Select Page

Transitioning to Adulthood

Transitioning to Adulthood

February 21, 2022 | 528 words | Personal History

Every stage of life comes with its own set of problems that need to be figured out.  But going from adolescence to early adulthood is particularly tricky, especially for a sensitive young person.  

I have four children who are currently navigating this transition, each of whom can be accurately described as sensitive.  While this term is sometimes pejoratively thought of as code for “highly emotional,” and viewed almost as a character flaw, I don’t see it that way.  I have always found this temperament to be a rewarding way to engage the larger world.  Though it does help when such sensitivity can be coupled with a native intelligence that is active and alert.  Diligently applying this intelligence over the years has enabled me to center my sometimes-run-away emotions, and put them to good use.

The fact their mother and I just got divorced is throwing a new wrench into the works. When people say they are staying together for the sake of the children, I always assumed that was limited to little kids.  Since mine range in age from 22 to 30, and since I thought they saw this divorce coming from a mile away, it never occurred to me the reality would be much of a problem for them, once it finally got here.

Boy, was I ever wrong about that.  Each of them is now wrestling with a variety of thorny issues related to my deciding to call it quits and go my separate way.  The whole thing is proving to be very disconcerting from their perspective.  I’m embarrassed to admit I was too caught up in my own pain and hurt to see what a hurdle this divorce would be for these bright young adults who are so dear to my heart.

*

No matter how many good books I read, or how many fabulous movies I see, there is nothing quite like experiencing a thing firsthand.  It turns out the classic problem you always hear about when it comes to children of divorce applies here:  Grappling with which parent should be blamed for the break-up, and which one deserves sympathy and support.  It’s just a natural part of the process.  Though I think each of my kids is mature beyond their years, they are not able to completely avoid this visceral and thoroughly understandable reaction.

All four are having a hard time putting the pieces back together.  But my one and only daughter, who turned 23 last month, may be having the hardest time of all.  She recently sent me a blistering text that left me feeling as if she might never speak to me again.  This was an especially painful message to receive.  I believed, up to now, that she and I have gotten along famously.

 

I hope and pray this startling emotional breach with my daughter will one day be repaired, since I sorely miss her company, and miss hearing about what’s going on in her life. I pray she and I will receive the grace needed to resume our once-close relationship. And I invoke that same grace as I try to strengthen my relationship with each of my three my sons.

Robert J. Cavanaugh, Jr

February 21, 2022

Use the contact form below to email me.

4 + 10 =

Finding a Calling

Finding a Calling

February 20, 2022 | 399 words | Personal History

My ex-wife decided in 2014 she no longer wanted to be married to me.  That’s when she unceremoniously moved out of the second-floor master bedroom, and took up residence in the little in-law suite we had carved out of a couple rooms on the first floor.

Yet it wasn’t until last June that I suggested we pursue an uncontested divorce.  What too me so long?  

I have already cited the till-death-do-us-part marriage vows I chose to take seriously.  But that’s not the whole story. There is another, less obvious reason I was able to weather such an unfriendly status quo on the home front for so long.

It turns out I found my voice as a writer in the wake of this marital estrangement, which more-or-less coincided with the death of both my parents, who had moved in with us in 2004.  My father died in December 2012, followed by my mother in August 2013.  In hindsight these events produced an unanticipated trade-off in my equilibrium.  Once I officially became an orphan, the stimulation and satisfaction writing started to provide replaced the warmth and light I once got from my marriage.   

As you may know, writing is one of those quiet pursuits that requires a measure of solitude.  I am grateful to my ex-wife for providing me with this solitude over these last seven years.  I only wish she could have done so without simultaneously emanating so much animosity in my direction.

I never wanted or expected my long-time marriage to become estranged, let alone end.  But now that is has, after a long, drawn-out fallow period, I find myself actively seeking a different female companion for the first time in four decades.  Finding such a person, and figuring out how to fit her into my sometimes-solitary existence will not be easy.  

On my most optimistic days, the hope is to meet a woman with whom I can build a friendship based on mutual interests, and a sympatico temperament.  Developing that into an intimate physical relationship would nice, too.  All while maintaining a quiet space for the writing that has become such a happy pastime, such an integral part of my daily life.

As if that’s not too much to ask.  It will be interesting to see just what the universe (i.e., God) has in store for me in the coming years, when it comes to the fairer sex.

