#BeREALationships -WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU WALK THROUGH THE FIRE

RachelFire



What Happens When You Walk Through The Fire


By Rachel Thompson


From the upcoming book, Broken People


Copyright ShadowTeams Publishing, 2016


When I finally decided it was time to tell my (now-ex) husband I wanted him to move out, I wanted a divorce, the truth is, I wasn’t ready to walk through the fire. Skipping around the burning coals for years, dancing past the cinders, dropping hints through smoke so thick it choked my ability to be honest with him, and to be honest, with myself.


Burying myself inside ramshackle, thorny pillars of daily survival – walking through each day without resentment eating away at my growing scorn became a sort of merciless victory.


Drifting further into myself, the cloud of silence growing, the fire building.


When silence didn’t work, we had conversations about what needed to change, what we both needed to work on. I loved him. It wasn’t that. It’s still not that. He’s a good man, a good father. I’ve known him almost half my life. My god, how is that possible?


My feet continued to burn.


I blurted it out one day, “You need to leave!” in a rush before I lost my nerve, my soles on fire. I couldn’t breathe with his booming voice, his anxiety vibrating, snapping at the very air of his slamming door, slamming drawer, clutter-filled presence.  I needed peace. I wanted counter space. To breathe in my own clear air.


My soul burning.


So he left. Not without some protest, a mountain of bills, and the upheaval of our now suitcase-carrying, back and forth children who think I’m being selfish. That’s okay, I see their point. They are too young to understand that breathing isn’t selfish.


It’s more important we do this thing together, focusing on co-parenting them, and we do, in the tepid froth left after the boil. He still calls me “Hon,” after twenty-two years together, which is sweet and only slightly strange, as when a child calls you by your first name.


It’s been easier, and harder, to go through than around. There is no detour when it comes to ending a marriage. “You will have to walk through the fire,” my therapist tells me, and she’s right. Nobody does this for you. It’s a grown-up thing, this divorce business.


You dig through the ashes for answers, and realize that you are just as imperfect as you fear, that all those clichés about change are excruciatingly true. I don’t blame him. I don’t blame me. I don’t even blame change. Maybe I’m fooling myself, but adapting a Zen approach to it all helps immensely, particularly when the best I can do is breathe.


I watch my former resentments as they pass me by. While I don’t shake their hand, I don’t wave goodbye to them either. I’m not there yet. I want to be that evolved, and maybe one day I will be. There is frustration and anger that lie below any relationship; we are not special.


The single, burning stack is falling as the pieces scrabble for new places to land.


I realize control is an illusion. We can’t shape a tattered love that’s no longer there, yet I can choose to cherish memories, and be thankful for happy times and amazing kids; that we’ve salvaged enough of this shredded relationship to still care about each other because of our children makes me if not happy, at least grateful for this solo walk.


I’m damaged. I’m healing. I’m tending my scars.


The way it is with any kind of burn.



 


rachelintheOC author avatarRachel Thompson is represented by literary agent Lisa Hagan, and is published by ShadowTeamsNYC.


She is the author of the award-winning, bestselling Broken Places (one of IndieReader’s “Best of 2015” top books and 2015 Honorable Mention Winner in both the Los Angeles and the San Francisco Book Festivals), and the bestselling, multi award-winning Broken Pieces (as well as two additional humor books, A Walk In The Snark and Mancode: Exposed).


Rachel’s work is also featured in several anthologies (see Books for details).


She owns BadRedhead Media, creating effective social media and book marketing campaigns for authors. Her articles appear regularly in The Huffington Post, The San Francisco Book Review (BadRedhead Says…), Feminine Collective, IndieReader.com, 12Most.com, bitrebels.com, BookPromotion.com, and Self-Publishers Monthly,


Not just an advocate for sexual abuse survivors, Rachel is the creator and founder of the hashtag phenomenon #MondayBlogs and the live weekly Twitter chats, #SexAbuseChat, co-hosted with certified therapist/survivor, Bobbi Parish (Tuesdays, 6pm PST/9pm EST), and #BookMarketingChat, co-hosted with author assistant Melissa Flickinger (Wednesdays, 6pm PST/9pm EST).


She hates walks in the rain, running out of coffee, and coconut. She lives in California with her family.


Author Site: rachelintheoc.com

BadRedhead Media Site: badredheadmedia.com

Twitter: @RachelintheOC

Twitter (Business): @BadRedheadMedia


SexAbuseChat: @SexAbuseChat


BookMarketingChat: @BkMarketingChat


MondayBlogs: @MondayBlogs 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorRachelThompson

Facebook (Business): https://www.facebook.com/BadRedheadMedia

Google : https://plus.google.com/ RachelThompson/

Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/rachelintheoc/

Instagram: https://instagram.com/rachelintheoc/

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/rachel-thompson/24/784/b95

Goodreadshttp://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4619475.Rachel_Thompson

Author Newsletter: http://eepurl.com/j9oaH

BadRedhead Media Newsletter: 
http://eepurl.com/koN8r

Full-size Author Photo Link: http://i119.photobucket.com/albums/o158/Froze8/RachelThompson_


 


2940149889440_p0_v1_s260x420-188x300 Broken-Pieces-paperback


Tagged: #BeReal, #BeREALationships, Divorce, emotions, Healing, Inspiration, Living, Marriage, Motivation, relationships, Strength
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Published on August 02, 2016 04:00
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