The Beauty in Breaking Page 5
Ex-husband was more accurate. The last time I spent time with Dan was in May, in our twelve-hundred-square-foot, two-bedroom prewar co-op in the South Bronx. Our marriage was unmistakably over, but we had continued cohabitating because my move to Pennsylvania was still more than one month away, just after graduation. (Neither Dan nor I had the money for another place at that time with the sale of our co-op still pending.)
We had previously settled on Philadelphia. Our families were in the Northeast, and we were Northeasterners at heart. New York City was too expensive, anything north of New York was too cold, and anything south of DC was no longer the North. Most of New Jersey was far too suburban, and the parts that offered big-city comforts were just as expensive as New York City. This had left only Philadelphia, which had easy access to New York, DC, New Jersey, and Maryland, and had a reasonable cost of living compared to its competition. Neither one of us had ever lived there, but it seemed to make the most sense on paper. I didn’t know anyone in Philadelphia, but Dan’s parents had just moved to one of its bedroom communities, and he had a couple of friends who lived nearby.
We had deferred every other decision until after my residency—when one member of a couple is in residency, the couple is in residency—but now all that would change. In our new city, I had imagined we would walk over cobblestone streets hand in hand. Ginkgo leaves would waft gently onto the sidewalks as we passed. We’d try all the new restaurants because we’d finally be able to afford them. I couldn’t wait to advertise all our starter IKEA furniture on Craigslist and purchase the type of furniture an adult woman actually wanted to pack up and take with her when she relocated. Our home’s style would be a mix of elegant and eco-industrial. We’d burn candles all the time, vanilla and spiced amber to start. We’d finally have placemats, napkins, and sleek new flatware. We’d wander the city museums on Wednesdays and host dinner parties on Fridays. We’d enjoy our discretionary income and then, after a couple of years, we could discuss having kids.
So our split could have been a scene from a terrible indie film, the one where the perfect, young, progressive New York City couple—the white independent filmmaker husband and the black physician wife who had met at Harvard’s freshman ice-cream social—endure a shocking, painful breakup. The couple has already overcome so much when, only months before she graduates from her residency, with a planned move to Philadelphia to be near his friends and family, he lowers the boom.
“You’re doing well in your career, and I’m not,” he told me that night. “If I’m with you, I’ll focus on your success. I have to find myself. The only way I can do that is if I’m not with you. You’ll be fine in Philadelphia. I can’t go.”
It felt like a cliché, a plot point that everybody else but the main characters themselves sees coming.
I knew what would happen next in the movie. It would start raining outside—first a drizzle and then a torrential downpour, as Whitney Houston crooned “I Will Always Love You.” As the music grew louder, I would rest my head on his shoulder. Then, as the song reached its crescendo, my heart would break.
In real life, forty-eight hours after his declaration, I found an attorney and filed for divorce.
We had talked until three o’clock in the morning, our words alternating between clench-fisted blame and gut-wrenching pleas. We had paced miles in that bedroom, until our bodies broke from fatigue. Finally, we had collapsed into bed. I tossed and turned the rest of the night away, unable to dispel the slideshow of snapshots that was our story—well, my version of our story. I knew that time would fade each image to a hazy déjà vu.
I begged the universe to make me remember our cheesy romantic dancing in the rain on a temperate April afternoon nine years before; our special Queens hummus recipe we had concocted from a handful of Food Network recipes and whatever happened to be our flavor preference of the week; our road trips to the Jersey Shore; his touch, which was smooth and soft in the way of a person whose work is more cognitive than physical; the brown pools of his eyes that told me that beneath his athletic build, he was fragile; and every second of the thirteen years we had shared. I begged the universe to make our breakup feel fair or right, and to let me survive.
I had attempted to soothe myself by crawling up close and snuggling into him. I lay there in the nook made by his arms, timing my breath to the heavy breath of his sleep, the rhythmic calm of his presence. (Dan had always had this gift: He could sleep anytime, anywhere.) His sculpted body felt supple as the muscle softened in slumber, providing the perfect cushion for bite-size me. I’m still amazed at how the body yields when it relaxes. I don’t know if it was because, in true Iron Chef fashion, he frequently whipped up fresh Italian dishes with whatever ingredients were on hand, or because of his long days running around the New York City streets for his film shoots, but that night, Dan smelled like a mixture of warm bread and grass. I inhaled deeply, as if it were the most precious breath I would ever take. I felt as if I were levitating there, as if in a hot-air balloon going up, up, up. I wanted so badly to come down, to snuggle closer, but there was a rampart of air, of breath, between us.
I looked over the edge of the balloon’s wicker basket and waved good-bye to this place. I thought of our earlier plan, before we knew we were breaking up, to rent out the co-op as an investment property when we moved to Philadelphia, until the real estate market swelled to secure us a hefty sale price. It was our surefire way to get rich, we had mused.
As the balloon kept rising, I panned the landscape to catch a glimpse of my in-laws and silently bade them good-bye, too. It had taken them nearly a decade to become comfortable with their baby boy dating a black woman, with their having a black daughter-in-law. In the end, it was worth it: Our bond had weathered strong. The thought of my relocating to their area without their son made the pang of my move that much more acute.
I said my farewells, too, to the two beautiful, olive-skinned, kinky-haired children Dan and I might have had. I could still feel the curls that framed their cherubic cheeks, which had my dimples. Their Italian American and African American heritages would have blessed them with lean, muscular bodies and round, ample butts. She would have been Nella Vita, and he would have been August. I could hear their giggles and their bye-byes dissolving into shrieks and cries. I tried to hold on to their images, but the balloon was drifting too high, and I was receding from them and my in-laws and the apartment and everything else I had known for the past thirteen years.
Now the balloon was up too far for me to jump down. The air felt thin at this altitude, and the only bubble of oxygen was right there on my ex-husband’s chest and neck. My eyes traced his every contour—the mandible, the clavicle, the iliac crest—because I knew it would be the last time. I knew that at some point, he would wake up, and I would have to move. Trembling, I fumbled for my phone to snap one last picture of him asleep in bed. It was a terrible photo: The image was blurry and, in the low light, sepia-toned. I couldn’t help but laugh, anticipating his response when I showed it to him after he woke—unless, of course, I simply deleted it.
Soon, a sticky New York City spring morning dawned. Sunrise oozed through the blinds and sketched a pattern on Dan’s left cheek. I peeled the sheet back to feel the shallow breeze of the fan as it fought a pathetic battle against the humidity, and I thought about my next step.
I would fall apart.
Part of it would be due to loneliness, and a greater part would be the loss of what had been, up to that point, the only relatively stable relationship I had ever had with a man.
I wasn’t angry the marriage was over. I wasn’t bitter. I knew that we had run our course. Our breakup had never really been about the moving; it had been about two people at a crossroads. Dan wanted to live abroad to study his craft, knowing full well that I couldn’t move after my residency. I needed to start working and to pass my board certification examination. He knew that I was not the type of woman to kamikaze my career for a man. I was also not the type of woman to stand in the way of another person’s path. For Dan’s part, he would leave because he had to. And I would let him go because there was no question that I had to.
No, the sadness on its way was over something greater than loneliness or “losing a man.” The breakup of my marriage was stoking in me the deep sense of abandonment that had lain dormant during my marriage, the loss of the home life I had craved but never had. I knew on some level that this was the real source of my grief.
I didn’t know the details yet—how or when—but that New York City spring, I knew it wouldn’t be long before I slipped into a well of despondence, one where there was neither color nor light, but where, goddess willing, there was a bottom. I knew, too, that there would be no fighting any of it.
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