My Wedding Was in the Times, My Marriage Was in Shambles
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Sundays used to find me reading the New York Times Vows column on my hand-me-down four-poster bed. The sunlight shone through the mesh and bars of my fire-escape-covered window, making a lacy pattern on my duvet that mimicked the gown of some quirky or blue-blooded bride. Sentimental tears inevitably flowed. People get married all the time, but those featured in the Vows column seemed especially to go through a portal into Happily Ever After.
I was a jaded and cynical 27-year-old who came of age in the swinging '90s of dot-com-boom Manhattan. But on Sundays, I reverted back to fairy tale, believing during those few minutes that love could creep in, in the form of a good and handsome man, and complete me.
I did meet and fall in love, within a matter of months, with a man who seemed the epitome of both good and handsome. My dad and my therapist both urged me to marry him, and what more did I need to hear? My eggs had begun to vibrate in my ovaries. They, along with my heart and my desire to walk down the aisle in a white confection, were telling me it was showtime.
When I finally co-starred in my own Vows Column, I was shocked at all of the people who called me, ecstatic by association.
On my honeymoon, I called my sister from a phone booth in Burgundy, cows grazing across the narrow road, so she could read it to me. I pumped francs into the slot as an old plump woman bicycled past, the morning’s fresh baguettes in her basket.
I was relieved to find that a quote from my husband’s pranksterish coworker, who'd drunkenly told reporter Lois Smith Brady that the groom liked to come over, get zooted on marijuana, and take all of his clothes off, did not make it in. And, luckily, half the column was not taken up by my mother’s overly frank reminiscences.
Yet it turned out we were really only happily married for a few hours. On my wedding night, my husband and I got into a fight in the taxi on the way home from our reception while the rain poured down and the chassis labored under the weight of wedding gifts. I don’t recall what started the argument, but I do remember that the new, impatient way he barked at me was both a surface hurt and one that sank underground and hollowed out our marriage’s foundation from the inside.
He was dear, charming, sweet, sensitive, tender, and thoughtful 98 percent of the time, but the lava of his volcanic anger, when it erupted, left ash and scorched earth all over our marital landscape. I staunchly believed that a couple should never go to bed angry. But that proved a luxury outside my grasp. Sleep quenched his rages, not rapprochement. The first time he went to sleep mid-argument I poured a cup of water on his head. He staggered to his feet, swearing. For a moment, I thought that he might kill me. He was lost, wet, and exhausted. I was desperate, grieving, lovelorn. He didn’t kill me, we did go to bed mad, and it was not the last time. I had to let go of that rule. It met its match in our dynamic. But breaking it still creamed us.
I put my energy into motherhood (two children) and throwing dinner parties. I breastfed on demand, kissed booboos, folded stacks of little undershirts, and cooked four-course meals.
He raged; I had crushes. I could keep my crushes a secret, and I also went a step further and kept his rages a secret. We probably should have brought both into the open, in therapy, for starters. I thought my crushes were harmless—the byproduct of monogamy. Keeping things spicy, sublimating desire. He thought his rages were harmless—that we were a married couple having arguments like every other married couple, and I was making a big deal out of nothing. As long as I felt like a nothing, that was a workable description. But I usually didn’t.
I started to realize that the only thing that was keeping me in this relationship was my fear of divorce. But that was like not eating my soup because I was afraid of having an empty bowl. There was no way around it. I had to go through it. As I moved out, I cobbled each day together miraculously and found it good. I was struck by the difference between how I thought I would feel, and how good I felt. I even felt OK about telling my folks, who cried. High on freedom, I took it in stride. Most of the people who asked, “How are you?” were told, “We’re living in two different houses now.” They reacted as if I had said that I’d found a lump. “But it’s fine!” I’d hasten to add. “It’s a good thing.” My son’s friend’s mom called up. “I hear things are ... awry,” she proceeded delicately. “No,” I rejoined tartly. “Actually, for the first time in years, they’re not.”
Divorce was complex, rich, a mixed bag, a windfall. It was multifaceted and infinitely layered. Divorce was rad in the sense of “affecting the basic nature or most important features of something,” “making changes of a sweeping or extreme nature,” and “excellent, admirable, or awe-inspiring.”
I thought that there must be other women out there having the same epiphany, and being an editor by vocation, I decided to put together an anthology. It just so happened that the publisher who fished my proposal from the slush pile had filed for divorce that very week. Within a few months, I had stories from a wide array of women. One had left a polygamous marriage. Another divorcée met a woman online, and moved to Finland to marry her. An artist in her 60s got married at a time when she couldn’t get a credit card without a husband, and a sassy twentysomething shared how happily she takes out her own trash—in red pumps.
There are indeed second acts in American lives, surprisingly lavish in their use of song and dance. When you’re told that you can’t get there from here, keep asking.
Portrait of bride by Stockbyte/Getty Images.

Comments
Get to know someone before you marry them
By: dmasursky | Wed, 02/03/2010 - 11:34
I think divorce is sometimes the only reasonable choice - not all relationships are healthy enough to preserve. However, it seems a bit odd that this author never knew her beloved had such a violent temper until a few hours after they wed. Makes a strong argument for 1) making sure you know someone before you get married and 2) considering carefully whether their qualities are really ones that you will find appealing for the long haul.
Copyedit
By: LenoraBabb | Tue, 10/20/2009 - 14:50
Thanks Coldplayer313. Got it.
Proofreading..
By: coldplayer313 | Tue, 10/20/2009 - 08:33
Someone needs to insert a period in the 6 graph at the end of "reminiscences." - Your friendly neighborhood copy editor
Well, I'm glad you're feeling
By: becklyy | Sun, 10/18/2009 - 21:13
Well, I'm glad you're feeling better. Better luck next time?
As an aside, pouring water on a sleeping person is a very unpleasant tactic used by abusers. My first husband used to have the same idea about not going to sleep angry, only he would keep me up so late trying to argue it out that I would involuntarily fall asleep during. He would then douse me in water or rip the sheets off of me with tremendous force, and I would have a virtual panic attack, and not surprisingly, be extremely angry and hyped on adrenaline. I am just saying, I guess, that perhaps you should rethink this tactic in future relationships.
Re: "I wish people wouldn't
By: nobodyreally | Fri, 10/16/2009 - 21:08
To Bunnyhop
It sounds like you and your husband are really happy. That's how lots of marriages are before they end in divorce. Hopefully you will never experience a failed marriage. But if you do, there is another, perhaps happy and satisfying, life waiting for you. This I think is the point of the book and this article.
-AHD
I wish people wouldn't
By: Bunnyhop234 | Fri, 10/16/2009 - 20:12
I wish people wouldn't glamorize divorce. I understand sometimes it's necessary, but this article makes it sound like the latest cool thing to do. I have been married for ten years, and strangely enough, I like it! My husband is a nice guy, who I like being with and there's not much more to it than that. Not everyone is miserable.
Happily married. Thank Christmas
By: Kapt Z | Fri, 10/16/2009 - 16:32
I can't imagine living and especially raising kids in a relationship like that. "He was a great guy, except when he scare me to death." Yikes.
I'm going to kiss my wife right now.