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Living Within My Means: Cleaning Up Is Hard to Do

02.19.2012 by J. Doe // 1 Comment

When The Departed left – abruptly – he left one big thing behind: debt. A great big steaming, stinking pile of debt.

A huge luxury car I don’t really need for just two people. Debt on my credit card for things we agreed on together. A mortgage it became rapidly apparent he no longer intended to pay.

There were other bills, too – like the new cell phone service we signed up for, and the cable package for eight gazillion channels of TV that mostly he watched.

And so on.

Some of these items, I am stuck with: jointly titled things, like my car, that I would sell if I could in the interest of reducing costs, but I can’t sell without his signature. I’ve been trying to get him to discuss the Big Picture so I can resolve these issues, but he has no interest in this whatever.

He wants to discuss who the Cuisinart really belongs to.  Other things he needs urgently include: skis, his iPhone 4S, a cocktail shaker.

I do up a spreadsheet and look for ways to reduce my budget, and what I find is that my costs are inflating – everywhere. Suddenly, I have to take my daughter to before and after school care – $300 a month. I have to pay babysitters if I want to go anywhere. I no longer get a multi-car discount on my car insurance, which is due, conveniently, right now.

And so on.

Meanwhile, he really needs a Cuisinart. He sends letters via his lawyer about this. I’m not sure why, because he’s never actually used one or, as far as I can see,  cooked anything other than eggs. I’m reluctant to turn it over to him because a) I actually use it and b) I suspect he wants to “accidentally” slice off a finger with it and then sue me.

I’m looking at my spreadsheet and if there’s one thing I’m certain of, it’s that I can’t afford to be sued right now. The places I would like to cut*, and would probably save the most money cutting – mortgage and car – I cannot cut without his cooperation.

One of the biggest expenses I see: my cleaning lady.

Okay, she’s not the best cleaning lady in the world, I grant you. She shows up every week – usually. She’s mostly on time. She misses strange things, such as a few cobwebs that are really impossible to miss – yet there they are. She breaks things sometimes, which drives me crazy.

She emigrated from Bosnia after the war there with her husband and four daughters, one of whom she is putting through college right now. Her English is so-so, but I have never heard her use an unkind word with it. She brings me food she made herself, and gives my daughter gifts for Christmas that she can’t possibly afford on what I pay her. And I know that a couple of her best clients went belly-up in the current recession – one of them was indicted.

She felt really bad about that. He was a nice man, she said, very generous.

I cannot let her go, I don’t have the heart – but I can barely pay her at the moment. I decide to simply cut her hours back.

I procrastinate. I’m not very good at laundry, vacuuming, or dishes, but if there were a Procrastination Olympiad, I would medal in every single event.

I make excuses through November – it’s Thanksgiving, who’s going to clean up after the turkey bomb goes off in my kitchen? I put it off.

December, meanwhile, is Christmas – pine needles, wrapping paper. A party at my house. Other people’s parties! I can’t miss them to, you know, clean. Plus, I’m no Scrooge.

I put it off some more.

Finally, it’s January, and cold, hard reality starts to sink in. My heating bills are astronomical, and worse – my daughter has to move to middle school next year, and I cannot afford it. I have to fill out financial aid forms and ask other people for money. And there are other people who deserve it more, I have no doubt.

Like my cleaning lady. The one with the daughter in college.

After her first visit in February, I pay her and then say, I have to talk to you about your schedule. I am going to have to cut back your hours. I don’t want to, but, well, you understand the situation.

She says, Oh, don’t you worry! I knew it would happen. I rather come here less but see you happy when I come – and you are happy now, without him.

When she leaves, she is smiling as she says, I’ll see you in two weeks.

 

*starting with his finger.

Categories // The Divorce Tags // divorce, single

Tale of Woe: The Day After That

01.26.2012 by J. Doe // 1 Comment

By Day Two after The Departure, several things had happened. First, the dog was suddenly willing to spend more time indoors. My daughter, on the other hand, was suddenly unwilling to sleep in her own bed and moved into mine – so although the dog was sleeping better, I was not getting much sleep at all.

Also, we changed the locks.

I received several text messages and emails from The Departed, demanding a discussion about “practical matters” and insisting I buy him out of his share of the house, and I started to reach out to friends for attorney referrals. I started reaching out to friends just to say hi, missives that usually began, “Sorry I’ve been out of touch for so long …”

I met one friend for coffee a couple of nights after The Departure, and on my arrival at Starbucks, wearing clothes she’d seen before on a body that had gained at least ten pounds in the month before, she announced, “Oh My God – You look great!”

I was sleep-deprived and utterly baffled.

She went on.

“I’ve never seen you happy before.”

A few days later, I emailed another acquaintance, sending her some pictures I had promised long before, and explaining the delay: “We separated.”

She replied, “Oh no! How terribly sad and lonely for you!”

And then it hit me, less than a week after The Departure: It was the first time in seven years that I didn’t feel sad or lonely.

In the weeks that followed, friends I never knew I had rushed in to fill the vacuum that had previously defined my life – it always felt empty, but I couldn’t understand why I couldn’t seem to connect. I came up with a lot of reasons, of course, but was never able to solve the problem.

The cleaning lady came, and also insisted I had lost weight, or bought a new shirt, or something. I told her what had happened; I had to – she was surely going to notice the lack of laundry and sudden abundance of closet space* in the master bath. She hugged me and said, “Thank God. That was not a man. He did nothing but sit there. And he made you so sad.”

Another day, I had lunch with a lady from the DAR – an older lady who I don’t know very well, who wanted to thank me for some help I had provided.  I told her about The Departure, expecting to hear an offer to pray for me or perhaps a lecture on the sanctity of marriage. Instead, she said, “I was wondering about you ever since that night we were at your house when you were helping me. He came into the room a couple of times to talk to you, but he did not speak kindly to you. It didn’t seem right – it didn’t sit right with me.”

Everyone, it seemed, had a story to tell me or a thought to offer. I had thought that we were just like other people, and moreover appeared to be, because nobody can see what goes on behind closed doors, right?

And then, without warning, he left, and I was happy.

 

*Here’s something they don’t tell you in all those relationship books: single people have twice the closet space of married people. And it’s freaking awesome.

Categories // The Divorce Tags // divorce

Tale of Woe: The Day After

01.24.2012 by J. Doe // 2 Comments

A funny thing happened the night He left: the dog slept downstairs. Not only that, he did it after spending the entire evening lying contentedly in the living room.

He did it again the next night, and the night after that.

I know this doesn’t sound like a detail worth noting, but this is not what my dog does. What my dog does is spend every evening whining and agitating to get outside. Sometimes he sleeps out in the yard until the wee hours. Sometimes he doesn’t like it outside, and whines to come back in, but then decides he doesn’t really like it inside, and spends the entire evening whining on one side of the door or the other.

Until the night He left, when the dog spent the evening lying contentedly in the living room.

Categories // The Divorce Tags // divorce

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