After Emmett died, and even after I married Shawn, I
remember spending hours trying to change myself. I didn’t feel good enough to
leave my room without my make-up on, or my hair done. I didn’t like to look
people in the eyes, for fear they would see all the broken pieces I had inside
of me. I wore high heels everywhere I went. Even on a morning adventure to the
park with all the kids, I would get dressed up and waddle around in my fancy
shoes.
Why? I didn’t know it at the time, but looking back it is
all so simple. I was scared to be me. I was frightened that the minute I
relaxed and walked around as me,
people would see why Emmett chose her.
I wasn’t enough for Emmett then, I was scared to not be
enough for Shawn, and I had come to not be enough for myself. My fear of inadequacy
in my marriage didn’t just build a wall of protection around me; it gave me a
false sense of who I felt I was supposed to be.
Shawn spent many days begging me to just stick on some
jeans, tennis shoes and a t-shirt—but I could not do it. I didn’t want to feel
inadequate in anyway. I didn’t want to give anyone a reason to talk about why I
wasn’t enough, and I especially didn’t want to be put in a situation where I
felt like I didn’t measure up.
It was like I lived in this imaginary world—where everyone
was looking down on me and laughing at all of my imperfections. The accusations
that had been sent my way didn’t just flash across my computer screen, or enter
in my ear—they pierced my heart. I read
them over and over, and recited them to myself as if they were gospel. If you had been a better wife . . . Emmett
would still be here. If you would have given him all that he needed, he
wouldn’t have gone looking for it somewhere else. If you were enough for him,
he wouldn’t have turned to her. It is your fault Emmett died.
Though I had the perfect knowledge that I was not there when
he died, and I did not pull that trigger, those lies posed as truths inside of
me—and they burned holes in my soul. I spent much time pretending that they did
not hurt, but the more they lay hidden . . . the deeper they reached.
Instead of working on digging up my own pain, I spent much
of my time trying to help my children heal. One afternoon on a quest to find a
grief therapy group for the kids—I came across one for me. After I hung up the
phone I almost laughed at the thought. What
would a grief therapy group do for me? I don’t need anyone else to tell me how
hard death is to face in reality. I have
already faced the fact that Emmett had died, and he was gone. I was beyond the
need to talk about my grief. I quickly forgot about the grief group and
carried on with my day.
A few days passed and the grief group kept popping into my
mind. One night before turning out the lights for bed, Shawn said, “Hey, you
ok? You seem very deep in thought.”
I finally shared my thoughts. I said, “So I have been
looking for a grief group for the kids to go to—I think it will help them work
through some more of the stuff that counseling hasn’t done—and I . . . I didn’t
find them a group, but the number I called was . . . it’s a grief group for
adults. It is a six-week course, and it starts tomorrow. I don’t want to talk
about my stuff, and I don’t want to go . . . but I can’t stop thinking about
it. Maybe I should go . . . so I can help people in the group. ”
Shawn grabbed my hand. “You should go, Ash. What do you have
to lose? I mean, just because we are married doesn’t mean that it has just gone
away. You walk around like everything is
perfect, but I can see sometimes that you are still hurting inside. If you want
to go, I support you. I think you could help people in the group . . . but I
think it might be good for you.”
When morning came the next day I was so nervous my stomach
was churning. I said goodbye to my family and got in the car. As I drove I
could feel my tears on the verge of breaking. My first thought was that I
didn’t want to mess up my mascara. I didn’t want to ruin this group’s first
impression of me. No! I was going to drive alone in the car without my pain. I
didn’t want to think about Emmett’s death. I wasn’t going to ponder what I was
going to have to say at the trial; I wasn’t going to rehearse what I would say
if I walked into the grief group and Kandi was there. I was going to be strong
and not show any of these emotions.
I was afraid to cry in fear that it would mess up my makeup,
but most importantly I didn’t want to let anyone in. I decided as I drove that
I was going to be stronger than ever. The past was in the past. I was a warrior,
and I was going to this grief group so I could help all the sad people in it
who were not as strong as me.