Robert J. Cavanaugh, Jr

February 20, 2022

Use the contact form below to email me.

11 + 1 =

Heart Like a Wheel

Heart Like a Wheel

February 15, 2022 | 92 words | Personal History

What is lonelier?  To lack any semblance of female companionship in one’s life, or to conduct a series of hopeful first encounters in search of an elusive match when it comes to emotional intelligence and temperament, only to come up empty?

And speaking of hopeful first encounters, the desire to be in relationship with someone special is so great there is a tendency to fantasize a friendship into being, right from the start.  One must learn to temper this in-bred enthusiasm, so as to engage the pleasant stranger in a sober way.  

Robert J. Cavanaugh, Jr

February 15, 2022

Use the contact form below to email me.

2 + 5 =

A Simple Explanation

A Simple Explanation

February 14, 2022 | 175 words | Personal History

The are many reasons why a marriage hits the rocks, and many ways to describe the demise of a long-term relationship.  Here’s one way…  

In the beginning, our sensibilities meshed and this made us a good match.  We were both a little on the shy side, a bit hesitant in life, each with our fair share of insecurities.  Then over time – by virtue of the commitment we made to each other, the love and affection we shared, and the children we raised together – I became less so.

But she did not, for whatever reason.  Or maybe it was a case of her early pathologies (we all have a few) resurfacing after twenty years, come back to haunt her.

All I know for sure is a deep dissatisfaction with the circumstances of her life swelled up and engulfed her, creating inner turmoil and disturbing her peace.  In the end there was nothing I could do to help.  And so it came to pass after thirty-nine years together we parted and went our separate ways.

Robert J. Cavanaugh, Jr

February 14, 2022

Use the contact form below to email me.

7 + 6 =

My Divorce Story

My Divorce Story

January 24, 2022 | 1,490 words | Personal History

This is being addressed primarily to my three brothers and one surviving sister.

They say all men are bored with other men’s lives.  And there may be nothing more tedious than the awkward details of someone else’s failed marriage.  So I’ll do my best to make this brief.  Carla and I agreed to divorce last June, soon after I got back from Larry and Jeannie’s wedding in Sedona, Arizona.   

It took a while to work out the details and get the paperwork filed.  The State of Pennsylvania officially granted our petition today, January 24, 2022.

Surprised?  Don’t be.  This has actually been a long time coming.  Assuming you would consider seven years a long time, that is.

It all started to go wrong in 2014, after Mom and Dad died.  Without any warning and with no explanation whatsoever, Carla moved her things out of the master bedroom on the second floor, and took up residence in the small in-law suite we had carved out of a couple of rooms on the first floor in 2004, when they first moved in with us.  And the door to that little apartment has been closed to me ever since.

There was no dramatic turn of events that prompted this relocation.  No contentious knock-down, drag-out fight.  No illicit affair come to light amid a torrent of tears and a river of recrimination.  Nothing one would ordinarily associate with a wife turning such a cold shoulder in her husband’s direction.

In our case it was as if Carla simply woke up one morning and decided she was unhappy with the circumstances of her life, starting with her marriage to me.

Though never a particular fan of professional therapy, I did suggest counseling early on, in 2015.  That idea was met with a great deal of anger on Carla’s part.  An intervention of some kind may have been warranted, but it would need to be initiated by someone other than me.

Three of our four children were still living with us at the time.  Their presence and the routines of daily life made it possible for Carla to ignore me without being too obvious about it, if that makes any sense.  As the last of the kids have moved on with their lives, her refusing to speak to me, and actually going out of her way to avoid being in the same room with me, has gotten even more pronounced.

 

You may be wondering with an estrangement that has gone on this long, why did we decide to pull the plug now?  Then again you may be prone to ask, what on earth took you two so long to reach an amicable parting of the ways?  Both are legitimate questions, neither of which lend themselves to a glib, sound-bite answer.

Without wanting to come across as too self-congratulatory, I have always taken the ‘for better or worse’ part of my marriage vows seriously.  It’s a measure of my being hard-wired for commitment and loyalty, I suppose.  The role of dutiful husband has just come naturally to me, even during these last years when the feeling was not reciprocated.  While trying to convince myself the ill will was only a temporary manifestation.  

