Why Family Matters: We Need a Witness to Our Lives
Posted by BlueEyes1962 on 22 Mar 2008 at 12:38 pm | Tagged as: Pittsburgh Observations
Last night, Cathy Day gave a reading from her new book, Comeback Season: How I Learned to Play the Game of Love, at the Joseph Beth Booksellers in the Southside Works. She drew a large crowd – the booksellers kept having to bring out more chairs.
I went with a guy friend I met on Match.com, and saw a couple of familiar faces in the crowd, including Samatha Bennett, award winning columnist for the Pittsburgh Post Gazette, and fellow blogger Cynthia Closkey (My Brilliant Mistakes), but luckily no men from Match dates gone bad.
Cathy is very funny, and anyone who makes me laugh gets my $25 – I bought her book and started reading it last night. I already found passages that have rung really true for me. Here’s one:
“That’s when hits me. I’m not looking for dates in Pittsburgh. I’m not looking to get laid. I’m really not even looking for a husband. What I want, what I need is a family. This realization surprises the hell out of me, and something completely absurd and incongruous pops into my head [a scene from the movie Shall We Dance in which Susan Sarandon says:]
‘We need a witness to our lives. There’s a billion people on the planet…I mean, what does one life really mean? But in marriage, you’re promising to care about everything. The good things, the bad things, the terrible things, the mundane things, all of it, every day. You’re saying, “Your life will not go unnoticed because I will notice it. Your life will not go unwitnessed because I will witness it. ”
- Cathy Day, Comeback Season, page 37
I had struggled for years to get out of my marriage. Whenever I brought up the subject, my ex would say “I’m not leaving my kids. If you want out of this marriage, you leave.” Since I refused to leave my kids too, we’d reach an impasse.
We might have gone on forever, not realizing how unhappy we were, if he didn’t take 6 week long business trips each summer. When he was gone, I felt a weight lifted – I was lighter, more free, happy and when he came back I always crashed.
Finally, he agreed to leave.
This should have been a great victory for me but I found it very hard, and I couldn’t understand why. But I think this passage helps.
For 20 years I had a witness to my life, someone listened to me, someone who noticed. Now he might have noticed all the wrong things – like when I gained 5 pounds or had bitten down all my fingernails, or laughed too loud , or sat the wrong way, or befriended the “wrong” people. But I was still noticed by someone. I still counted.
When we separated, even though I stayed in the same house, with the same 3 kids, kept the same job, and outwardly had very little change to my daily life, I felt unanchored, like I was floating around lost.
Maybe part of that was not having someone who “had” to listen to what happened at the office today, or how Zack was doing in World History, or what piece of furniture the dog chewed.
My desire to blog might have come from the same need to have a witness to my life. And the blog has had a lot fewer entries lately, partly because I am in a relationship, which means I’ve got someone to listen to my stories again (even if his eyes do glaze over at times if I talk too much about office politics…)
As I read through Cathy’s book, I’ll give more comments. I think it’s great that we have a local writer who has a published book on online dating, especially one that’s so brutally honest – and in her own name.
It’s a lovely book, funny and sad and sweet and intelligent. I think most smart women and men will appreciate it.
I was glad to see you last night too! I’m glad you’re blogging again — you have a lot to share with us.
Great to meet you at the signing BlueEyes-sorry I didn’t catch your name before. I loved Cathy’s book just as much-I read it at the right time, after the guy I met about 6 months ago and was seeing off and on decided to go back to his ex girlfriend. Hmm, I guess I was just a bandaid for him while I wasted 6 months of my life pining for him. I guess even after this long, I’m learning a thing or two (or three…)Anyway, for anyone else reading out there, I’ve been doing online dating for about 12 (I thought it was 14) years, since the very first dating sites came out(which were ethnically oriented). Yes I’ve met a LOT of tadpoles, kissed a LOT of frogs and I still haven’t found the ONE. But hey, if I’m still going strong after this long, anyone can do it. So if anyone needs moral support, I’m here! And I definitely have some stories…
glad to see you’re back, glad to see you writing again. when you write about your experiences, instead of relaying things you’ve heard or been told, i am a witness to your life.
you are not unnoticed, uncared for, a stranger in a world of billions of people.
we, your readers, bear witness to your life. those of us who are divorced, with children, with exes living nearby know that we are not alone because of your willingness to share.
just finished a great book, looks like I’ve found my next read.
Happy Springtime, we all deserve it!