DEAR DR. NERDLOVE: I’m a 36-year-old man and I’ve been divorced for two months. My wife and I had been married for ten years and together since we were eighteen when we both had to agree that our relationship was over. The divorce was as drama-free and harmonious as you could want; it was a mutual divorce and there wasn’t a lot to do besides sign the paperwork and call it a day. We were and are still friendly, even as we had to admit that we didn’t love each other the way we needed to. All of our friends have been incredibly supportive and even remarked at how this was a model for how a divorce should go.
Since the first time we actually mentioned the divorce word, I was sad and a little resigned but I knew it was the right decision for both of us. I’ve told my friends that I wasn’t happy about it but I was ok.
Doctor, I’m not ok. I’ve been hanging on by my fingernails and losing my grip.
Now in the last month, my ex-wife has moved across the country for work (which was something we both knew was coming, even before we went to the lawyers) and I’m in a spiral. It’s not that I want my ex-wife back – I’m happy for her and she’s going to be much happier on the west coast than she ever was here. It’s that her leaving was apparently the last thing holding me together and now I’m freaking out.
I haven’t left my apartment for days. I feel completely lost and confused and I don’t know what I should do. The idea of getting back on the dating scene is leaving me terrified beyond my capacity for rational thought. I haven’t been single for nearly half my life! I don’t know how to be single or how to be on my own. At least when my ex was still in the same city as me, I felt like I had a semblance of normalcy but now I feel like I’m clutching to a twig in white water rapids and heading for a waterfall. What’s wrong with me? Why am I not ok like I should be? What do I do?
Please help.
On My Own
DEAR ON MY OWN: You’re ok, OMO. What you’re experiencing is entirely understandable and normal; part of why you feel like you’re spiraling is because you think you shouldn’t be feeling this. But that doesn’t make any sense; your world just came to an end, of course you should be feeling it! Yeah, the end may have been as gentle as you could hope for, but it still ended. That’s going to f--k with you and thinking it shouldn’t is madness.
Buddy, you were with someone for eighteen years. That’s half of the time you’ve spent on this planet where you haven’t been just one person, you’ve been one half of a gestalt entity that was your marriage. And then suddenly, that being fell apart, and now not only are you an individual again, but your other half is gone. If you were ok, then that would be the sign that something was wrong. That would be the sign that you stopped caring long ago, that you were never really forming that being that was both you and your wife, that you weren’t forming a whole that was greater than the sum of its parts. The fact that you’re hurting is the sign of just how much you cared and how much it all meant to you.
It was easier to pretend when your ex-wife was still nearby, even after the divorce. Now she’s completely gone, and you’re seeing the negative space where she used to be.
It’s ok to not be ok. It’s ok that this is f--king with you. It’s ok that you’re feeling lost and confused and scared and twisted up. It’s ok to feel all of this and you should feel it.
But it’s important to recognize this for what it is. Yes, you had your world and your world ended. But the fact that the world ended doesn’t mean that this was the end. Worlds end all the time, but in that ending, a new world is born. You’re experiencing the shock of the new, the terror of the unfamiliar and the confusion of who you are and what your purpose is.
Consider that for the last 18 years, you have shaped your life around another person being there with you. Every decision you’ve made, every day you’ve experienced, every future you built were all built around the two of you. Now, suddenly, there’s just you, like before you merged your life with your ex-wife. But it’s not like before, because you aren’t who you were back then just as you aren’t who you were when you were married. You don’t know who you are now, because you only just got introduced to yourself. That’s why you’re freaking out; you’re still thinking like who you used to be and not seeing who you are now.
And that’s ok! This is all incredibly new and incredibly fresh. You’re still reeling from everything that’s happened, and two months is not enough time to get used to it. Honestly, even saying that it’s been two months is misleading; this didn’t truly begin until your wife was well and truly gone – not just from the marriage, but from your home, your city, your state. You need to give yourself a lot more grace and compassion because it just happened.
