Monday, August 5, 2024

When Comparison Steals Your Joy

It's not just our men who steal our joy, but thanks to the kind of lives they force us into, so does our tendency to compare ourselves to other couples and other families.

"Comparison is the thief of joy!" I hear from the wings.
"We're all different, you can't compare!"
"Everyone has their struggles!"

But most Cassandras know that our other couple friends aren't experiencing the same kind of intricate, emotionally abusive troubles that we are. 

I'm currently on holiday with Peter and our children. Still, we are holidaying together to minimise the impact of his recklessness and thoughtlessness on our children. If I didn't holiday with him, he would holiday with the children without me because he deems it his right to, even if he wouldn't enjoy himself.  Everything comes down to rights with Peter. Even after separating, I'm still having to sacrifice parts of myself and my own wellbeing and needs to keep the children safe. Additionally, I believe that it's important to maintain some level of travel and life outside of the daily drudge of day to day living. I want to show the children other places and worlds and I need to experience them too. There are negatives to whatever solution I throw at the situation, so I choose my negatives carefully. 

But, I am starting to wonder if my foolish resilience is beginning to weaken. I don't like Peter as a person anymore. Peter is not my friend. Peter's lack of motivation to do anything at all which didn't benefit him personally wrecked our little family. I put the children to bed in the evenings and I'm left with him, beer in hand, no conscience, no care in the world acting completely normal. Can I keep doing this to myself? 

I am struggling hugely during this break.
Friends of ours are also holidaying nearby, a family we have holidayed here with in the past. They have taken extended family away with them too and are renting a lovely big house overlooking a quiet beach with stunning sea views and a private swimming pool. It was suggested that we meet up by the mother of the children in the family, but I can't face it. 

We are around a mile away from them in a small, pokey cottage that is a little tired, with no views due to having to leave our booking until the very last minute as I never know what the situation will be like with Peter to book in advance. I never know if we can endure another holiday together until the time is almost upon us. I envy them also taking their extended family away with them. They will be able to enjoy evening meals as a couple as they have family to watch the children. Peter and I never got to experience this due to the overwhelming, critical and interferring nature of his parents, particularly his mother. Peter, in retaliation wouldn't entertain bringing my mother away with us either because he deemed it "unfair." Like a toddler might. Our holidays have always been the four of us which has been isolating, something I think Peter enjoys.

What I find so difficult is that I've looked at this cluster of cottages that our friends are renting so many times before, longing to book the smaller one. But it's always gone by the time it gets close enough for me to accept that I can just about withstand holidaying with Peter for another year. 

But I lie here in the small bathtub of the pokey cottage that we're in with paint peeling off the battered tiles, wondering if I could tolerate this better if the destination was a little more luxurious and larger. A bigger space to get away from Peter more. Maybe I should book in advance afterall?

I cry for the life I never had with Peter, the one I see our old friends living now. I am green with envy and heavy with sadness.  Intimate suppers overlooking the harbour whilst their parents lovingly put their children to bed, the matching dry robes and matching kayaks that they own (Peter would never entertain partaking in any activities that I enjoyed), the swims at dusk in their private pool and family days out with extended family, having other adults to soak up the noise of hyperactive, tired children.

I know that no family life is a fairytale but I am tired of "making the best of a bad situation." If I hear this advice one more time, I genuinely might scream. I find myself thinking, why can't I have the best for once? Instead of making the best of the shit I have. I'm lonely here. 
Holidaying without any emotional connection and no love or friendship is tiresome in the throes of parenting young children. Is it time to let go? Time to accept that Peter will always be their father and that the risks are now out of my control? Save myself from the slavery of family holidays? Perhaps one day enjoyable family holidays will be in my reach once again, with a loving person who I deserve to share them with. But I guess I need to let go first...

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