• commentary
  • WEDNESDAY MAY 28 2008 6:00 AM

Abandon All Hope: Cycle of Lunacy

Here's a little piece of advice, mostly for the ladies, but boys – take it as you will.

When filing for divorce, and you aren't yourself a lawyer, trained in any legal lexicon, and are sort of a basket case to begin with, don't try to decipher the jargon on the paperwork while you are PMSing and just ran out of cupcakes. In fact, don't do anything but acquire more cupcakes and an extra, Costco-sized jug of Midol. Do not try to explain to your ex why these papers are so important, and how there is a strict timeline in which things need to occur. Do not have a meltdown when things do not happen EXACTLY your way. Keep in mind, you are not currently dealing with a rational set of emotional tools, nor are you dealing with another rational human. You're dealing with an ex.

I'm not saying that ex's are all evil horrific beasties. They don't all have to be shot on sight. The process of "Becoming An Ex" is something that we have all experienced. People change once they become an ex. It's a fast and slick metamorphosis, and happens instantly once the words "We need to talk" are said. Next thing you know, you're realizing that the person you thought you knew has gone utterly and completely insane, or perhaps has been insane the entire time and just tricked you into thinking otherwise.

One night I got home from work and a recent ex was sitting on my porch, looking furious. Apparently, Mr. Mad had broken into my house to sift through my trashcan for "evidence". Evidence of what? That I throw shit away and don't always recycle? Was he expecting to find some great revelation as to why we broke up, buried in with my food scraps and take out containers? We broke up because he was driving me nuts and I thought he was a moron. Maybe somewhere deep down inside I knew that he was eventually going to turn into the type of person that would break into my house to dig through my trashcans.

On another night, many years later, I was woken up at about 4:30 AM to a sound on my porch. I opened the curtains, and saw (another) fresh ex. This one was sitting there doing bumps of coke. It was the equivalent of him saying, "Guess what! I'm a drug addict! Surprise!!" When I opened the door, and politely asked what the fuck he was doing there, his only reply was that he was waiting for me to wake up. In his amphetamine-addled little mind, my 6 AM wakeup would be the perfect time to have the “please get back together with me” chat. Unfortunately for him, it didn't work out as planned. Rather than getting back together, I closed the door and called the cops.

Know what I learned from all of that? People usually aren't who they seem to be, and I should have bought a better fucking lock for my gate years ago.
The grieving period post-breakup is what seems to force people into a bout of the loonies, and whomever initiated the split is obliged to stand there saying, "Oh wow, you're suddenly completely insane now that we have broken up!" Sometimes this can lead into dumpster-diving, coke-snorting middle of the night visits… sometimes this causes endless email and phone calls… and sometimes this causes trash-talking and rumors. Whatever the case may be, I've only ever heard of one break up that went smoothly, where both parties shook hands and said, "Well, at least we tried."

The thing is, we've all tried, and yet we continue to allow this cycle of lunacy. Does this mean that we actually want smooth sailing? Or would that just leave us bored? It seems to me that we all enjoy the agony and the ecstasy of it all. Anguish is just as strong of an emotion as love, and the good can't feel as good without the bad.

So go ahead. Go dig through your old emails, and leave your gates unlocked. We've all been on the other end of it – we've all sent those emails and letters, we've all dialed the phone and hung up as soon as the other person answered (well, at least until caller ID came about), and we're all going to keep doing it. It makes us feel a bit cinematic, and also gives our friends something to laugh about. In all honesty, even if we knew what a wing nut someone we are involved with will become once it's over and done with, wouldn't we still go for it?

 

Previous

PAGE: 

1 | 2 | 3

Next

Comments
MaggieZee

MaggieZee

San Francisco, CA
June 2006

MAY 30, 2008 06:05 AM

i'd like to meet someone who has mastered the art of becoming an ex.

Meow

Meow

SUICIDEGIRL

Ohio, USA

JUN 10, 2008 11:21 PM

Ah.... divorce papers.... so glad that only took a year and a half to do. wink

miao!!

DevilsReject

DevilsReject

Cleveland, OH
February 2007

JUN 11, 2008 12:08 AM

my ex-wife is currently going through her second divorce.

The "new" ex-husband's lawyer subpoenad me to testify at their divorce, since it's an utterly disgusting divorce.