This is all normal. This is all completely understandable. You’re ok. You’re only just realizing how much has changed and change is scary.
The first thing I want you to do is reach out to your friends. Your friends almost certainly took you at your word that you were ok, and even if they suspect you may not be, they aren’t going to know that you need them until you tell them you do. Reconnecting with your friends and spending time with them is going to do a lot for helping you feel like you’ve got your feet under you and you’re standing on solid ground again. It’ll help bring normalcy back and remind you that you’re not alone – even though half of you is gone.
You don’t have to do much; just spend time with them. Feel the warmth of their presence, allow yourself to lean into them and just appreciate them. Let yourself laugh if you feel it, and let yourself cry if you need to let it out. The tears may outnumber the laughter at first, but that will change in time, as their love and affection will bring you strength and peace.
The second thing I want you to do is put dating aside. It’s not just that you’ve fully accepted your divorce, you haven’t even started the mourning process. It is way too soon to even think about dating; you don’t even know who you are yet! Dating right now isn’t about love; it’s about the fact that you’re still feeling this massive hole and you’re feeling an entirely understandable impulse to make that hole go away by shoving someone else into it. But that’s not going to fix it, because nobody will actually fit in that hole and despair and loss will seep in through the little nooks and crevices like rising damp. The hole needs to close on its own, and it can only do that as you work towards learning who you are now.
The third thing I want you to do is to focus on yourself. You need to heal and you need gentleness. What are the things that feed your soul, the things that make you glad to be alive? What is there that feels like the warmth of a sunrise against your skin and the smells like a spring breeze in your nostrils? These are the things you should be indulging, to soothe the pains and remind you that there’s still good in the world. These are the things that will remind you that you’re still alive and life is for the living, not for the walking wounded and the living dead. Focusing on these things will help ease the pain, clean the wounds and soothe the aches.
Give yourself permission to focus on yourself for a little while. You’re allowed to be a little self-centered and a little tender. You’re allowed to rest and recover instead of rushing back out into the fray. Like an athlete who’s suffered a critical injury, it does you no good to try to get back in the game when you aren’t healed. At best, you just prolong the time it’ll take to recover. At worst, you’ll only hurt yourself worse.
But I want you to understand: there will be days when you feel better, followed by days when the world comes crashing in on you like an avalanche. But as these days pass, there will come a day when you realize that you don’t feel so bad. You may only notice it by what you don’t feel – that pain that you’ve gotten so used to that you only notice it in its absence.
When – not if, when – that day comes… well, that’s when you’ll be ready to start the process of dipping a toe back into dating and finding love again. And while I know it’s going to feel unfamiliar and intimidating, there’s nothing to fear. In the 18 years you were with your wife, you built a lifetime of experience. You’ve faced every conceivable scenario with her, allowed someone to see you in your most vulnerable and ugly moments and knew they still loved you anyway. You’ve had triumphs and failures and you came out better for it all. You have nothing to be afraid of, because you’ve seen it all and done it all and you know what you’re capable of. When the time comes, it will feel strange to do this again, with new people, and there will be times that it feels too intense or too frightening… but you’ve come through before. The person may be different but you know what you’re capable of because you’ve been there before, and you’ll be able to navigate it.
Sure, the new people will respond differently – some positively, and some negatively. But that’s ok too; this is how you’ll learn who’s right for you and who isn’t. You’ll learn who is someone to pass on, and who might be the person you will want to build with. And with time, the unfamiliar and frightening will become the known and you’ll recognize the territory much sooner and much more efficiently and stride across with that much more confidence.
But that is the future. For now, there is healing, there is mercy and there is the search for your peace. What you’re feeling isn’t pain, it’s enlightenment. You’re a new person now, with the benefit and wisdom of what you’ve earned before, stepping into a new world. It’ll take time to get used to it and to map out its territories, but you will get there.
You’re going to be ok. I promise.
All will be well.
Please send your questions to Dr. NerdLove at his website (www.doctornerdlove.com/contact); or to his email, doc@doctornerdlove.com