I pulled up to the address the woman had given me over the
phone. As I stepped out of the car a wave of the past rushed over me. I knew
this place well. Emmett’s step mom Denise—who had died a few weeks before Teage
was born—had her funeral here. A funeral home? Really? My new grief group
was going to take place every week in a funeral home? Why did it have to be a
memory from my past? How was I going to be able to help people if I was busy
thinking about my own pain?
I tried hard to push that hard memory out of my mind as I
pushed down the even larger lump in my throat. I was not here to cry, I was here to help others. Just like the
many other times I had tried to lie to myself about my emotions, my face burned
with all of those I was trying to hide.
I sat down with my arms folded. I glanced around the room.
It was filled with sad faces, many who had been on the earth many more years
than I had. Each person had a story, and you could see it written all over his
or her face. My heart raced as my soul could feel all of the pain that filled
the room.
The session began. The discussion leader asked us to go
around the room and introduce ourselves and tell a little about why we were
there. As each person spoke and the spotlight got closer and closer to me I
began to rehearse in my mind what I was willing to share.
And then my turn came. I began. “My name is Ashlee. I . . .
I was made a widow last year in March and I have five kids. I am remarried now
and have a new daughter.” I bent my knees to take my seat.
Then my heart took over. “I . . . My husband was killed . .
. because he was cheating on me. I . . . my heart still hurts. I try to pretend
that everything is perfect. I try to tell myself that it didn’t break me, but I
am drowning. I . . . just want to feel normal again. I want to remember how to
feel, and how to love. I . . . just . . . I am trying to figure out how to make
my life right, but it is just so hard. The trial hasn’t even begun and . . . some
days it is all I can think about. I just don’t understand any of it. Why . . .
did he have to die? Why did that gun have to fire? I . . . just don’t
understand. I am here, because I don’t know what I am doing. I am trying to
figure out how to be enough for a man again, but really I just want to know how
to be enough for myself. My husband wasn’t just killed . . . he was murdered by
a mistress's angry husband. He didn’t want me. He was choosing someone else.
But what hurts the most is the fact that I still wanted him. I still wanted our life. He wasn’t the perfect husband. He
wasn’t always the perfect father, and he was making a really big mistake. But
he was OURS. He was the man who I devoted my life to, and he was taken from me
before I got to do that. I had a perfect plan . . . and it was going to be . .
. perfect. So now I just want to know how to let that go, so hopefully someday
I can breath again. I want to perfectly love again. I want to be the girl I was
before he died, but I don’t know how. I miss him, I miss the perfect life I had
. . . but most importantly I miss me.”
And there it was. I was not perfect. For the first time
since Emmett died I was standing in front of a group of strangers telling them
how imperfect my life was. I wasn’t pretending to be something or someone else.
I was just me.
What is perfection? My view of this word has changed in the
last few years. It started as a glimpse of a life I thought I had. Then it
changed to an image I thought I must be. That week I came to see perfection in
a whole new way.
Once my heart poured itself out to this group of strangers I
knew I wasn’t just there to teach—I was there to learn.
Perfection is sitting for hours in a room full of elderly
widows learning about love. They poured their souls about a life they once had.
They cried tears for the perfect days they shared and the imperfect partner
they had loved; they opened up their hearts about the dreams they had watched
come true.
As I sat in that perfect moment, in that perfect room, I
felt a glimpse of hope. I had so much that had been taken from me, but all of
my dreams could still come true. Though my life with Emmett was over, my story
was not complete. Though my perfect dreams had once felt shattered, I could
still learn to live a new one.
Perfection feels like the only dream we should want to
obtain. But what if perfection is happening right now? What if—even through the
imperfect past and the imperfect days we now live—we are living the perfect
life we were always meant to?
Our days will be hard. They will not be perfect. Our makeup
may smudge with the tears of our pain; some days we might not ever make it out
of our pajamas . . . but life is so much more than what we once thought would
make it perfect.
