“I crossed the street to walk in the sunshine.”
– Elizabeth Gilbert, Eat Pray Love
(I wrote this nine years ago and never showed anyone. It has been on my mind lately and I decided it was time to share it.)
***
“Attraversiamo.”
With this last printed word, meaning “let’s cross over” in Italian, I close the book and stare through the tears at the wood-paneled wall before me. Sitting alone on a Friday night in my small newly acquired two-bedroom mobile home, my thoughts are consumed with the book I have just read.
Eat Pray Love by Elizabeth Gilbert. Just a random bookstore purchase, like so many before, yet this one has changed everything.
I am 30 years old and my second marriage has just ended.
My children from my first marriage—two adorable, bubbly redheads who are the only lights in my life—are at their dad’s for the weekend. I have no distractions, no bedtime baths or tuck-ins to take my mind off the nagging lessons that Eat Pray Love has instilled into my brain.
I’ve messed up. This thought bursts forth before all others and refuses to be ignored. I look down at the closed book on my lap and those three words are all I see.
I’ve messed up.
In Eat Pray Love, Elizabeth Gilbert documents leaving her life to travel for a full year. Could I do that? Could I travel the world in search of the “me” that got lost in those last two marriages? Would a plate of Italian spaghetti or an Indonesian medicine man fix everything for me like it did for Liz?
Of course not. I’m a mother. A broke, divorced mother. I can’t leave.
So what then?
Prior to my second marriage, I was what some would call a fireball. A fiery, spirited gal, with red hair to seal the deal, nothing could get me down. Even my first failed marriage, painful though it was, did nothing to stop my headstrong determination. The same spunk that entered that marriage with me trailed along after me as I left. I was still the same, just a little broken-hearted and slightly off course. But that would soon ease and, with a little time and forgiveness, both my kids’ dad and I would see the split for what it was: necessary. We would soon learn to co-parent and eventually even call each other friend. I was going to be okay.
And then I met my second husband.
I wonder what it was that had drawn me to him. Although my feisty personality gave off the aura of independence, the truth was that I wanted someone to take care of me. I didn’t want to be worrying about bills and packing school lunches alone. I wanted a partner. Then suddenly, there he was.
Hindsight is always 20/20 as they say. In retrospect, I see the red flags I overlooked then. A controller can easily be disguised as a caregiver. He wanted to do things for me. For a tired, overworked single mom, this was a welcome turn of events. Little by little, he began to take care of it all, making decisions for me to help clear my heavy load.
Then came the other changes. What clothes I wore, how I kept my hair, what friends I could keep. Others seemed to notice what was happening, but not me. It just felt so good to be loved. To be noticed.
This couldn’t go on forever though. One morning as I sat in my doctor’s office trying out yet another depression medication, my doctor said something I would never forget. She pulled her chair right over to me, sat down and looked me straight in the eyes. “Melissa,” she said, “I do not have a medication that is going to fix your marriage.”
Fix my marriage?
Armed with that old redheaded stubbornness, I marched out of that doctor’s office with the certainty that she was a quack. If she wouldn’t give me a different medicine, I’d find another doctor who would. Something was wrong. It was chemical, I was sure of it. My life was great.
Really.
But later that night, lying in bed beside my snoring husband, the doctor’s words kept running through my mind. I needed to talk to someone. But who? The only friends I had now were my husband’s friends. I used to have friends from work, but my husband had convinced me to take a job in a smaller office where there weren’t so many annoying office functions and parties to attend. I cut contact with all of them at his suggestion – moving on was easier if you would just forget.
Maybe one of my old theatre friends? I once loved community theatre so much. It had once been such a huge part of my existence…where had it gone? Ah yes. My husband didn’t like the time that it consumed. My place was at home with him and the kids, not out doing God knows what with God knows who. It was time to grow up and be a wife and mother. Isn’t that what he had said? So no, the theatre friends were out. I hadn’t talked to them in so long, I couldn’t call them up now in the middle of the night.
I had some friends from a women’s church group that my husband allowed me to go to on Monday nights. Maybe I could call one of them? No, I couldn’t. He told me that talking about my problems in that group was only asking for trouble. He made it clear to me that our business needed to remain private and was not to be shared with a bunch of busybodies who wanted nothing more than to spread the news throughout the church.
So, who could I call?
Mom.
I snuck out of bed and walked into the living room. I pulled out my cell phone and just as I had her number keyed in, my husband walked into the room. Of course, making a phone call in the middle of the night could only mean one thing. I was cheating on him. I attempted to show him the number I was dialing, tried to prove that it was only my mother, but he wouldn’t listen.
I had to be stopped from making that call.
And I was.
I packed my bags the next day.
Now, here I am only a few short weeks later (many bruises healed, many to remain), closing the last page of Eat, Pray, Love and sobbing like a toddler.
Elizabeth Gilbert’s words fill my mind.
“If you’re brave enough to leave behind everything familiar and comforting – which can be anything from your house to your bitter old resentments – and set forth on a truth-seeking journey… then the Truth will not be withheld from you.”
Where is my Truth, Liz? Where is it?
“If you’re brave enough…” Is that what I was? Was I brave to leave my husband?
Just like that, I receive my answer. Somewhere deep inside me, a fiery redheaded community theatre actress screams, YES!
Yes.
This is it. This is why this book has gotten to me. Today is the start of my journey. It may look like a little rented, singlewide mobile home, but to this lonely, lost sojourner, it is the first step towards the journey of freedom.
Attraversiamo.
I head to the telephone to call my mom.
***
Melissa, I am sending you all the strength that I can thru these words on a page. You deserve so much more than you have been getting. Don’t forget it! Get your body strong. Your mind will follow. Run! Call me anytime. Teresa Darnell has my #. -Elizabeth Craig
Hi Elizabeth. I should have made it clear – this was something I wrote years ago. I’ve moved on and am so deliriously happy now, it’s crazy! Thank you so much though. You’re the sweetest. ❤
Hang in there. It WILL get better!
Ha! I, too, just logged in to send you a ton of empathy from WayDownUnder, and now I’ve read your response to Elizabeth. Never mind, you can have a ton of empathy anyway for all that you share. Like most who write so honestly and openly, you can’t know how many lives you touch in your helpful, companionable way. Good luck, fellow traveller!
Ha! I, too, just logged in to send you a ton of empathy from WayDownUnder, and now I’ve read your response to Elizabeth. Never mind, you can have a ton of empathy anyway for all that you share. Like most who write so honestly and openly, you can’t know how many lives you touch in your helpful, companionable way. Good luck, fellow traveller.