A little over two years ago, I lost two people I loved: my husband and my friend of thirteen years. I lost them to each other.
If you think that some things are so bad that there’s no returning from them, I am living proof that heartbreak can make you more loving and hopeful, that loss can ultimately be a gift.
They don’t tell you that you lose more than just love in divorce. You lose friends. You lose family. You lose your appetite. You lose the idea of who you were. At least I did.
They also don’t tell you what you gain.
I remember the early days. I sent a heartfelt message to mutual friends telling them that I wanted to continue to celebrate birthdays and watch TV shows on Sundays. I held my breath and pressed enter. Crickets. Only one friend wrote a response. I never heard from most of them again.
Allowing a vacuum to open in your life is one of the most challenging things you can ever do. To sit in the emptiness, to let go of the familiar and wish people you once loved, who have hurt you deeply, well, is to be brave in a way that fundamentally changes you.
I did not know what would come to fill up the emptiness.
I gave up half of my belongings to my ex-husband and ex-friend and moved into a beautiful one bedroom apartment. I painted the walls the pure clean white I had always craved. A blank canvas. I began adding things slowly: a white tufted bed, a pale aqua wall, girly things that had felt taboo in a shared space. I bought a juicer for myself when I didn’t feel like eating and started cooking simple meals for one when my appetite returned. I went to Meetup brunches with strangers and listened to stories about their lives. I became quiet in a way I had never been. I saw things in ways I had always been moving too fast to see. Life slowed down. I noticed the rushing around me.
I watched my ex-friend Instagram my belongings: an iPod my dad had given me, peacock feathers I chose for the Christmas tree, a painting I’d purchased for its resemblance to myself and my then husband, the couch I had lovingly had custom made. And I let them go. I felt my anger and I let that go too. I decided before I had any proof that there would be more of everything: more paintings, more Christmas tree decorations, more love.
I spent time alone and for the first time in a very long time, I coveted my own company. I travelled around Australia for a month. I went surfing and night diving and for long runs in the rain. I watched movies and stayed up as late as I wanted. I wrote pages of stories just for me.
I started to make new girlfriends. It felt a lot like dating. We’d go for tea and have long talks or go out dancing. There was no history to bind us, we were there only because we enjoyed each other’s company. It was something I’d been craving for years.
A gift.
Sometimes I felt afraid, used, unworthy. Sometimes I played the victim and sometimes I played the hero. But I chose to simply notice that and accept it too.
Mostly, I believed.
I believed that life was fundamentally good and that one day, I would love again. I started to see opportunities to love all around me.
At my lowest, I didn’t want to get out of bed. But I did. I had snowball fights with my mom and singing competitions with new friends and jumped on a giant trampoline with a Belgian girl who was like an instant sister halfway across the world.
Intense moments of pure joy sprinkled throughout moments of intense pain. This is one of the gifts of loss that they don’t tell you about: the ability to become completely and totally awake to your life.
I would spend one day hibernating in a yurt and the next go out and make new friends, diving headfirst into the sea.
It can all exist at once. Remember this, when you think you have to figure it out, when you feel compelled to stuff yourself into the rigid role of griever. You can be happy and sad. Angry and centered. Surrounded by love and alone.
Anyone who looked at my photos from my time in Australia would be surprised to hear my husband had left just two weeks earlier. It wasn’t that I wasn’t feeling it.
I just wasn’t willing to stop seeing the beauty in the world around me. I wasn’t willing to give up on the idea that the world, and the people in it, are fundamentally amazing.
Because they are.
One day, in a documentary filmmaking course that I decided to take on a whim, I met an attractive, confident, creative man. It was just a stirring at first, the glimmer of possibility.
Two months later, we went on our first date.
Six months later, we road tripped down the west coast.
A year later, we moved in together.
Today, we love each other, grow together and talk about how we became the people we are today and who we want to become tomorrow.
We listen. We are kind. We appreciate the journey it took to get here.
Love feels like complete and total acceptance balanced with the desire for growth.
Not just from and for my partner.
From me to me.
Which is the true love story here.
These are the gains they don’t tell you about when you experience loss. Because to truly get them, you have to learn them for yourself.
When I celebrated my birthday two months ago, and again when I hosted a Christmas party with my partner last weekend, I looked around in amazement at the life I had created in two short years.
Where that unknowable vacuum once stood, there is life and laughter and expansiveness like nothing I have ever experienced.