Life is about love. Love is about family. And families are
not perfect. Some days we may lose; others we may win—but in the end all that
will remain are all the things that make us imperfect. High heels are not what
make us whole; and makeup doesn’t change who we are. To truly find your worth you have to search
for it inside.
You will find it when you least expect it. Your worth in
God’s eyes will not be found in a box; it will not carry a price tag. It will
be a radiant light that permeates from inside of you.
It hurts to feel that you do not measure up, it is scary to
wonder if you are enough. Before you wait around for someone else to build your
sense of who you are—Find it in yourself.
There is One who has always seen your perfection through
your flaws. God’s grace can be found in the little moments that are there to
remind you that even though you are not perfect, and even though your path has
been rocky—you are perfect to Him.
You are perfectly imperfect, just the way you are.
Beautifully put. Thank you so so much for sharing. Just what I needed.
ReplyDeleteLove! That pic of you and Shawn permeates so much love! Enjoy your perfect imperfect moments. I just finished book 1. When do you think #2 will be released? Can't wait!
ReplyDeleteThank you for teaching me so much.
ReplyDeleteLoved this!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you for your inspiring words. They have such a positive impact on my life. You put into words what do many of us are feeling and you maje us feel a little less alone.
ReplyDeleteI loves this!! I feel that in often just hide behind what others see as strength! I act as if I don't feel ashamed for what my husband has done because it is his sin. I act as if life is just moving forward and I have so much Faith that everything will just work out! Deep inside I feel empty, lonely, like a failure and grieve the loss of my hopes and dreams! I am thankful for you and your example and the love if feel from you! As always I feel hope in your story!! 💙
ReplyDeleteAshlee, please, please, please, please know if you don't already that the fault was in him, not in you. He was not working toward perfection in one relationship, as you were. His goal was to conquer multiple women. After Kandi, it would have been someone else, and then someone else after her. The only reason you "weren't enough" was because you could not be more than one person.
ReplyDeleteWell said.
Delete...or, I'm my opinion, Emmett was so focused on money that he probably felt like be 'owed' Kandi because of her 'help' in building his practice, therefore an affair. He was so blinded - because you were enough.
DeleteIf you could see what the rest of us see, you would never, ever, doubt your beauty! Your light radiates inside and out! Thank you for sharing it with us!
ReplyDeleteYou are the most beautiful person... inside and out. Thank you for your beautiful words. They always touch my heart.
ReplyDeleteHow unbelievable that people actually told you that if you had been more, he wouldn't have done that or things would have been different. I add my voice that I hope you know that is not true!!! People have a temptation they feel they can't resist. Obviously they CAN resist it, but because of something in THEM, they choose not to. It was nothing in you.
ReplyDeleteThe picture you selected of Kaleeya trying to look pretty with your makeup is absolutely perfect for this post!
ReplyDeleteYou and shawn are adorable! Thanks for sharing your world with everyone. You are so blessed!
ReplyDeleteI really appreciate you putting into words what so many people have felt and experienced.
ReplyDeleteWhat I have to say is not about E and what he did.
ReplyDeleteLife does that same thing, breaks us in different disguises. What I have to say is that your truth is for all of us. In many, many circumstances you have beautifully described how we can feel that we are not *enough". Your words are perfect for all of us who feel so imperfect. We are *enough* no matter what other peoples choices are. We are *enough* right where we are. Others do not determine our worth with their actions or words. God chose our worth when he created us in His image. We are all *enough* right here, and right now! Yes, my son's death, my daughters rape, my child's molestation, my child's drug addiction, my husband declining health, my mother's Alzheimer's, my daughter being gay and all of you who are reading this! You are all "enough" if you just learn to love yourself the way you are. All of you no matter what your circumstances. We are all *enough*! Who said? God who created us said!
Wonderful.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your pain which leads to hope and love.
DeleteI just saw your story and you are very inspiring. Xo
ReplyDeleteI've found your blog by no coincidence. I am so grateful you are willing to share all of these experiences and feelings. I feel like we could be best friends! Thank you for teaching me so much.
ReplyDelete