Monday, December 11, 2006

"You know that old saying about how you always hurt the ones you love? Well it goes both ways."
-
Jack, Fight Club (1999)


A friend recently moved into our house for a few days.

She moved into our house, because she moved out of hers.

She moved out of hers, because her husband abused her. A lot.

She moved into our house. For the second time in a week.

The hardest part wasn't that she left him. The hardest part was that she had to do it twice. For me, that hardest part was that she walked back into her house...kids in tow...into the home of an abuser...and lay down next to him again.


I've much to share with you, but tonight I want to share this. I'm amazed and I'm confused and I'm really, really sorry for her, and for her kids. And, in some weird way, for her husband. This is not my world...I'm lucky that way. I live in a home with a woman who I not only love, but most of the time really like. My wife lives with a husband who she loves and most of the time likes, and who they both, deep down, believes won't ever intentionally harm her. I live with a woman I yearn to see after a long day, and she lives with a man she can go to bed at night knowing wants the best for her. I believe that Stacy and I could bring kids into the world and, somehow, raise them to be people who respect and love the opposite sex. Not because we're better, I don't think. We grew up that way...our kids will believe it because our parents, at some level or another, believed it. We were lucky.

My guess is that my friend's husband grew up in a home where he saw his mother treated with contempt, shame, and disgust. My guess is that his father was dominating, and his mother either stooping or overcompensating by raging against the kids. That's just my guess. I'm fairly sure that my friend grew up in a place where she questioned her own worth, and where her parents, by example, taught her that she was only as good as her foul shots and her pretty smile, and she had to know that someday she would slowly lose both.

I think she went back into that house not because she truly believed he would change, but because she believed she didn't deserve for him to. She's smart, educated, strong and beautiful...and yet she learned along the way that she wasn't worth true love; just marriage, and children, and a house, and the abuse.

We helped her get away. For now. I don't know if she'll stay away. I wonder if some twisted sense of destiny will bring her back to him. God, I hope not. No woman deserves that treatment. None.

I'm angry with my wife at this moment. I'm not going to tell you why, because it's her business and it's my business. But it doesn't matter. I'll be over it tomorrow or the next day or maybe next week. That doesn't matter either. What matters is that, by God's grace and decent parenting, I'm choosing to love right now. I'm loving by breathing slowly, remembering who she is and who I am, and typing furiously at my blog until I can fall asleep. And tomorrow, when I wake up and head off to work, I will choose to kiss her goodbye. It is my choice to love her, and it's a choice both of us make each day, whether we feel it with everything we have or whether we conjure it in spite of some squabble, petty or otherwise.

I'm not a great husband. But I'm a good one. And when our friend calls us tomorrow to ask us if she should return to her husband again, I'm going to close my eyes and, for as long as it takes, be grateful for what I have.

Please pray that she stays away, and that he seeks help. Her story is one of millions, and she and her kids deserve better.

Peace,
Justin


2 comments:

Anonymous said...

One can only hope, I suppose.
One can only pray.
What a simpleton I sound like ... saying such things.

The fact that she has you and Stacy to go to ... to escape to ... is such an amazing thing. Just having a place to get to.

Justin, I don't have much to say here ... and maybe that's because you are saying it all with your actions. There really are no words ... just things to do.

For what it's worth, your friend will be in my prayers.

Helen Ann said...

God be with your friend...I will pray for her. That God will protect her and lead her out of that hell.

Many blessings,

Helen

PS - thank you for your comment on my journal about Tim's crazy and wonderfully challenging message from a couple of weeks ago. I am still digesting it! That's some good preachin'...He could get in trouble for saying things like that...How Christ-like! :) :P

See ya 'round church!

H.