Saturday, July 4, 2020

A Different Sort of Fourth of July

One thing that happens every year around this time, in addition to a ramp up in flashbacks and nightmares, is that I give myself a brutal self-evaluation as Cory's mother (i.e. rake myself over the coals, doubt myself, and generally come up short since she did, in fact, die).

Is this healthy?  Not so much, so of course, I have tried to avoid this through many different means but it always catches up with me sooner or later, so instead I've taken to writing down some of my harsher criticisms and doing some reality checking.  Is that what really happened?  Were there better options at the time?  What good things did I do?

One of the actions I've wrestled most with is allowing Bob back into Cory's life.  It certainly caused her more stress.  Did it possibly trigger her illness?  Did being around him harm or help her?  What did she gain in the short term? In the long term?  Did my giving him another chance set a bad example?  Did my leaving him set a good example?  What did I model for her?

It's funny these questions came to me today on the Fourth of July.  Being an introvert, it's a holiday I've never fully embraced.  Crowds?  No, thank you.  Being outdoors?  Meh.  Fireworks?  They're ok, but I could take them or leave them.  Since Cory's accident, I just don't mess with the fourth, at all.  Jake is equally unimpressed with the whole thing so it hasn't been an issue for our family.

Today, I remembered the Fourth of July that Cory and I spent with her birth father after he came back into our lives.  Jake was at Tim's for the holiday and so Cory and I watched the fireworks with Bob at one of his family's houses.  It was very likely the first real holiday he'd ever spent with her.  Sitting side by side sprawled out on lawn chairs, I remember watching her face lit up with the different colors of the night.  She was so incredibly beautiful at that age, like a tiny fairy with enormous eyes.  Her face was poised between childhood and the young woman she would become.   I remember noticing that a lot of the time her gaze was not on the sky but on Bob, watching him as he watched the fireworks with a non-alcoholic beer held loosely in one hand.  She studied his face the way I imagine you would if you were a child who had never known the other half of yourself and no idea when they might stop being part of your life.  She was memorizing him.

We had a good time that night.  I remember most our mingled laughter and sheer hope...hope that things would go well this time for all of us.  He wasn't drinking so that was a great first step.  Could he acclimate to being a father?  Could he handle the responsibility?  The thing that I couldn't help but notice is that Cory wasn't yet be herself around him.  Even when pressed, she wouldn't sing her Independence Day song she'd made up when she was 6.  But then again, they were for all intents and purposes, acquaintances.  It would take time, I told myself.

Long story short, his soberness and stability did not pan out over the long haul.  His mental instabilities rubbed up against Cory's. While he expected a full do-over, she was no one's do-over.  Being in her life would come with whatever she wanted to dole out.  He could own it and move forward or she would revoke her invitation.  Guess which option he chose most often? 
 There came a point when it was not in her best interest to spend time with him.  And eventually, it became clear that I had led us, along with Jake, back into a hopeless situation.

So here's the question I have to ask myself:  am I sorry?

Man, such a catch-22.
If spending time with him actually caused her illness, I would say 'yes'.  But I do not believe that getting to know produced her mental illness.  I believe her mental illness, with its genetic predisposition, surfaced during major life stressors...and easily could have, and likely would have, surfaced even if those stressors were different, such as losing a grandparent or Tim and I finalizing our divorce.

Did I have other options?  Sure, I could've refused to let her see him.  I could've closed my heart to him, as well.
Then, I ask, much as Dr. Z. did many years ago, what would have happened next?  How would she have felt about me if I had denied her the opportunity to get to know him for herself?  What would I have done next?  Would I still be the person I am today?

The things I don't regret at all are the good memories that were made (there were some, you know, that make me smile and giggle to this day) and what she was able to learn about herself.  No wonder she was so fricking funny!  No wonder she loved to sing and had an artistic side.  Guess what?  She actually looked like her mom AND her birth father.  Those Flintstone feet sure as hell weren't mine.

In the short term, she had the chance to get to know him and decide what she thought about him without my grievances clouding her judgment.  She got to see his strengths and his weaknesses in full.  She got to see his good heart underneath a lot of his less desirable behaviors.  She got to see his intelligence and charm.  She was able to see firsthand why I loved him in the first place and she knew without a doubt that she had come into being from two people's love for each other. 

In the long term, she was also able to see his addiction, and she told me herself how that shaped her thoughts about drugs and alcohol.  Even if that were the only take away from getting to see him, it's a big enough one for me to be able to sleep at night.  There's a couple of reasons my girl didn't turn to substances to cope with her symptoms.  While I think getting her into treatment early was one, I have no doubt that watching the decisions Bob made because of his addictions was the other.  She wanted to be nothing like him in that regard.  The last thing she wanted was a dual diagnosis.  She had plenty on her plate as it was.

And well, I know my Cory Girl.  Had I told her she couldn't see him, she'd have packed a bag and left in the middle of the night.  She was the same girl who had to find things out for herself, just like the time she licked an iron handrail in the dead of winter after Tim told her not to because her tongue would get stuck.  It might have hurt, but at least she no longer wondered.

As for me and my willingness to give him another chance?  Well, I won't bore you with the statistics, but I'm not such an anomaly.  Unless you've actually been in a relationship like that, it's hard to understand how and why women go back.  I will say that I exceeded the standard 7 times for sure and that even after Cory's accident, I dreaded telling him what had happened because I was certain he would blame me.  Completely non-nonsensical thinking- at that point there was no reason for me to value his opinion-  but also not so far off, since he did end up blaming me for her death.

  In full disclosure, I can be pretty stubborn myself.  Someone close to me told me I'm stubborn this last week and I was appalled, lol.  I like to fancy myself as committed to my beliefs and knowing my own mind.  I think I'm pretty damn flexible to boot.  Writing this today, I had to laugh at myself.  I can't think of a single person in my life, besides Cory and perhaps his mother, who thought giving Bob another chance was a good idea, but I wouldn't listen to any of them.  Am I sorry?  No, actually I'm not.  I have some amazing memories alongside the bad ones.  In the end, I came out stronger.  I know what I deserve.  I know what I won't tolerate.  I know I can do things on my own, if need be.  And hey, it might have hurt, but at least I no longer wondered.

Knowing your worth...knowing your deal-breakers...knowing you can recover from mistakes or lapses in judgment...knowing you can be self-sufficient...those are the things I hope Cory sifted out of the whole mess.  I hope she held those things up and looked them over at night.  I hope she saw me as strong and realized she could be strong, too.  I hope the lesson she took is that it's possible to rebuild from heartache, family dynamics, mental illness...all of it.

I'm sure I made lots of mistakes being Cory's mom. All parents do.   But I'm positive I did lots of things right, too.

The proof was in the amazing girl who died on July 5, 2012.  She was stronger than I'd ever imagined.  She was funny, kind, and sweet.  She was smart and thoughtful; mature and insightful.  She was passionate and stubborn.  She had a knack for accessorizing that I'll never be able to duplicate.  Her laughter was contagious.  She was quick to forgive, but had learned to set healthy boundaries.  She knew how to love.  She knew what love was and what it wasn't.

  She inspired me to keep going even when I want to give up.  She showed me how to do unimaginably hard things.  She made the world better just by being here.
So all things considered, maybe I did a pretty good job, after all.  Happy fourth, Cory Girl.

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