Love

Summer Adventures, Part 2

The last day of school was June 13th, and it couldn’t come soon enough for us! Steve and I picked the kids up right from school and took them down to Temec to see Indiana Jones, to celebrate. I was the only one who’d seen it before and I was a little concerned that Luke would have a hard time sitting still for the whole two hours, but both kids were completely mesmerized from the first frame to the last. Gotta say though, it didn’t help Luke’s fear of stinging/biting insects one bit. Curse those giant ants!

The following Tuesday, the 17th, we finally squeezed in our “spring” roundup.

It was wonderful to see the cows and calves all fat and happy again on the lush spring grass. Mahogany started out fidgety and spooky, but she settled down nicely as the morning progressed. And this was the first year that Elizabeth was able to really help with bringing in the herd, thanks to her growing rapport with Stormy. It was a good day!

It would have been a great day, except while we were there at the pasture the fuel pump on my car quietly died, and I ended up having it towed up to Idyllwild for repairs. They couldn’t find a new pump for it anywhere but at the Saturn dealership, ditto the fuel filter that they recommended I have replaced at the same time, so the whole thing ended up costing me just under $1000, including the towing fee. Yowtch!

Back when the kids and I were planning out our “Summer of Adventure,” we’d scheduled a trip to The Imagination Workshop for Wednesday the 18th. We weren’t sure what exactly it was, but it looked interesting and didn’t cost much for admission, so we wanted to check it out. When Steve heard about the outing he wanted to come too, so we made a family day of it. Which worked out well, since the guy at Idyllwild Garage said they were waiting on the parts for my car and I wouldn’t have it back until Thursday at the soonest. So we all went down in Steve’s truck.

The Imagination Workshop totally exceeded my expectations! It’s an amazing and delightful clutter of silly “inventions,” optical illusions, cool science and physics gimmicks, secret passageways and plenty of hands-on fun. I wish I had more pics to post, but something about the lighting in there confused my camera and almost all of my photos came out blurry. :^(

After we left the Workshop we stopped for pizza at a place we’d never tried before, called the Temecula Pizza Company. It doesn’t look like anything from the outside; just a featureless storefront tucked in between a Carl’s Jr and a Mobile station. But the pizza was INCREDIBLE! I ordered a personal-size piece of heaven with white sauce, smoked chicken, dried cranberries and two kinds of cheese (provolone and gorgonzola) that was freaking amazing. We will most definitely be going back there.

Thursday was the day I was supposed to leave for Laughlin with Julie and Josh, but they were having technical difficulties with their boat and weren’t able to get it fixed in time. They were still going to Laughlin, just not on the river part. After a lot of agonizing over whether or not to go anyway, I finally decided to bow out this time. The urban/casino scene isn’t really my thing, and I was afraid I’d feel so out of place that I’d dampen their fun.

The fuel pump didn’t come in on Thursday. The Idyllwild Garage guy said I wouldn’t have my car back till Friday. I told him that was fine, I didn’t really need it until Saturday anyway.

Friday Steve wanted to have a father-and-son day with Luke. They took a bunch of trash to the dump, did a couple of ranch calls (Luke likes to hand the shoeing tools to Steve as he needs them), and then they headed down to Hemet to get the truck’s oil changed.

While they were doing all that, Elizabeth and I saddled up our trusty (and not-so-trusty) steeds and went for a nice ride. It was fun to cruise along, go as fast or slow as we felt like, and talk together without Luke’s endless chatter constantly interrupting us. We might have to do this guy day/girl day thing more often!

All four of us arrived back home within twenty minutes of each other, and shortly after that I realized that somehow at some point my cell phone had fallen out of my saddlebag. Luckily the ride had mostly taken place on actual roads, so Steve drove me back over the route to look for it. No luck. When we got back we tried calling it, and it turned out that a friend of Steve’s had found it in the road near his driveway. He was nice enough to bring it up to our gate. Yay!

