A month or two ago, I suddenly got the unction to write almost every day for a week. I got to Chapter 10 so that equated to somewhere between 1 and 2 chapters a day. Writing a chapter sounds like something you could do in an hour of one day but this comes along with outlining, character mapping, planning rising conflict, plot twists, crises, and resolutions before diving in and then having to go back and edit and then edit again. I think I was making pretty decent progress.
Then one of those magically moving paths in the dark forest shoved me down, down, down into another deep pit with a quicksand called despair at the bottom. I didn’t write blog posts for quite some time and still haven’t written another word in the book. At first I started getting stressed about how I had just quit in the middle and I needed to keep going. Then I’d sit down at the laptop and just stare at the screen. I had nothing to say. I’ve now decided not to worry about it and also that when it’s time to write more of it, I’ll know.
Once I finally do finish it, I don’t know what happens next, when I finally get to the point where I’ve written the epilogue. That’s something I’ve decided to wait until later to worry about, too, because right now the important part is that I do eventually write it, get it done, finish, accomplish completion. Even if he is the only one who ever knows I did it, then I’ll know he would be proud. For today, that is what matters to me the most.
But when I found this saved blog draft today, it brought a couple of things together for me. I once live in The Before, the place I lived in prior to meeting Scott. Mistakes, regrets, a lifetime of falters that led me to heartbreak and total opposition to romantic relationships. That Before was also an After – after divorce.
Then, quite unexpectedly, another Before popped up; that’s the one that I lived in prior to Scott’s Homegoing. That middle part was the best there ever was; that was where I lived knowing I had been given a wonderful gift, a real kind of love, a soulmate.
And now…now I live in The After again. I have to remind myself that, once, a long time ago I lived in a different kind of After. After divorce. And then one day another unexpected Before came along. One day life was worth living so much that I often thought I must have dreamed it, dreamed him up. He was so perfect for me that he should have been a dream.
That means that sometimes The After is also a Before. I’m hoping you’re still following me here. (After divorce but also before finding the love of my life. After meeting my soulmate but Before losing him.)
I know that one day God will pour out some kind happiness over my life again. One day I’ll feel like I’m in a new Before and not just the After. This time The After is devastating, but the Before will have hope and light and life. I doubt I’ll ever be involved in romance again because, without a doubt, Scott was my soulmate. He was The One that people look for their entire lives and some never find. But other good things could be in the new Before. And Before what? I don’t have a clue.
The second thing this ten-year-old post (written just three months after meeting Scott) brought together for me was that I’m using all of this, parts of the life I lived in both of The Befores, to create something. They say to write about what you know. This is it. (It is fiction, yes, but I am using pieces of my life to breathe life into the narrative.)
So, although there has been tremendous happiness and there has been devastating sadness, they will blend somehow in a medley that creates a new song altogether. And I hope it’s one worth tapping your foot to the beat. I actually already know a lot about what the second book will be about but have to get through the first. It’s a process I am determined to complete.
The blog post draft saved from 2013 but never posted…until now:
Some people say they don’t regret any of the choices or mistakes they have made because each decision has taken it’s part in molding them into who they are now. I cannot comply with this way of thinking. I do regret mistakes I’ve made. I regret being stupid enough to have needed lessons such as the likes of some of my falters. I regret the changes that some of those trespasses made in me. I’m not even happy with parts of who I am because of the changes some of them made in me. I never wanted to be jaded. I didn’t want to be suspicious and fearful. I never intended to be someone who sometimes uses anger to walk through hurt. I do wish I could go back and not be who I have been at certain times, but I cannot…so I will be a better me now, today. And better tomorrow than I have been this day.
None of this is to say that I am not happy today. I have actually been deliriously sparkling with newfound joy lately, so much to the probable annoyance of onlookers who don’t like to watch people being “mushy”. I’m thankful to have found a soulmate who accepts me as I am and whose faults I accept, also, knowing that we all are imperfect. It is being able to accept each other with our imperfections and not putting one another on pedestals that allows our relationship to be real and yet still adoring. This is, surprisingly, where real love is found. I’ve really found it. This is definitely it.
