When I was two years old my parents got divorced. I was lucky in a way, because at the time I was too young to understand that separation, at it’s most basic level, isย the physical manifestation of pain being split in two.
By the time I’d turned five Mom had remarried. We left Atlanta, where our entireย family was from, and moved to Louisville, where I ultimately grew up. Back then, fathers didnโt have the same parenting rights as today, so with a brand new puppy under one arm and a pack of candy cigarettes in my hand, I waved goodbye to my fatherย as my stepdadโs sleek, silver Thunderbird rolled down the driveway, through Tennessee (โSee Rock City!โ), andย toward a new life.
As time went by, pieces of my old familyย became seedlings for another, and when my amazing baby brother was born, my new family was complete, but in a different kind of way. There was someone else present who, even though he wasn’t part of this new unit, was still in the mix because he was attached to me.
My father.
I wouldn’t sayย things were perfect between my mother and father, because even when bad memories fade they leave a scar. Butย Mom always held the door open for visits, and my father never missed an opportunity to take any time with meย that she was willing to share.
As years passed and I became increasingly comfortable with my family dynamics, I began to see myself as lucky, even though it wasn’t always easy. I was a Whitten and everyone else I lived with was a Logan, I felt like a misfit in the world of seemingly perfect families on my block, and I sometimesย had to paint a smile on my face when all I wanted to do was cry. But intermingled with the sad was something that no other kid I knew could match. Not only did I have one great dad, I had two,ย with different but equally important ideas, strengths, influences, opinions, and dreams…and one huge commonality. They both loved me, in a way that only a father can. Times two.
So the challenge, for Day Four, is to find the silver lining in a bad situation or event.ย In someย unfortunate incidents it simply doesn’t exist, which, regrettably, is the true definition of tragedy. But in many cases, good can be salvaged from bad. If you can find happinessย in something that at first only brought pain, it’s a gift to yourself that never goes away.
Divorce, like life, is complicated. It’s messy and raw, and carefully drawn colors end up bleeding outsideย the lines.ย Sometimes though, if we’re lucky, the things that hurt most end up helping us in the end.
I, Gemini Girl, have interrupted my non-existent programming to bring you the 25 Days of Giving Challenge. Please join me in my quest, over the next 25 days, to make people happy. Iโll share stories of giving escapades that will be sure to wow, impress, or at least not annoy anyone who chooses to participate. Each Day of Giving will be conveniently brought to you via emailย if you follow this blog. And if youโre already a follower? Pass it onto your friends. If we work together we can change the world, or at least dramatically improve my hit ratio.
Leave a reply to Suzette Cancel reply