Since I was originally supposed to be in Laughlin that weekend, Steve had planned to take the kids to the Orange Empire Railway Museum on Saturday. With me not being in Laughlin after all, it was decided that we’d take my car and save some money on gas. Except! The fuel pump STILL hadn’t come in, and now my car wouldn’t be ready till Monday! Whee!

So we piled into Steve’s truck and headed to Perris. Steve’s parents met us there at the museum a bit later.

Luke was delirious with pleasure at being surrounded by all those trains and machinery. The rest of us were delirious with impending heatstroke. It was 107ยบ in the shade that day, and we were not in the shade; we were in the broiling sun surrounded by hulking metal behemoths and often on black asphalt. I’m not normally bothered by heat, but that was like being in a toaster oven. And inside the trains it was even worse! Gaaahhhh.

Still, it was a great museum if you like trains. I forgot to bring my camera (!!), but Steve’s mom had hers so we got some nice pics. You can’t even tell how close to heat collapse we all were.

Sunday we all spent here at the house, hanging out and playing Clue. We just recently discovered that game, and it’s turned out to be oddly addictive. Simple enough for Luke to easily grasp the concept, but with enough opportunities for surreptitiously gleaning clues from other players’ careless remarks that Steve and I have begun to get downright cutthroat about it. Ah, the pleasures of clean family fun. ๐Ÿ™‚

Monday my car was finally fixed, and we brought it home. Hooray!

During all of this, Steve and I have been doing the two-steps-forward, one-step-back cha-cha. Some days everything seems to fall effortlessly into place, and other days feel like one long struggle to mend an unmendable relationship. It’s…wearying.

We finally decided that it’s time to try marital counseling. So we picked a guy pretty much at random out of the yellow pages, and Tuesday was our first session.

We can’t decide whether that went well or not. The guy listened to our tale of woe, asked a bunch of questions, and finally said (rather dubiously, Steve and I both thought) that he could help us if we really wanted to try and make it work, and when did we want to start our weekly sessions?

Interestingly, the fact that a marital counselor appeared to be of the opinion that our marriage is probably doomed has only made Steve and I all the more determined to make it work. Apparently we both possess the “Oh yeah? We’ll show HIM!” reflex. Nice to know we have SOMEthing in common. ;^)

And now I need to get outside and get some work done in the yard, because it turns out that yardwork does not do itself while one is out galavanting around at museums and such.

It looks like the apricots will be ripe within the next week. Mmmmmm, apricots.

And that’s all the news here. I will attempt to get back to posting more than once or twice a month, so my updates don’t all read like novels. :^)

Categories: Animals, Family, Horses, kids, Life, Love, Marriage, Ranching | Leave a comment

I’m Starting To Think He’s Been Replaced By An Alien Pod-Clone

Not that that’s a bad thing.

Random snippets of conversation this week:

Steve: “I have to run down to Temecula tomorrow for some horseshoes and stuff. Want to come with me?”

Me, clueless: “Me? Why?”

Steve: “Just to spend some time together. We could go somewhere nice for lunch while we’re down there.”

Me, automatically thinking of all the stuff on my To Do list around the house, then realizing that Joe Taciturn actually wants to spend several hours hanging out and talking with me. “Wow. I’d love to come!”

Steve: “Great! See you in the morning!”

**********************

Me: “One of these days I need to tear out that old furnace so I can use the space for things I actually use. Totally not looking forward to that job; it’s going to be a pain.”

Steve: “I could come over and help you with it. Let’s do it Sunday, I’ve got the whole day free.”

***********************

Me, wistfully: “You know, Dani and Steve do their weekly grocery shopping together as a family. I wish we could do that.”

Steve: “Why couldn’t we? Sounds like fun. We could even throw in something cool for the kids every week, like taking them to the park or the movies or something. I’ll start keeping my schedule clear one day a week, which day’s best?”

Me: [faints]

**************************

On that horseshoeing-supplies-buying trip, we even drifted into a political discussion and — you would have to know Steve and I to grasp the amazingness of this — neither of us got pissed off at any point in the debate.

It’s just…unnatural.

But I really really like it.

And that furnace? It would have taken me days to wrestle it out of there, but together we pulled it out in an hour or two.

