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Christmas Shopping with The Child, Part 1

02.25.2013 by J. Doe // 1 Comment

In the end, my father did not send The Child an envelope full of cash; instead he wired cash up to her via “your local Wal-Mart.” I explained that there was no Wal-Mart near us, but my father insisted otherwise, bolstering his assertion with a link to the address on the Wal-Mart website.

I remained suspicious, but we went there one Saturday, and sure enough there was a Wal-Mart there, with some cash waiting for The Child at the service desk. The Child announces that there is something else I am wrong about – not only is there a Wal-Mart near us, but it’s a wonderful place. She bolsters her assertion by pointing to her newly-filled wallet.

I admit defeat and take her to the Mall. She needs to go shopping without me, she says, and so, after ensuring she has her cell phone and it is charged, I let her loose.

I wander through an electric car dealership and the Apple store and a cooking store, all of them selling things I don’t need or already have or can’t afford, and often all of the above.

I pretend I am not worried about The Child, on her own in the mall.

She texts me: What is the name of your brand of Christmas Village?

I tell her, and hope she is not buying an $80 collectible houses that you can get on ebay for $10 plus shipping.

She says Thanks! and not long after, texts again to ask if I am hungry yet.

Yes, I could die of starvation at any moment, I tell her.

Where are you? I’ll come find you! she says.

I tell her, the shoe store.

And I wait.

And wait.

Fifteen minutes, then twenty. Then a panicked text: I am lost.

I find out where she is and tell her to stay there. A minute later, I find her, and catch just the tiniest glimpse of fear before she spots me and lights up.

Do you want to see what I bought? she says. I can’t wait to show you!

I want to be surprised by my gifts, I tell her.

Oh, she says. It’s not for you. It’s for The Dog!

She shows me a sack of dog-biscuit mix decorated with a little bone-shaped cookie cutter. She’s beaming.

We’ll make them for him on Christmas, I tell her.

Categories // All By Myself Tags // holidays, single parenting

My Mom and My Divorce: The Ties That Chafe

12.03.2012 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

I re-read The Foreigner’s email tirade and contemplate his reference to my second divorce.

How he says it isn’t really important, I’m immune to his tirades, for the most part. The fact that he knows at all is what strikes me. There isn’t any normal way for him to know, you see.

The Child doesn’t speak to him. He doesn’t know any of my friends, and even if he did, the funny fact is, even some of them aren’t aware of it. It’s not like I announced it in my annual Christmas letter; I don’t send one. He’s not on Facebook, doesn’t follow me on Twitter, and although he knows about my book review blog, there has been no mention of my personal situation on it. My Father certainly doesn’t speak to him.

My mother, on the other hand, does – quite often, in fact.

When The Foreigner and I divorced, it went like this: I was a stay-at-home mother to The Child, then just a year old. The Foreigner and I lived in Oregon, where we had moved at his behest, taking me far from both my support network and my job prospects, both of which were located in New York. He simply announced one day that he wanted a divorce and, as a result, would be returning to The Netherlands, to be closer to his family.

I could have pointed out that The Child he was moving half a planet away from was also his family, but that was not really the point; the point is, I was really in a spot, thousands of miles from anyone who could help me or any visible means of helping myself. I did what people normally do in this type of crisis: I called my mother.

She let out a deep sigh filled with her aggravation and disappointment in me, and told me, “Well, I guess you can come home, then.”

The next day, I looked over The Foreigner’s shoulder as he sat at his computer, and saw an email in his box from my mother. The subject line read, “Us.” I didn’t read the email, but she felt compelled to tell me at some point that just because things had not worked out between me and him, didn’t mean she should not be able to maintain her friendship with him.

So instead of going home, I moved to Seattle, where an old friend was living, one who graciously offered me a place to stay while I found a job, helped me find a daycare for my daughter, not to mention an apartment to live in, and let me cry on her shoulder and supported me in a thousand different ways that I don’t really remember but will forever be grateful for.