The people around me love me for me. I have stripped away the layers and allowed myself be seen for the first time in my life. I understand that I am the creator, that I’ve been the creator all along. I choose not to be a victim and I am slowly, slowly loosening my grip on needing to be the hero. I mess up sometimes. And that’s okay.
All I need to be is a human being. Heart open. Unattached. Ready to receive.
Here is what I know to be true about times of loss and rebuilding—you must hold two very different realities at once: the ability to accept and fully experience your loss and the unabashed hope for a better future.
You cannot run through the loss to the shiny beacon on the other side. Nor can you allow the pain to dim your heart.
It’s a balancing act. It requires presence.
Can you be with your pain? And can you also lean into your desire?
It is the combination of the two: the stripped down loss and the white hot desire that will lead you to the life you are longing for.
Stretch out your arms in the dark. Be willing to cry and laugh in the same breath. Most importantly, no matter what, keep listening, listening, listening to the drum beat of your cracked open, loving, overly optimistic heart.
That’s how you rebuild a life.
It’s how I rebuilt mine.
Wow, awesome post. My heart broke for you but you inspired me as well. Definitely gives hope to those suffering. Thank you for being strong.
Wow. What an inspiring and moving post. You sound pretty incredible! X
Beautiful :)
I thought of my parents who recently had a massive house fire and lost all of their belongings. Once the relief settled that they were both safe, my mother began to grieve for the loss of her mother’s (my grandmother’s) paintings – or as my mom referred to them, her “friends”.
I want to share with her your sentence: “you must hold two very different realities at once: the ability to accept and fully experience your loss and the unabashed hope for a better future.” I think this will ring particularly true for so many dealing with all types of loss.
L
Wow, L. It’s strange to think that losing everything can be a gift. But it does create space for the new, emotionally and physically. And there are losses to grieve. Both are true. Sending love to your family as they rebuild. xx
Beautiful post, and it so echoes aspects of my life…
Finding myself waking up in my childhood bedroom the morning after I had walked out of my home after discovering my husband was having an affair with our next door neighbour was equally the most devastating and freeing moment of my life… I spent the next three years balancing trying to rediscover the person I really should have been and heal from the betrayal. It’s a tough road doing both and it really does take time. I’m delighted to hear that you’ve found the companionship of someone who’s allowed you to love again. I have yet to welcome that person into my life but I do believe it will happen.
Thank you again for sharing your experience. It was a very brave thing to do and I hope one day I shall have the courage to share my story and give others the reassurance that you have that you will come out the other side of it!
Sending you love, brave, beautiful woman. You have lots to share with the world and with your future partner. It’s all on the way.
I love your story, and how it eventually turned out.
I’d also just come out of a long term relationship with my previous partner of eight years. I was in a fairly one sided relationship, and just had my fill and couldn’t hold on to anything anymore.
But I moved on, and now I am with an amazing girl with bright hopes towards a future together.
Cheers!
Awesome. Thanks for sharing!
Reblogged this on Binded Thoughts and commented:
Wow haven’t read a heartfelt passionate post in a while. Bravo to you for your courage and determination to move on and not give in to the lows of life.
Rebloged it in bindedthoughts.com
Wow haven’t read a heartfelt passionate post in a while. Bravo to you for your courage and determination to move on and not give in to the lows of life.
Wow your post is really touching. I lost my best friend 2 years ago and I used to cry every day :( Thanks for sharing your personal things with us. You’re amazing
Thank you. So are you.
Reblogged this on Writink Page and commented:
Because the light of life and optimism is always on!
Exactly what I needed to read at this time of my life. I am learning acceptance and to be present to my life – and you make it seem all worthwhile.
This post was EVERYTHING!!there is so much love and grace that awaits us. This is a true note to self, “All I need to be is a human being. Heart open. Unattached. Ready to receive.”
I can relate to the vacuum you talk about from where you rebuild …not from a divorce but another situation. The attitude required is the same you chose, its a courageous and rewarding one!
So inspiring – thank you for sharing! http://maryconroyalmada.com/
This spoke the words of my heart. Beautiful, truthful and inspiring. Thank you.
This is what life is about. We are going to lose things all the time, but learning to rebuild ourselves and our lives, that is what really matters.
i can feel your contentment and confidence in this post. you are a glowing example of human resilience! it is a hard realization that we can feel polarizing emotions at the same time. but when we allow it, it liberates us! thanks for sharing some very personal details of your divorce. i’ll admit that i wondered what went wrong, and where you went. i knew it was something serious… you have gone through one of the experiences i fear most. it’s what happened to my parents marriage when i was 16 and has left an imprint on me. while i don’t expect divorce or massive betrayal in my marriage, it’s reassuring to know that one can not only survive, but thrive and grow and love again. hugs and kisses to you rian!
