%title What Defines Us %date 2019-07-01 :writing:fiction:epistolary:furry:short-story:family:divorce:sawtooth: Darren, Haven’t heard from you in a while. Do you think I could come up and visit for xmas? Been a while since I’ve seen the little monsters. Let me know before prices go up. How are you? How is Leila? LYF Mom ----- Mom, I’m sorry I haven’t gotten back to you recently. Things on our end have been awful, if I’m honest. Leila and I are thinking of splitting up. I don’t know about Christmas. I hope you understand. LYFA Darren ----- Oh honey, I’m so so sorry. What happened? Was it about work again? I still want to come out and see you. More now than I did before. Can I do anything to help? LYF ----- Mom, Sorry, I guess my last email was pretty skimpy on the details. Yeah, the work thing got bad, then got a whole lot worse. I knew Leila was unhappy with it and all, but I don’t think I realized how unhappy. I mean, I’m not happy with it, either, but obviously it’s the life I live - and have lived - so it’s in my blood. She wasn’t happy hearing that. Well anyway, dozens of arguments later, it comes out that she got fed up enough to start sneaking out and seeing others. Maybe if she’d been open about it or whatever, I would’ve been more able to work with it, but I think it just goes to show that neither of us are happy and neither of us can trust each other. We tried doing the counseling thing. Even brought Jer and Eileen to some, but I don’t know, mom. I feel like I’m in a bad spot with that. I feel like I’d like to be the one to talk things through with the kids, not some very expensive stranger, you know? It makes me feel like I’m out of touch with how they feel about things, and like it would just sow distrust in them of us. I’m lost, mom. What do I do? This is all so overwhelming... LYFA D ----- Darren, It’s not easy stuff to work through, I know. It sounds like you’re doing a good job of things, and certainly like you’re doing right by the kids. You both knew that there would be a lot of compromise going into this relationship, but maybe you just didn’t realize how much? I hope I’m not overstepping or anything, just that sometimes compromise works and sometimes it doesn’t. That’s just the way of things. You and I had to compromise on a lot, and it’s worked out okay (I think\!\!), but Justin and I tried and never could get it to work. As for what to do, just be honest. Painfully so, if need be. That said, you should be careful about Jeremy and Eileen. If you want to talk about all this and work on the divorce thing, \*don’t do it on your own.\* Do so with Leila. Both of you talk with them together, and don’t be afraid to talk about the problems you and L are having. They’re smart cats, they’ll be able to understand, and may have good advice for you, too\! Treat them like adults, and they won’t treat you (either of you\!\!) like mysterious unapproachable aliens throwing their lives into chaos. Call me if you need? LYF Mom ----- Mom, Sorry for the delay. Things are up and down over here. We did as you said and have been talking things through with the kids, to mixed results. I can tell they’re uncomfortable and unhappy about it all, but I feel like they’re getting it, and having their say. And I feel more connected with them about it. The downside is that it’s splitting L and I’s thoughts on the matter in a weird way. When we talk about things in front of the kids, it feels like we’re saying one thing, but when we talk in private, it’s something different. We both act so civil around them because we have to, that it’s made our arguments in private more painful. Things were sort of a maybe until we started doing this. Now it’s feeling more like a definite. It hurts so much, mom. I love Leila, and I love the kids. If this is the direction we’re going in, I guess that’s what needs to happen, but none of this work stuff is going to look good to a judge. The thought of losing them has me not eating, not sleeping. I don’t know what to do. LYFA ----- I know, honey. I don’t want to sound like a broken record, but I know it’s not easy stuff. When things have broken down this completely, there is no outcome of this that is going to feel fair, but you love your children. It’s plain to me, and I hope it’s plain to Leila and any judge in the matter. You won’t have them taken away from you. Just make sure you stay in their lives. Make sure you do what you can to help them want to stay in yours, too. (Not saying buy their affection, just show your love and appreciate (visibly) the love they show you.) LYF ----- Yeah, the goal is not to be my dad here. *Sent from MobileMail* ----- Darren, That’s not fair to me \*or\* your dad at all. He and I had our differences and we couldn’t work them out, but my goal was never for you to hate him. We shared our time with you as we did, for better or worse, and I tried to keep channels open. That’s why I’m saying what I am. Help them want to be in your life. LYF ----- That’s just the thing, mom. You keep pushing me to him, but there’s nothing there. Not saying your advice is bad, it’s certainly good. It’s advice I wish you could give dad. The guy hit me, though. I was never good enough for him. He was an abusive jerk and you know it. Why would I want to go and show him \*any\* positive attention? Seriously, I’ve tried to handle this divorce shit and my relationship, hell, my fucking life the \*opposite\* of how you handled things. You both provided me with so many bad examples of how things could go. And yet here I am, reliving the fucking past. *Sent from MobileMail* ----- Darren, honey, I’m so sorry. Not a day goes by that I don’t think about you. You’re my baby, remember? Long as I live. So please, please understand me when I say that I’m sorry. Both your dad and I handled that entire situation terribly. \*Both your dad and I.\* I messed up back then, and if I could go back and change things, I would. I don’t know if that means staying with Justin longer so that I could protect you or getting the divorce sooner to get you away from him. I don’t know how I can fix it now, other than to help you not \*become him.\* We’re after the same thing, here. Neither of us want you to be him, to wind up in his shoes. That’s why I keep pushing you toward him, though. I know it had to have hurt him for you to cut him from your life. I can’t imagine how much it would hurt if Jeremy and Eileen did that to you. I can’t speak to your relationship with Leila. You know that Justin and I were cordial to each other, but when things ended, they ended, and there was no going back. If you two can patch things up, then that would be great\! If you can’t, though, you’re right: don’t be like your dad and I. Love you forever Mom ----- I’m sorry, mom, you’re right. I know things weren’t great for you and dad either, and I know you’re just trying to help. It’s just hard. It hurts a lot, and it’s making me really upset at the drop of a hat. Love you for always D ----- And as long as I live My baby you’ll be\! The problem with being a parent (and you’ll understand this more and more as Jeremy and Eileen grow up) is that your children are both the better versions of yourself and also doomed to repeat so many of the mistakes you did. You took a lot away from how things were when you grew up. Like you said, you took away the things that went wrong and want to do the opposite. You have my blessing on that\! You make me endlessly proud when you do so. But you also took away my work ethic. That’s a good chunk of why Justin and I didn’t last. Not the main reason, of course, but still, it was there. And now it’s playing havoc in your life. All we can do is try and do better. What happened isn’t all there is to us. What defines us is also what we become. LYF Mom ----- I don’t really know what to say. I didn’t realize that was a problem you and dad had, too. I’ll have to think about it. Things are still up and down, but have been a bit more up recently. I still think things are going to end in a divorce, but talking with the kids forcing us to be more civil has helped a lot, and we’ve started talking about an equitable split. Thank you, mom. I know I got snippy, but you’re right, and have helped more than you realize. Can you still come up for Christmas? LYFA D