Samuel Johnson defined a second marriage as “the triumph of hope over experience.” In my case hope hasn’t completely triumphed yet (it’s still neck and neck with caution and a deeply-ingrained skepticism), but so far it’s making a very strong showing.

I just hope the aliens aren’t going to want their pod-clone-guy back anytime soon. I’m getting rather attached to him.

Categories: Family, Life, Love, Marriage | 1 Comment

Level One, Day Five

We’ve had quite the week here.

First, the fun stuff: On Friday, my friend Julie and I went to see Indiana Jones. What a great flick! A big rollicking roller coaster ride from start to finish, with a real plot and everything! I thought it was a very satisfying conclusion to the Indy saga.

Then we spent a few hours running errands, and that was fun too. I think a full day of nonstop girl chatter might be better than therapy. I mean, presumably. I’ve never actually had any therapy. Steve and I recently talked about seeing a marriage counselor, but we’re kind of afraid he’d listen to our story and then say, “You’re all wrong for each other, just walk away. That’ll be $250, please.”

Not-so-fun-stuff: In the spirit of Getting Everything Out In The Open, Putting The Past Behind Us And Beginning Anew, Steve has been (rather courageously, I think) filling me in on Things I Should Know About Before Making A Final Decision About Getting Back Together.

He started with the easy part, telling me about a bunch of stuff he did during our separation. He figured (correctly) that it would be much easier for me to learn about those things from him than to find out from someone else somewhere down the road. It was kind of difficult to hear, and I can’t say I really wanted those images in my head, but I did appreciate his honesty and I was glad he’d told me. People apparently do some crazy stuff when their marriage falls apart.

Next he moved on to the hard part: confessing things he’d been guilty of during the years we’d been together that even I hadn’t known about at the time. There was nothing really divorce-worthy in and of itself, but taken all together his confessions painted an even more dismal Big Picture of our old relationship than I had seen before. Again I appreciated his desire to come clean and put it all behind him, and I did my very best not to make him feel like he’d made a mistake in telling me about this stuff, but damn. Kind of a major shock for me.

Saturday was the Clarke Family’s annual roundup and branding. We usually all go, but I skipped it this year. Steve and I are still officially separated, and I didn’t feel like answering a bunch of questions that even I don’t know the answers to yet. So Steve took the kids to the roundup, and I saddled up Mahogany and headed down to my old hideout to do some heavy duty thinking.

Gorgeous day, and there were still some late wildflowers brightening up the canyon.

Once we got to the hideout, the dogs played in the creek while I introduced Mahogany to the concept of being turned loose in the little grassy area. I made low “fences” of dead cottonwood branches across the two exits, but she could have shoved through them or hopped over them if she’d really wanted to. I figured I might as well find out now whether she was going to stick around voluntarily or have to be tied to the tree every time we came down.

She stuck around. I was glad — it would have been a long walk home.

So then I settled down to ponder my situation. And I guess it all boils down to this: either I can choose to believe that Steve’s desire to change is sincere, that he has come to realize what truly matters to him, and that he’s ready to put his self-absorbed ways behind him…or I can choose to believe that he’s the same irresponsible opportunist that he’s always been, and not waste another day of my life on him.

Or, I suppose there’s a third option. I could promise to give him another chance, but then end up driving him away myself with all my mistrust and old resentments. Really hoping to avoid that one. I need to either make a clean break of it or honestly throw my heart into the ring for all it’s worth one last time. At least if it still doesn’t work out I’d have the comfort of knowing I wasn’t the one who screwed it up.

The thing is, he feels different now. To me, I mean. For the first time in years, my finely-honed Bullshit Detector isn’t tingling even a little bit. He feels…authentic. The man who used to deeply resent being asked to call home if he was going to be working late, now calls me two or three times a day just to ask how my day’s going and tell me about his. He converses with me. Actual conversations! And he didn’t even blink when I told him that, until I feel more secure in this new marriage we’re building, I would need him to stop going out and partying without me. He just agreed. He said from now on we’d go out together or he’d stay home with me.