My core fear my entire life was abandonment. Finally looking that fear in the eye and loving it was the only way to extinguish it. Now I show up very differently. Life feels really different. Those parental imprints can be strong. But they’re not permanent. Thank you for your love and support, always. xx
Thanks for the brutal honesty. It may have taken some time to reach the place you have made for yourself, but you did it. Looking back on my own experience with divorce and change, I would have to say you did a much better job than I did. I credit your own introspection and ability.
I’m sure you did/ are doing a great job. It takes the lessons and time it takes. Keep going.
Beautiful!
Rian – you’ve been may favorite blogger since I started reading your blog. I only hope we get to read the things you wrote just for you – from the time when it all existed at once, maybe someday. I was in Portland a while ago, and saw this in a shop window. Of course I thought of you and had to take a picture. http://dialetheia.com/forRian/pinkpig.jpg
Thanks for Truth and Cake.
Ed
Hi Ed, thank you! I love that pig. I’ve only ever seen shiny pink ones. So cool and so meaningful that you took a picture to share with me. You’re awesome.
This was such a beautiful post. Your heartbreak was tough to read, but your outlook on life and positive attitude is totally contagious and eye-opening. Thanks for sharing this, I bet it will give a lot of people going through the same or similar heartbreak even just a little bit of hope that things will get better.
Dear, sweet, remarkable, resilient Rian. While I will be the first one to admit I once saw your life as beautifully perfect with the doctor husband, so many exotic adventures, and blog posts that inspired me to be a better writer, I now see that not everything in your world was as rose-colored as I thought. I thank you for sharing your hurt and anger and recovery and joy. I thank you for returning to blogging and laying it all out there for thousands to read. I thank you for being your best self and encouraging all of us to be our best selves. I thank you for once again proving that reality, with all its ups and downs, truly makes life worth living.
Reblogged this on CozyBookmark and commented:
I was so moved by this beautiful and inspirational post, I had to share. <3
Thanks for the great info dog I owe you bigiytg.
Actually, you may want to disregard my last comment, since it looks like my light meter’s broken. I am now stuck with a brand new camera which won’t video in anything but bright bright sunlight. If anyone knows how to get something like this fixed, do tell.
So inspiring. Thank you. <3
Thank you Rian. You are a fierce woman and a good reminder that every day there is a choice.
This post really inspired me because it is easy to be scared when moving on without people you think you need but there are other people out there. It actually reminded me a lot of of one of my posts “People come and go.” Check it out and tell me what you think?
Beautiful, heartbreaking, hopeful. Thank you for your story.
Rian, I have said it before and I will say it again: you are so beautiful and special and that guy is so very lucky.
I know this rebuilding of which you speak. First, was the divorce; second was the next one; now, it is the stroke. Each of them have taught me; the stroke taught me the most – giving up everything, starting completely over, enjoying the process while being so scared at times you could almost throw up.
I am going to reblog this one. If I can’t, then I will link to it. This is an important one. I have followed you for years and this one is such a different you.
I am glad for you.
I hope that, someday, in my own way, I find someone just like you – only different…
Scott
Rian, it is just so interesting to read this beautiful, yet courageous story about life, forgiveness, hope and openness. I was listening to under the bridge – feeling kinda alone- being a victim that it is Xmas… and sometimes we just want a companion to watch a film during a cold night… however, things happen when you are happy with your life and your are following your dreams and we work towards it, like you did. I am very happy to have read this post, maybe be feel very grounded. You are an inspiration in many ways XX Liv
Beautiful writing! Thank you for sharing your experience its so inspiring!
god bless you… great courage
Oh wow. I’m a bit lost for words now, it feels like you have said it all and what’s left has to be lived in the first place. I am going to skip on the divorce (I don’t mean that in a rude way, it’s just not ‘applicable’ to my life – my husband and I do pretty well) but everything else will be taken to heart. Thank you for this post!
I Wish you the very best. One Of the most beautiful posts i have read in a very long time. you give me hope.Merry Christmas
Beautiful. Thank you for your courage to share your story with the world.