His lawyer called me today, and said, and i quote:

"Your ex-wife claims that the reason you and her didn't work out was because you weren't controlling enough. She could go out with her friends and come home at all hours and you would never complain, it gave her the feeling that you didn't care about her"

I couldn't do anything but laugh at this, i really had no clue how to respond to it.

RudieCantFail

RudieCantFail

Baton Rouge, LA
January 2006

JUN 11, 2008 12:37 AM

DevilsReject said:
my ex-wife is currently going through her second divorce.

The "new" ex-husband's lawyer subpoenad me to testify at their divorce, since it's an utterly disgusting divorce.

His lawyer called me today, and said, and i quote:

"Your ex-wife claims that the reason you and her didn't work out was because you weren't controlling enough. She could go out with her friends and come home at all hours and you would never complain, it gave her the feeling that you didn't care about her"

I couldn't do anything but laugh at this, i really had no clue how to respond to it.



That's some kind of special crazy right there. tongue

Mr_Matt_

Mr_Matt_

Pompano Beach, FL
July 2005

JUN 11, 2008 06:00 AM

Maybe people should wait longer before getting married.

You never know someone until you live with them, so "shacking up" for a few years seems like a wise idea.

c4ff31n3

c4ff31n3

I'm lost
November 2004

JUN 30, 2008 09:20 AM

Wow,

you've dated some odd fellows. I am always able to continue friendly relations with my ex's. I'll substitute chocolate for cupcakes, though, in case I do end up in a bad way.

Zuli

Zuli

USA
July 2008

JUL 21, 2008 07:24 AM

wow ! I am definitly dealing with a looney like those guys right now.....

CheshireCat

CheshireCat

Los Angeles, CA
January 2004

JUL 21, 2008 07:33 AM

yes I have done some outlandish shit,the ego overtakes completely,its as if I became another person....tormenting my x over and over ...and kind of fun to tell ya the truth

Polkadot

Polkadot

SUICIDEGIRL

Macau

JUL 31, 2008 11:20 AM

i really love how you wrote this fractal...

Cash

Cash

USA
OLD SKOOL

JUL 31, 2008 11:31 AM

Fractal said:
Maybe somewhere deep down inside I knew that he was eventually going to turn into the type of person that would break into my house to dig through my trashcans.



That made me laugh my ass off. I really enjoy your writing...it's genuinely funny without being pretentious.

Cash

Cash

USA
OLD SKOOL

JUL 31, 2008 11:33 AM

Mr_Matt_ said:
Maybe people should wait longer before getting married.

You never know someone until you live with them, so "shacking up" for a few years seems like a wise idea.



There's a reason I'm 32 and have never been married. That is...the reason BESIDES me being petulant child.

niero

niero

Minneapolis, MN
July 2008

JUL 31, 2008 09:36 PM

I actually had the reverse experience. She was kind of, how to say this nicely, a bit "off", which I didn't see clearly while we were together (my bad). But when we broke up, and I was moving out, we were cool. Things smoothed out once we broke up, and for a while it confused us.

It feels to me like the original post is hinting at the "phenomenon" that bad relationships are full of excitement and drama and the healthy ones are "boring" because you're usually much more mature and civil to each other.

Versailles

Versailles

Portland, OR
July 2008

AUG 03, 2008 03:39 PM

Reading this reminded me of how thankful I am to be single and how much it is worth it not to date people you have that not so perfect feeling about, just because they're there...and you're lonely.

Kohai

Kohai

I'm lost
October 2006

AUG 06, 2008 06:34 AM

Some of my gay friends have been through breakups with people they've been with for years but (at the time) couldn't marry. A bad divorce is the ugliest thing you've ever seen... until you see people who've been together for a decade trying to separate their house, possessions, pets, etc. with absolutely no legal framework to do it with.

The above is not to try to belittle the experience of a bad divorce, but it may give some grim consolation that you're not as screwed as you possibly could be.

niero

niero

Minneapolis, MN
July 2008

AUG 07, 2008 03:44 PM

Kohai said:
Some of my gay friends have been through breakups with people they've been with for years but (at the time) couldn't marry. A bad divorce is the ugliest thing you've ever seen... until you see people who've been together for a decade trying to separate their house, possessions, pets, etc. with absolutely no legal framework to do it with.

The above is not to try to belittle the experience of a bad divorce, but it may give some grim consolation that you're not as screwed as you possibly could be.



I never thought about that, but yeah, that makes sense - having to go through all that with no legal guidelines to keep the other person in check would be nasty.

Previous

PAGE: 

1 | 2 | 3

Next