And every so often there was in fact a flicker of hope – a rational exchange here, a warm greeting there.  Those brief reminders of better days were enough for me to keep the faith.  And believe the dark clouds might soon part, just as inexplicably as they had gathered and taken hold of her.

Sadly, no such breakthrough ever occurred.  Instead, the isolation and lack of communication and overt passive aggressiveness has continued to grow, as the hopeful signs have become non-existent

Another part of the explanation might be how the withholding of her affection came in the wake of Dad dying in December 2012, followed by Mom’s death in August 2013.  When Carla decided to limit all conversation and contact, I guess my stoic side initially accepted it as just another in a series of major losses.

Then there is my own inbred quirkiness, complete with an undeniable solitary streak.  About a year ago, Dan, our youngest, stood back and observed my domestic routines – making the bed and cleaning the bathroom and doing the laundry, fixing my own meals and washing the dishes – and declared me a “bachelor.”  The iconoclast in me got a kick out of that description.  Without ever considering for a moment just how odd my marital situation had become.

  

As you know, Carla chose not to fly out to Arizona in the last week of April for Larry and Jeannie’s lovely outdoor wedding on May 1.  Even though this little trip turned into full-blown family vacation with our children and grandchildren in attendance.  (Dan was the only one who didn’t make it.  But our oldest Matt and his wife Susannah were there with their four children, the youngest of whom was only seven months old at the time.)

This was not unexpected, since Carla has declined to join us on any sort of family outing during this stretch of self-imposed exile.  Or join me, on any solo adventure.

More than just not going, though, she makes a point to act like these trips never took place.  Take my brief one week visit to poor, destitute Guatemala in June 2019, for example.  I was part of a small traveling party sponsored by an international aid organization.  This represented one of my very few forays outside the continental United States.  Yet when I returned home you would have thought I just got back from a quick run to the grocery store, judging by Carla’s complete lack of interest.

In fact, she always seems to be a little more annoyed, and a little more unhappy, after each marriage-related or family-related activity she decides not to participate in.  There is a message in there somewhere, I’m sure.

Not that I am trying to build a case against Carla.  Nor do I have any interest in participating in that ever-popular national past time known as ‘trashing the ex.’  In my mind there really is no good guy or bad guy here.  She is now deeply dissatisfied with this marriage, and that is her prerogative.  But as I have told our children, just because Carla is unhappy does not mean I did anything wrong.

 

There is no denying going to Arizona last spring turned out to be something of a turning point.  Seeing each of you interact with your long-term love interest (spouse or significant other) was instructive.  In Sedona a simple fact dawned on me: I miss having a woman in my life.

Once home, it took a few weeks to gather my thoughts and confront the issue.  I finally summoned the courage to lure Carla out of her lair, and popped the question: “It’s obvious you no longer want to be married to me anymore, so why are we still married?”  She had to think about it.  The next day she agreed to pursue an uncontested divorce, and said: “I never thought you would consider getting a divorce, because you’re Catholic.”

This obviously implies Carla was ready and willing to walk away years ago, but apparently felt trapped by what she took to be my religious convictions.  That she never broached the subject herself is of course another avenue of inquiry that would be worth exploring.  But these big important things seem to happen when they’re supposed to, don’t they?  I have no regrets about hanging in as long as I did, or about the eventual timing of this divorce.

Even though trying to re-enter the dating pool at this point is less than ideal, since I am well past my prime.  You, my siblings, are pretty much in the same boat, so there is no need for me to go into detail on that score. 

Along with the obvious physical limitations I am now experiencing, all of us who reach this age are naturally set in our ways, and are less accommodating of another’s habits than we were forty years ago.  Not to mention how so many of the things I most enjoy are essentially solitary pursuits.  This alone might prove to be the deciding factor, the insurmountable obstacle to finding a new friend of the opposite sex, and fitting her into the picture.

While I may have started this process back in June with the straightforward objective of clearing a path for a different female presence to inhabit my thoughts, I am already scaling back my expectations.  Chastened by just how difficult it will be to find even a halfway sympatico companion this late in life.

For now, at least, I am prepared to content myself with restoring peace and tranquility on the home front.  Going about my business as the spirit moves me, free of the overwhelming disaffection that has engulfed me for so long.  And being open to whatever or whomever the universe might send my way.

Robert J. Cavanaugh, Jr

January 24, 2022

Use the contact form below to email me.

9 + 7 =