'At this stage in our lives,' my friend Sarah said cheerfully, 'loads of couples split up.' She pointed out that our kids don't really need us any more (apart from to ferry them around and give them money). 'So,' she concluded, 'not that I'm talking about you of course - but lots of couples decide there's no reason to stay married.'
To me, this seems wasteful. You've weathered those baby and toddler years, without sleep or proper nutrition.
You've bickered over whose turn it is to stand in the park for three hours, in
the pouring rain, and spent romantic evenings sand-blasting dried Weetabix off the high chair. Surely you're now due some fun together? Deciding to split up now
would be mad. If we were going to do it, it would have made a whole more
sense when we were ashen with sleep deprivation, and never went out, and when I was still blaming him for impregnating me. Why
divorce now, when we can do whatever we want?
Sarah reckons we're in a 'danger zone' now because the glue that held us together - ie, our offspring - will soon disappear. Off to college they'll go, leaving J and I miserably sipping sherry and occasionally rousing ourselves for a game of whist.
Staying
together when the kids leave: my strategy
-
Talk to each other. Admittedly, this can be scary: what if the only thing we
can think of to say is, 'Did you put the bin out?' We may have to practice getting
the conversation flowing again. Alcohol will help.
-Try
to be rational. Looking back, when
our twin boys were babies I wasn't quite myself. Jimmy only had to make an innocent
remark for me to fly off the handle or run upstairs screaming. 'This is a nice
ham salad,' he once had the audacity to remark - my cue to throw a velour
sleepsuit at his head and start sobbing (my reasoning being that a ham salad
couldn't really be 'nice', and that his comment was really a criticism of my
domestic abilities). Thankfully, we are now living in more rational times, and
should therefore get along better. Plus, most argument triggers are
child-related: who's being too
strict/soft, why don't they help more in the house and whose fault is it
that they don't, etc. Remove teenagers from the equation and what is there left
to fall out about?
And that, I think, is the crux of it: we were only together for two years
before I got pregnant, and it feels like there's a whole lot of catching up to
do. Cinema, restaurants, fancy bars and weekends away... there's so much we can
do, the choice is boggling. My only worry is that, by the time we've
decided, everywhere will be shut.
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