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Guest Post
Exponent II features the work of guest authors writing about issues related to Mormonism and feminism. Submit a guest post Write for Exponent II.

Birth/Rebirth: Birth and Rebirth through Divorce

Guest Post By Erin

From what I remember, (it has been almost 8 years since I pushed another life out of my body) birth is painful, messy, exhausting, and frightening. I can understand why Nicodemus might have been a little incredulous when he was questioning the need to be reborn, i.e. “You want me to do what???” However, there are times in life when a rebirth is absolutely necessary. Not because we weren’t right when we started, but because we have strayed from the person we were meant to be when we began.

Over the course of our marriage, my husband had taught me that I wasn’t enough. I couldn’t do much to please him, no matter how I tried. I logically knew that all the things wrong with our relationship weren’t my fault in total, but in order to maintain peace, I did the apologizing, I accommodated to his needs and wants, I did my best to change my verErin Guest Posty essence in order to please him through fourteen years of marriage. I was committed to my covenants and would have given up more if I could to protect my children from the spectre of divorce.

In September of 2012, my husband told me he couldn’t “do this” anymore and walked out the door leaving behind a well prepared letter of how visitation and child support and division of property and debts would proceed. I was dumbfounded, to say the least. A week before we had been making detailed lists of all the things we should plan to buy for birthdays and Christmases to prepare for a family goal of section hiking the Appalachian Trail over the next 7 years. His leaving came out of nowhere. Thankfully, the Spirit whispered, “Let him go, he knows what he is leaving and he is still making this choice. You will be okay.”

This wasn’t the rebirth, this was the conception what would be the birth of my new life.

Over the next few weeks and months, there wasn’t a moment when I wasn’t in constant communication with my Heavenly Father. I needed direction for everything and He taught me how and why I needed to take certain steps, who I needed to turn to and how to handle the four kids and their varied reactions to the situation. Like a babe in the womb, protected from the outside world, I received the nourishment I needed from friends and family. Almost nothing was done that somebody else didn’t do for me. Even Christmas was handled by others, mostly anonymously, from the tree to the presents. I felt greatly blessed and humbled. The divorce was finalized amicably with just a few moments of discomfort when the terms of spousal support were negotiated. I was free from my marriage, but I hadn’t yet gone through the rebirthing process. I thought I had. I thought I was ready for the next step, but I hadn’t even seen the light of day yet to know who I was and what I wanted.

Over the next few months I could feel my old self stretching and reaching to get out of the skin I had developed as “his wife”. I thought that I had made it through the marriage and divorce fairly unscathed, but I hadn’t hit rock bottom yet. The Lord had been very protective of me until a few weeks after my birthday. My oldest son was preparing to be ordained a teacher. His Grandpa and uncle were flying out to perform the ordinance. Out of nowhere, my ex begins texting me, accusing me of things, but not coming right out and saying what he was accusing me of. It was an awful couple of days as I read these nasty texts and wondering what exactly he was talking about. It suddenly dawned on me that this form of manipulation and control was how he had always kept me subservient to his will and temper. It was a moment of clarity I will never forget. I mourned for the loving and hopeful 24 year old girl who had accepted this man and begged for her forgiveness for not standing up for her and allowing her sweet nature to be changed by him. I also celebrated the fact that I was no longer living under that oppressive influence. I was now ready to become the person I had always been meant to be. Commence the birthing process!
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I began setting goals, first giving away clothes that didn’t make me feel like the person I wanted to be. I exchanged blacks and greys for light and bright colors. I made goals, big and small- going back to school, running another half marathon, giving compliments when I admired something about someone, all in an effort to find my future in myself. Not everything was rosy or perfect. My ex had moved out of state and married the young woman he had been living with, my oldest daughter wanted to live with them instead of me. I spent the summer while the kids were all at their dad’s waiting for things to fall in place so that I could start school and feeling frustrated by my poverty and lack of a partner to assist with some big decisions concerning the house. This was all still the contractions, though. Transition was just on the horizon.

By the end of the summer, I faced some emotional traumas. My daughter left to live with her dad. Then, I started school, but my enthusiasm for it was tempered by an inexplicable anxiety. I soon realized that I was coming up on the anniversary of my ex leaving. I woke up the morning of that terrible anniversary and realized that I needed to own this day. I needed to mourn, to celebrate, to cry, to sing, to laugh and embrace all that I had been through the last year and let it go. I did just that. My apologies to my facebook friends. I felt like Rapunzel in the scene in Tangled right after she leaves her tower. At the end of the day I was emotionally spent. I had learned something about myself, though. I was not ready to get married again, but I wanted to be. My kids wanted me to be. This is how my transition began. You know, the part where you start saying, “I can’t do this anymore.”? Yep, that’s where I was.

