Beyond repair…

Just what is it that makes families become all twisted and slowly disintegrate into warring factions?  What causes  severe breakdowns that leave permanent scars in familial relationships?  How many people deal with such issues?


So many questions, so few answers.

I grew up in a fractured home, extended family was just on my mother’s side and there was rarely a time when everyone came together as a cohesive unit.  Trust me, we coined the word… Dysfunction.  Arguments were constant between aunts and uncles, most based on foolish disagreements.  Holidays were never a shared experience for someone was always not speaking to one or more family members.  Prideful, judgmental and hurtful… the prevailing attitude as seen through the eyes of a child. 

My eyes.

An only child, I longed for happy gatherings and the wonderful memories that would be left behind.  I always promised myself that, someday, when I married, my life would run in that wonderful direction of togetherness.   How I imagined scenes of family seated around the table, eating and laughing at Thanksgiving, our doorbell ringing on Christmas Day with cousins running up the stairs to our tree and their gifts hiding underneath the drooping branches.

For a while, that dream almost came true when I married.  My new family was large with several sisters, one brother, and their children on my mother-in-laws side.  The running joke was that when they all got together, they didn’t need anyone else.  Maybe not but I so wanted to become part of them, to simply belong somewhere at last.

A year after our marriage, my husband’s only brother wed and the family drama began to unfold in the years that followed.   Sadly, in-laws soon became out-laws as a slew of vindictive dynamics took control.  I quickly came to witness, and be part of,  the painful, destructive behaviors that cause families to break apart.  My mother-in-law was a wonderful, generous, woman with one tiny flaw.  She played favorites behind the scenes which fostered jealousy and resentment between the adults and ultimately her grandchildren.  That small personality quirk would have tremendous repercussions that have affected our family to this very day.

So, what’s really behind this post, you might be wondering?

Well, yesterday, a friend on Facebook posted this comment for a few opinions…“Some things are better left unsaid, if I don’t talk to you it’s not because I don’t like you, it’s because I would rather not say something that I may regret!”

It made me feel tremendous guilt and it made me think…

… about the past sixteen years where my husband, his brother and seven cousins have become relative strangers.

… about my sister-in-law,  how she played an equal part in the separation of our two families, how she continues to hide behind her own guilt, how she has brainwashed programmed her children into following her misguided views on family life.

… back to a letter I wrote her a few years ago, asking to meet in the middle, to settle many foolish differences and leave more positive relationships for our children in the future

… how that olive branch I extended was met with disdain and ultimate refusal. 

It made me angry.

Now, I wonder if it is indeed time for a showdown.  Hell, I may even go down in flames, who knows but, nothing ventured, nothing gained.  Right?  Life is speeding by and it’s time to force years of ridiculous disagreements to a head, once and for all even though the damage may be so deep that it is far beyond repair.

I mean, can things possibly get any worse?


At least I can admit my guilt and…in the end, regret will fall where it truly belongs.

 

What do you think?



 

 

 


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Sweet memories…

Sweet and colorful, each one hides under blades of shiny grass, nestled inside a basket.

The flavors dance on little tongues, bringing smiles along with a search for more.

Red, green, orange.  One by one, they disappear.  The fun of finding them grows short.

Flicker of Inspiration Linkup and Prompt #45: Short and Sweet

Write something under 350 words to fit the theme “Short and Sweet” – do this by starting your piece with either the word “short” or the word “sweet” and ending it with the word you didn’t start with. For example, “Sweet Pea was short.” Alternatively, “Short bread is too sweet.”

Short and sweet Easter Blessings to everyone!

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Eliza

 

                                                         Who didn’t love her?

 

She was someone who influenced millions of women in having a simple little black dress in their wardrobe, each one desperately tried to wear it with the same elegance.

 

I so wanted to be just like her.  Well, more like the Eliza Doolittle character she played.  How I longed for a chance to reinvent myself and become a different person, so well-polished, fabulously dressed, and schooled in the best etiquette.

Me being me, I could so identify with spouting out some profanity at a crucial moment as Eliza did at Ascot.  I loved that.

 

And I loved her heart, her dedication to others, as well as her remarkable talent.  She was graced with the reputation of being a humble, kind and charming person, who lived the philosophy of putting others before herself.

 

Gregory Peck read this poem by Rabindranath Tagore after her death, a beautiful tribute to an extraordinary woman.

 

Unending Love

 I seem to have loved you in numberless forms, numberless times…
In life after life, in age after age, forever.
My spellbound heart has made and remade the necklace of songs,
That you take as a gift, wear round your neck in your many forms,
In life after life, in age after age, forever.

Whenever I hear old chronicles of love, it’s age-old pain,
It’s ancient tale of being apart or together.
As I stare on and on into the past, in the end you emerge,
Clad in the light of a pole-star piercing the darkness of time:
You become an image of what is remembered forever.

You and I have floated here on the stream that brings from the fount.
At the heart of time, love of one for another.
We have played along side millions of lovers, shared in the same
Shy sweetness of meeting, the same distressful tears of farewell-
Old love but in shapes that renew and renew forever.

Today it is heaped at your feet, it has found its end in you
The love of all man’s days both past and forever:
Universal joy, universal sorrow, universal life.
The memories of all loves merging with this one love of ours –
And the songs of every poet past and forever.

 

Once Eliza, forever… Audrey Hepburn.

 

 

Flicker of Inspiration Linkup #44: Character

Your prompt this week was to write a post about a character who has influenced you in some way in your life. Someone you read about once that inspired in you a certain way of thinking or acting.

                                  “Come on, Dover! Move your bloomin’ arse!

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