My favorite gesture so far:

In our old marriage, the kids were “my job.” If we had some family outing, I’d be the one getting Luke and Elizabeth ready to go while Steve relaxed in his comfy armchair, flipping through channels on tv and periodically asking what was taking us so long. Yarg.

Fast forward. I had plans to be out with Julie this Friday, so Steve was going to pick the kids up at the bus stop after school, keep them overnight, and then take them to the Clarke roundup Saturday morning.

Friday morning at 7:30am he showed up at my door, to help me pack their suitcase, because he didn’t want me to feel like I was doing all the work myself.

A girl could almost dare to hope.

I spent a couple hours mulling things over in the hideout, then rode home feeling pretty good about giving the new marriage one solid shot. I have firmly resolved that if it fails this time, it won’t be because I didn’t give it my all-out best effort. That’s really all a person can do in life, right? Throw their whole heart into it and pray that love can find a way.

Now if only Steve’s no-strings-attached ex-girlfriend would stop leaving bitter messages on his cell phone. That would be swell.

Here’s to the future. May it be as bright when we get there as it looks from a distance. :^)

Categories: Family, Horses, Life, Love, Marriage | Leave a comment

Level One, Day One

Today Steve and I had:

One beautiful, nearly perfect conversation

One catastrophic detonation

One tearful reconciliation

Our first mutual goal assigned for Level One: to go an entire week without either one of us acting like a crazy person.

Baby steps. Baby steps.

Categories: Life, Love, Marriage | 1 Comment

Stages Of Grief

Warning: this post is going to be the sort of soppy emotional wallowing that is probably of absolutely no interest to anyone but me. If you’re looking for clever, witty perspectives today, now’s your chance to escape.

So. When Steve and I separated, my first response was an overwhelming relief. I was so glad to finally just let go of the hopeless struggle and start reconnecting with my own self again. I woke up every morning with a song in my heart, and went about my daily work with a glorious lightness of spirit. The fact that Steve was suddenly putting an extraordinary amount of effort into strengthening his relationship with Luke and Elizabeth — something they have long needed — reaffirmed for me that we’d made the right choice. I felt liberated, buoyant, free.

That lasted for almost a month and a half. Then the bitterness and resentment started creeping in. In some strange way, the happiness and ease of my new life made me deeply angry about all the years of futile struggle and empty promises I’d just gone through. It gradually built up in me, and then climaxed in a solid three days of bitter fighting with Steve. Until then we’d kept our relationship civil, but now the gloves came off. We said horrible, ugly, cutting things to one another, doing our best (or worst) to wound and maim. Almost fourteen years of knowing one another had taught us right where all the tender spots were, and we clawed at them ferociously and without mercy.

It was horrible. One of the most harrowing experiences of my adult life. Those three days of total hostile alienation made me realize that underneath all of my anger and resentment, I actually still valued Steve’s friendship quite a lot. I told him I didn’t want to fight anymore, and he said he didn’t either, and we carefully began to put together a new sort of friendship, based on the acceptance that we are maritally incompatible but not ignoring the enduring bond between us. Being friends felt so much better than being enemies.

Next came a phase of true grief for me. The pain would wash over me at random moments, almost unbearable in its intensity. I remembered the early days of our marriage, before I got pregnant with Elizabeth, and how Steve and I would spend our evenings on the porch at our old home and talk about the wonderful life of self-sufficiency we were going to build together. I grieved for what could have been. I knew that the effort had well and truly failed, and I didn’t want it back, but I wept, a lot, for the all love we’d shared.

And then I pulled myself together and put on my big-girl panties and moved into the acceptance phase. Steve started seeing someone else, and I was glad that he’d moved on and that now we could just be friends with no danger of a misguided reconciliation. Our relationship became easier and happier than it had been in years. He would come by almost every afternoon to see the kids, and we’d chat about how things were going with us, and life was peaceful again. From time to time I would bring up some old marital issue I was still smarting over, and for the first time EVER we were able to really talk things out without his glib self-justifications making the discussion pointless. Heaven knows I have my own faults, and I’ve made as many mistakes as anyone, but at least I’ve always acknowledged that fact and tried to learn from them. Until this latest phase in our relationship Steve had always shrugged off his own misdeeds as just more or less normal behavior that I should have been more tolerant of. Now he began to see those acts in the cold light of reality, and to realize the true harm that his selfish choices had inflicted, and to acknowledge the wrongness of them. I have to say, it was a marvelously healing time for me.