About two years later, when I was living in a small rented townhouse, The Foreigner announced he was modifying the child support agreement. The amount he had to pay – although significantly less than what the state formula called for – was too much, he said. So he had decided what he preferred to pay. You get what you get, he said. On one of these reduced payment checks, he deducted the cost of some candy he’d sent The Child, and called me an “Ungrateful Woman” in his explanation of the amount on the memo line.

I decided not to argue the point, and filed a request with the state agency that collects child support. On his next visit to the United States, the agency arranged to serve him with collection papers, which was made rather difficult in light of the fact that his new girlfriend (now his wife, and mother of the two children he claims he cannot feed) lied to the process server to prevent this from happening. Though people like to complain about the inefficiency of government agencies, I will never forget how impressed I was when after a week of chasing The Foreigner and The One Who Came After Me around, they finally managed to serve him just as he was about to board the plane to fly home, with all the other passengers as witnesses.

I received an indignant email from my mother not long after. I was a deplorable person for “belittling and humiliating him” in this way, when, after all, he was “trying” to pay.

I wanted to tell her that if I told CPS I was “trying” to feed the child or “trying” to find her decent child care or “trying” to provide medical care and a roof over her head, but not actually doing it, nobody would say they were being anything other than responsible in taking the actions they would most certainly take in such a situation.

But instead I just deleted the email, and all the other ones that followed. There’s a pattern to them: First a berating, then a friendly email that pretends the berating never happened. If no response, then indignance over my lack of manners.  And so on.

I only see her now on the rare occasions I am in her geographical area for other reasons, but mostly I ignore her, keep my distance. I read all her emails, and reply to some but not others, depending on the tone and my mood. I send birthday cards and Christmas gifts without fail, but I put little thought and no feeling into it, and expect nothing in return. I mostly send them to remind myself that one of us, at least, is willing to do the right thing, the normal thing, in spite of everything else.

So in the midst of my divorce, it was no coincidence that The Foreigner suddenly needed an accounting of his child care payments at the worst possible moment. He knows everything that is going on, and although that isn’t much because I don’t tell my mother much, it’s still just enough to be troublesome.

While this exchange about medical bills is going on, I receive a nasty email from my mother, chiding me for The Child’s lack of manners in failing to send a thank you note for a birthday gift several months before. I delete it. A few weeks later, I receive two more emails, asking me “how things are going” and inquiring about some books she thought I might like. I ignore those, too.

I’ve had many thoughts over the years since my first marriage about my mother; some made me sad, others made me rage. Now I feel nothing, and worse, I don’t even have feelings about that.

Categories // All By Myself, The Divorce Tags // narcissism, reflections, single parenting, The Foreigner

The Divorce: Medical Bills, Part 4

11.30.2012 by J. Doe // 8 Comments

I point out to The Foreigner that I am under no obligation to send The Child overseas to obtain free – or paid for, depending on the conversation – medical care in The Netherlands. And I remind him that he owes about $50k in fines due to being in contempt of court. And because I’m a nice person, I tell him to have an extra-nice day, and also, please send the money for the medical bills I’ve already paid in full.

He replies:

I have completely utterly had it with your attitude … You can go ahead an screw yourself.  This is not a medical bill, but some voluntary thing for you did yourself. You are a complete failure in raising her.
Also, you seem to pick a fight with everyone including the the poor guy that had the guts to marry you after me. Where is he? Probably run away and taken cover from your horrible temper. I suggest you go find yourself a good treatment because you have some serious psychic issues. Probably inherited that from that schizophrenic father you have …
You are such a loser woman. I am very angry with you even though I should feel sorry for you. After 11 years of divorce you are still intent on extorting me with your ridiculous charges of contempt.
A couple of things are now clear to me. First, he does not actually understand the contempt citation. Second, someone has been talking to him about the current state of my life.
There’s only one person I can think of that would have.

Categories // The Divorce Tags // child support, divorce, single parenting

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