No Easy Answers: Why the Popular
View of Divorce Is Wrong Constance Ahrons, Ph.D., Excerpted from We're Still Family, (Harper Collins Publishers, New York)
"Everyday meat and potato truth is beyond
our ability to capture in a few words."
-- Anne Lamott, Bird by
Bird
It was a sunny,
unseasonably warm Sunday morning in October. In a quaint country inn in New Jersey, surrounded by a glorious autumn garden, my young
grandchildren and I waited patiently for their Aunt Jennifer's wedding to
begin. The white carpet was unrolled, the guests were assembled, and the
harpist was playing Pachelbel's Canon.
A hush came over the
guests. The first member of the bridal party appeared. Poised at the entry, she
took a deep breath as she began her slow-paced walk down the white wedding
path. Pauline, my grandchildren's stepgreat-grandmother,
made her way down the aisle, pausing occasionally to greet family and friends.
A round of applause spontaneously erupted. She had traveled fifteen hundred
miles to be at her granddaughter's wedding, when only days before, a
threatening illness made her presence doubtful.
Next in the grand
parade came the best man, one of the groom's three brothers. Proudly, he made
his way down the aisle and took his position, ready to be at his brother's
side. Then the two maids of honor, looking lovely in their flowing black
chiffon gowns, made their appearance. My grandchildren started to wiggle and
whisper: "It's Aunt Amy [my younger daughter]! And Christine [the longtime
girlfriend who cohabits with Uncle Craig, my daughters' halfbrother]!"
As they walked down the aisle and moved slowly past us, special smiles were
exchanged with my grandchildren -- their nieces and nephew.
Seconds later, my
youngest granddaughter pointed excitedly, exclaiming, "Here comes
Mommy!" They waved excitedly as the next member of the bridal party, the
matron of honor -- their mother, my daughter -- made her way down the path. She
paused briefly at our row to exchange a fleeting greeting with her children.
Next, the groom, soon
officially to be their "Uncle Andrew," with his mother's arm linked
on his left, and his father on his right. The happy threesome joined the
processional. Divorced from each other when Andrew was a child, his parents
beamed in anticipation of the marriage of their eldest son.
Silence. All heads now
turned to catch their first glimpse of the bride. Greeted with oohs and aahs, Aunt Jennifer was
radiant as she walked arm in arm with her proud and elegant mother, their stepgrandmother, Grandma Susan. Sadly missed at that moment
was the father of the bride, my former husband, who had passed away a few years
earlier.
When I told friends in California I was flying to the East Coast for a family
wedding, I stumbled over how to explain my relationship to the bride. To some I
explained: "She's my exhusband's daughter by his
second wife." To others, perhaps to be provocative and draw attention to
the lack of kinship terms, I said, "She's my daughters' sister." Of
course, technically she's my daughters' halfsister,
but many years ago my daughters told me firmly that that term "halfsister" was utterly ridiculous. Jennifer wasn't a
half anything, she was their real sister. Some of my friends thought it strange
that I would be invited; others thought it even stranger that I would travel
cross-country to attend.
The wedding reception
brought an awkward moment or two, when some of the groom's guests asked a
common question, "How was I related to the bride?" With some guilt at
violating my daughters' dictum, but not knowing how else to identify our
kinship, I answered, "She is my daughters' halfsister."
A puzzled look. It was not that they didn't understand the relationship, but it
seemed strange to them that I was a wedding guest. As we talked, a few guests
noted how nice it was that I was there, and then with great elaboration told me
stories about their own complex families. Some told me sad stories of families
torn apart by divorce and remarriage, and others related happy stories of how
their complex families of divorce had come together at family celebrations.
At several points
during this celebratory day, I happened to be standing next to the bride's
mother when someone from the groom's side asked us how we were related. She or
I pleasantly answered, "We used to be married to the same man." This
response turned out to be a showstopper. The question asker was at a loss to
respond. First and second wives aren't supposed to be amicable or even
respectful toward one another. And certainly, first wives are not supposed to
be included in their exhusband's new families. And
last of all, first and second wives shouldn't be willing to comfortably share
the information of having a husband in common.
Although it may appear
strange, my exhusband's untimely death brought his
second and first families closer together. I had mourned at his funeral and
spent time with his family and friends for several days afterward. A different
level of kinship formed, as we -- his first and second families -- shared our
loss and sadness. Since then, we have chosen to join together at several family
celeno brations, which has
added a deeper dimension to our feelings of family.
You may be thinking,
"This is all so rational. There's no way my family could pull this
off." Or perhaps, like the many people who have shared their stories with
me over the years, you are nodding your head knowingly, remembering similar
occasions in your own family. The truth is we are like many extended families
rearranged by divorce. My ties to my exhusband's
family are not close but we care about one another. We seldom have contact
outside of family occasions, but we know we're family. We hear stories of each
other's comings and goings, transmitted to us through our mutual ties to my
daughters, and now, through grandchildren. But if many families, like my own,
continue to have relationships years after divorce, why don't we hear more
about them?
Excerpted from We're Still Family: What Grown Children Have
to Say About Their Parents' Divorce (Harper Collins Publishers, New York, 2004)
© 2004 Constance Ahrons.
All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission of the publisher. No part of this
book may be used or reproduced without written permission from HarperCollins
Publishers, 10
East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022
More details about the book and author can be found online at http://www.harpercollins.com/catalog/book_xml.asp?isbn=0060193050
and http://www.constanceahrons.com.