What an amazing post. Thank you for sharing lovely lady xx
Toing! nunca lo habÃa visto asÃ, la verdad es que nunca tuve esos problemas con el macho alfa de esta manada, como vivÃamos en ciudades diferentes, el iba cada fin de semana a mi ciudad (al revés no podÃamos, porque yo trabajaba en sábados y él no, asà que apaehocvrbamos mas el tiempo asÃ) y el pagar: avión/autobus y además hotel y comidas, no es precisamente barato, asà que a la hora de pagar las salidas, los dos apoquinabamos, era lo menos que yo podÃa hacer ¿no?
Absolutely loved reading and enjoyed your vulnerability- you have done an amazing job! Thank you for your words and humble inspiration.
This resonated very much. But for different reasons. When I was diagnosed with breast cancer a couple of months ago, after the initial shock and fear and sadness, I quickly had to learn to live with all those emotions but also with the “other” life, the everyday humdrum, the love, my habits, my friends. In short, you have to keep on living holding both experiences and finding beauty and happiness and centered-ness in the midst of it all. What you went through is rough and it is beautiful to see how you rebuilt, keeping intact your openess and generosity of spirit. Thanks for sharing.
Love this and could relate to so much of it as following my last heartbreak I felt completely lost in my life. But in the last 3 years I started doing things for myself- starting and finishing my MBA while working full time, traveling to new places and making new memories through doing activities I wanted to do and try. I am a much different person than I was 3 years ago and I hope whenever my next relationship comes into my life I will be able to see my grown even more. And if it takes time to meet someone I know it’s because I’m not ready yet and I’m ok with waiting.
This is so entirely beautiful, thank you for sharing such an honest and inspiring account of you and your recent past.
Immensely moving. Very much in the spirit of my favourite quote “Anything you can dream or think you can do, begin it. Boldness has genius and power and magic in it”. Be well always.
Moving. Honest. Raw. And for anyone who is going through a hard time – inspiring! Thank you!
Profound and inspiring! A wonderful read.
By far the best description I have ever read about loss and rebuilding. Amazing. Thank you for it to words.
Reblogged this on haunusuan and commented:
An amazing and beautiful story of self love and growth
you are amazing! xoxo
You are amazing, such in inspiration.
What a lovely happy ever after story! We can’t truly experience pleasure without pain. Merry Christmas,
This is a beautiful post, one full of hope and love. Thank you.
Wow. These are beautiful words, thank you for being so open & real & raw! Love your writing & your story (that is still being written!)! May God continue to bless you & awaken you to how beautiful life truly is.
Ah yes, nicely put, evrenoye.
❤️
Brilliant, heartfelt writing, thank you so much for sharing your story. I couldn’t help but draw parallel lines to my very different yet similar experience of the grief and loss I went through when one of my children was diagnosed with a rare genetic condition at birth. The sadness and weight of it all, and the pure joy and elation of his precious fighting life all at the same time.
That was nearly 8 years ago now, what a gift life had in store for me that day, and it keeps giving. Yes, accept, keep moving forward and carry the torch of love and hope bright in your heart has been my mantra.
Your words have helped me see just how beautiful it all is.
This is so heartfelt. Right when i was thinking to myself that I forgot how to be human, how to feel emotions, how have desires, how to get back to my authentic self…I know how it feels to lose someone and this helped me realize that in life you just have to role with the punch. playing victim is only self-defeating
You so beautifully said everything my heart has been feeling over the last couple of years as I recover from divorce. My favorite part: “the ability to accept and fully experience your loss and the unabashed hope for a better future”. This is exactly what I try to do…daily. Thank you for putting words to the feeling! So glad to have stumbled upon your blog :)
You’re welcome! I’m glad it resonated. One of the reasons I share my stories is that so many of us go through things like this and feel alone in it. We’re definitely not alone. <3
I’m sorry that happened to you. Thank you for seeing things so clearly – the actions you took and advice you have given are wonderful. I am at the end of a break-up compounded by lies and an exhaustingly-gray area of infidelity. I am also discarding old dreams, trying to find new ones. It is tempting to waste the gift of freedom and focus on recovering… finding a stable routine of survival, alone. This mainly involves perfecting an exercise routine and avocado-on-toast. Instead I will remember your advice, take control and be rather a lot braver!
Thank you, I’m in a similar situation (add in 2kids), I’m trying hard to focus on the beauty and good and feel the pain and you’ve captured it beautifully. It says to me – keep going, stay strong, notice joy, treasure the good. Thanks x
You are amazing. Keep it up.
And please checkout my blog too. I’m new here. Hope you’ll like it. Any suggestions feel free to comment. Thank you :)