But then…a new pain began to creep in. My brain reminded me over and over that nothing had really changed, that we are still two wildly incompatible people who are completely unsuitable for a romantic commitment, but my heart yearned for him. Desperately, like a hungry, gnawing thing in my chest. It became harder and harder to just be his friend, to accept that he was with another woman now, to be happy about the separate lives we were building.

I started playing with fire. I asked him if he loved her, and he said no, there was only one woman he’d ever loved or was ever going to love, and that was me, and he wished it could have worked out between us, and that he deeply regretted the mistakes he’d made in our marriage. He said he’d made it clear to his new girlfriend that he wasn’t looking for a commitment or to give his heart away again, and she claimed to be fine with that, being in the middle of a divorce herself. I could have begged him to come back then, and he might have done it, but I still retained enough common sense to know better. Besides, I don’t want the kind of man who just takes whatever’s handed to him, and keeps it until something more appealing is handed to him. I need a man who knows what he wants and is willing to work for it.

So things went on that way, and I got more or less used to the heartache. I figured somewhere out there was my Mr. Right, and I just had to endure the pain of wanting Steve until something more real came along.

I think it must have been the barbecue last weekend that brought things to the breaking point for me. I had so much fun there, but the whole time there was this undercurrent of knowing that Steve should have been there with me.

That night I called him. I completely opened up, told him what a good time I’d had, and that even in the midst of my fun I couldn’t stop thinking that we belong together. I suggested very tentatively that maybe we could make an experimental attempt at starting over, and making a new beginning for ourselves. No huge commitments, no moving back in together, just…dating, maybe, like two people who had just met and found one another attractive.

There was a long silence, and then he said he’d need to give it some serious thought.

Two days later he broke up with his girlfriend. He told me he hadn’t made up his mind yet about giving us another try, but that it wasn’t fair to keep stringing her along if there was any chance of our marriage working out. He felt genuinely horrible about how hard she took the breakup, but I actually liked him even better for that. And it wasn’t like he hadn’t warned her not to get attached.

We still haven’t come to any real decisions about where our relationship is headed. Neither of us wants the old marriage back, that’s for sure. What we want is to figure out if there’s some way to create something entirely fresh and new for ourselves. For all four of us, me and Steve and Luke and Elizabeth, together as a solid and unassailable unit of love and loyalty and devotion.

I think we could get there. I think there would be a lot of hard work along the way, but I think the end results would be more than worth the effort.

I have diligently avoided pressing Steve for a decision. I want him to choose us freely and gladly, or not at all. I can’t go back to the numbing half-life I had with him before; I’d rather quit him cold turkey and be done with it.

I mentioned to Luke and Elizabeth that Steve and I were considering the possibility of getting together again, just on a trial basis. I asked them how they felt about that, and they both fell into a thoughtful, slightly conflicted silence. That’s a testimony to how much happier their lives have been since the separation. They’ve been getting more of my attention, WAY more of Steve’s attention, plus they haven’t had to listen to us bickering at each other about our general dissatisfaction. From their perspective it’s been a win-win-win solution.

“He wouldn’t be moving back in,” I felt the need to tell them. “At least not right away. If we try this, it’ll be in baby steps.”

Elizabeth nodded slowly. “You should just start at Level One,” she finally observed. “And see how that works before you go any higher.”

My amazing child has put her finger on it exactly. We need to start at Level One. Master all the little basic stuff before we try to tackle the big stuff again.

Now where’s a good Amulet Of Infinite Wisdom when you need one?

Categories: Family, kids, Life, Love, Marriage | 1 Comment

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