I prayed desperately to be healed so that I could be whole when I meet someone that I could be married to. I felt prompted to set a date-the anniversary of my divorce. This was the date when I wanted to be ready for whatever or whoever was next. I decided that for the next three months I would date, but I would make it clear that I was not ready for anything more than casual relationships. That relieved a lot of the pressure that I had been feeling. I also decided that I would ask the Lord to tell me what I could DO. This prompted one of the most painful learning experiences of my life. The first night I said this prayer, the thought immediately entered that I needed to write a letter to my ex-husband’s new wife and welcome her to the family. This was beyond my ability. I lacked the forgiveness and love to write such a letter and not have it come out snarky.

Once again I was praying-for assistance to do this hard thing. The letter got written, though not without the enabling power of the Atonement and sent. The next few weeks proved that the letter was written for other very important purposes besides my own healing. How differently my ex and I were able to communicate about the kids now. He also revealed to me his own feelings that he was going through when he left and I came to the realization that my fears about being married again were all based on his issues, not mine. What a blessing! I also went through the temple and looked into the celestial room for the first time in a year. I was suddenly longing to be there.


Recently I celebrated one year of singlehood. It was a much quieter celebration than the previous one. I marked it only with a prayer of gratitude and was given the feeling that I was indeed ready to move forward with that aspect of my life. A quiet birth, but I could feel the love and approval from my Heavenly Parents as I once felt those same things from my earthly parents. I am reborn but with newfound understanding and confidence. I am bright, talented, naturally happy and optimistic.

I am enough.

 

Exponent II features the work of guest authors writing about issues related to Mormonism and feminism. Submit a guest post Write for Exponent II.

21 Responses

  1. This is amazing. Beautifully written. Thank you for sharing your divorce/birth experience. You’re pretty smart for a newborn! Good luck and godspeed the next steps of your journey.

  2. Thanks so much for this honest post. I get it. My divorce finalized three weeks ago today. 16 years of marriage and 6 children. This is not at all what I planned for myself but I understand so much if what you wrote about the marriage experience and stepping out of it to become who we are meant to be. It’s quite a journey. I am grateful to be free but still struggling with lots of hurts. It’s a process to be sure. Thanks so very much for sharing! It’s beautiful and gives me hope.

    1. I’m honored that you can relate. It IS a journey and it takes time, but there are pleasant views and accomplished guides along the way. Enjoy the moments that are good! I hope you find your strengths as I continue to find mine. God bless!

  3. Erin,
    Thank you so very much for sharing your experience with us. Your writing affected me in a surprising way– when you were discussing wearing the clothes for the person you wanted to be. That has had me thinking about how so many of my clothes are bought because of the price, the size, because of an event, some other reason that is not 100% for me…. and its made me rethink how, in that way, I am not being true to myself. Such an odd point for me to fixate on, because the whole post had me hanging on every word. And yet that– that has made me strive to reassess the parts of my life that I’d like to change to help me be me, to help me find me.

    Thank you for your powerful contribution.

    1. I will be honest, that was prompted by a program called Dressing Your Truth. The woman who designed it bases it on 4 energy types we all have but lead with one. When I learned about it and realized what “type” I was, I began buying things that were more comfortable for me and made me feel good. It has helped the way I parent, too. Sounds strange, but true.

  4. Thanks so much for sharing your story. I’m so impressed that you had the strength to follow that prompting and pray for the grace to write that letter to your ex-husband’s wife. That is amazing, and I’m glad it’s brought you blessings.

  5. Very insightful. You have triumphed. Congratulations. I am impressed at the wisdom and grace that you used during this transition. Happy re-rebirth!

  6. Erin,
    Thank you for your insightful post. I expect you will accomplish wonderful and important things in your new life.

  7. Wow. We are all on our own journeys, but sometimes they lead down familiar paths to another’s, don’t they? Thank you for sharing this Erin. I can relate so much and cried my way through it. I also tried for 12 years to remake myself for my husband. In the end I was still told that I never loved him. That I was incapable of love. That I hadn’t done enough. But you know what, my heart has only grown bigger and I know he is wrong (most of the time I know). And I don’t know what part of the process I am in for sure right now because it’s all very new – but I’m working towards rebirth! Your story is hard but beautiful and you are brave and strong and amazing! YOU ARE ENOUGH! I am enough too!

    1. Yes we are! What an absolute lie to be told how you feel about someone else. To be told you don’t love someone means they don’t know or love you enough to recognize the many signs of love you have given them. Good luck on your journey and know you’re not alone on it. 🙂

  8. Thank you for writing this … I was really touched and moved as I read it. It is a story we can all own: how hard, crushing things can shape us and create us new. You have been reborn with grace and beauty. It gives me courage to try and do the same.
    Suzette

    1. Thank you. I am a firm believer that our trials are not for our own benefit alone. I’m grateful my experience can bless others.

  9. Erin, I love how you wove God’s hand in your life throughout this post. It’s very powerful.
    Thank you.

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I’m going to try to do a better job holding multiple truths about Mormon women’s experiences at once with care, including wisdom gained from my North American-specific feminist awakening, and the recognition that many wise and experienced Latter-day Saint women of color around the world are focusing on priorities and using approaches that have meaningful and understandable distinctions from mine. 

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