Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Nothing in Common :: Personal Narrative Essays
      Nothing in Common     Ã       After 19 years of marriage I decided it was time to try  living on my own. It took another year and a half for me to actually do it. I  had married my husband when I was barely out of high school and promptly gave  birth to three sons in rapid succession. I won't go into the details of those 19  years. My husband was a good husband and an okay father. After about 10 years I  realized that we were two completely different people with absolutely nothing in  common except for our sons.     Ã       Moving out was the most devastating and liberating thing  that I ever did. I first set myself up in a small above-garage apartment. I had  no furniture except my bed and my computer. My first night there I sat in the  empty living room listening to the sirens in downtown Lake Worth, a far cry from  the peaceful cocks crowing in Jupiter Farms. The emotions running through me  were a strange and horrible mix of elation, sorrow, and fear. What had I done?       Ã       After a few weeks I began to settle in. I had a full-time  job with FPL, I saw my sons often, and I discovered the joy of solitude -  something I hadn't known in a very long while with three boys and their friends  always under foot. In the mornings I would have a cup of coffee on my balcony  and then take a walk to the Intercoastal, which was only two blocks from my  apartment. My chaotic soul started to slowly heal and slow down to a peaceful  pace.     Ã       In the silence of that apartment I had plenty of  opportunity to look hard at myself. I took advantage of the silence and finished  writing the two books on healthcare and childcare in the late 1800's that I had  barely begun a few years before. Those two books were published a year later. I  renewed my love of poetry and spent hours reading the works of Pound, Rich,  Atwood, and others. I decided to return to college.     Ã       I spent four months in my sanctuary over the garage. Then  I went home. Everyone thought I would be the same, that life would be the same.  					    
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