My wife told me that after her parents split up when she was a teenager, her life felt 'derailed'. When her father died she felt that she coud get back on the rails again. That meant ditching me, communicating with her high school bf. I don't know if that s looking over her shoulder or not.
She spent this summer visiting friends from high school and university. How many 42 year old mothers do you know doing that? My kids slept in ~15 different beds between her travels and with me visiting my brothers. She has reimagined her family of origin - she told me it was all different now. I was never able to experience this 'different' family - I was only there to listen to the heartache caused by the family as was - before it was all better.
On her Facebook page one day I looked, there was a photo of her fathers grave. Her theme pucture. How many of your friends post photos of their fathers grave on FB? Not saying that it is wrong. It seems unusual, especially to me, knowing what I know of that family.
I feel even after this time that I know little of MLC. I know absolutely that our marriage ending was extremely abrupt - I know that detaching took us both years. She told me that she didn't know how or why she was leaving. It is still horrific for me to think back on it all. I know that it doesn't add up - and it may never add up. But there is an element - a big one, of the past being revisited in my case.
I don't know about the differences of this in men and women. I wonder how much it matters - at this stage mostly I'm trying to make an idea of how to live for the next 5 years or so. Maybe it is just me that feels this way, but it is mystical and deep - the past definitely matters in this ... People, songs, tv shows, places ...
... But one day we'll be older and I wonder then, when I'm thousands of miles away from her, when she has no say at all in my life, when she remembers back - what rails we'll all be traveling on.
bnw
Ps - another note for your research, ready, my bomb drop was - 'I don't love you, I don't want to grow old with you'. Subtle, and caring.