A
Ailina
Guest
Excellent posts!!!Part 2 of 2
Do offer up your grief and pain. You know about offering up, don’t you? Because your grief and pain can be efficacious. God can use it to save sinners, if you offer it to him. So offer it up. It won’t heal your grief, but when I do this I feel a slight lifting of the burden, a bit of peace that I have given a precious wanted gift to Jesus. It was during my divorce that I started saying a daily offereing, and I will always say it now. Here it is:
O Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, I offer you my prayers, works, joys and sufferings of this day in union with the
Holy Sacrifice of the Mass throughout the world. I offer them for all the intentions of your Sacred Heart: the salvation of souls, the reparation for sin, and the reunion of all Christians. I offer them for the intentions of our bishops and of all Apostles of Prayer, and in particular for those recommended by our Holy Father this month.
Now your time of sorrow will be a mission for Christ. It will have meaning.
The grief will pass. You will have a life. It will be like a phoenix rising from the ashes. You have heard of that illustration, right? It becomes meaningful, not cliche, when its your experience. Your life is like burning coal right now. But God makes all things new. He will make your life new.
You thought he was a soul mate, but you were wrong. What he did is not what soul mates do. You considered him your best friend, but he was not a true friend. What he did a true friend never would do. Would you ever do to someone what he did to you? Ever? You see: he is not like you.
The loss in divorce multiplies - people you thought were your friends disappear. But I found there was blessing in the bitterness. It is terrible, but you do find out who your true friends are. All at once.You find out that some who you thought were friends really weren’t. And the loss of each one is another terrible pain. But it really is better to know the truth. What you have left is real, not an illusion.
All these truths you are learning cause pain. But in the end, you will be freer. The truth sets you free.
Another pain is that your role in life has been taken as well. You are no longer “wife”. And to add insult to injury, you have a new, ugly name: you are “divorced woman”. And you will sense the judgement that comes with that title sometimes when you are very tender. And right now you are tender - you are like a big open sore, and sometimes senseless people will rub salt in your open wound.
Yes you have your son. Its not easy to parent when you are in steeped in grief, and that makes his crime worse - to cripple a mother. But God will be your crutch. Mary is a mother, a merciful mother, and she will help you. Ask her, every day, “Help me be a mother.” She will help you.
I struggled with this too. You do know about annullment, right? If the Church judges that your marriage was not a marriage, then it is annulled, and a subsequent marriage is not adultery.
You don’t really have to worry about this now, because since you were fully committed to and loved your husband, you have much hurt to get over before you could even think of anyone else anyway. But it is natural to wonder what your future will be. I wondered too. You wonder what will happen when you get out of the dark oppressing cave of divorce. Everyone assumes you’ll date now. But how could I ever fit in the dating world - I have different rules than the rest of the world. Everyone else is at least a “maybe” which adds some expected excitement to the date. I am a “never” (not till after the wedding)! And who is that these days? Practically nobody.
My other conundrum was that I was still reeling from the belated realization that I had made such a poor choice in a husband. He had misrepresented himself - and my understanding of his personality disorder - narcissism - helped me see that this was par for the course. But at the time I marrie,d i was sure that he was God’s will for me.
Now I want to be sure I do God’s will. Thats all I want. So I am determined to be completely okay with being single always - because that might be what God wants for me. As far as dating, I am not going to seek any dating, just leave that completely in God’s hands. For me, that seems right. Also I will seek an annullment. I want the Church’s judgement on my marriage, even if I gain a conviction that God is calling me to never remarry. And I understand going through the annullment process is a real healing process. So I hope someday you cna have that too.
So thats the perspective of one person who was in your shoes not too long ago. The pains don’t stay that strong. They just can’t. I hope that helps.
