How to bounce back

,

This is what I thought yesterday: I thought, today is the day I'm going to start going to the gym again. I am certain that no one recovers from sadness until they go back to the gym: Endorphins, routine, self-control, these are all the pieces of getting back to normal.

I have said, every day for the past week, that today is the day I will go to the gym. But this is the day when my ex-husband sleeps over. It’s the day I am supposed to be at the farm. I am supposed to wake up with the farmer's arms around me, roosters crowing in my ears.

Instead, I wake up freezing, because the ex keeps my house much colder than I do. I wake up with the kids voices in the air downstairs, clamoring for breakfast. They sound so sweet and fun but I promised my ex I would hide in my bedroom until they kids go to school. It's his time with them, and if I stop hiding, we would have to parent together, and if we could do that then we'd still be married.

So I am sitting my bedroom, I am hungry. Not hugely hungry because, in a stunning example of the unfairness of life, I lose my appetite when I have been dumped, so I am very thin with no one there to see it.

It'll be another 45 minutes before I can go downstairs. I am hungry enough that I eat one of the chocolates the farmer gave me as a parting birthday gift. That's right. He gave me presents while he was dumping me. I have to bite into seven before I find one I like, and I lay in bed in between bites in case I have to cry, and then I bite four more to find a second one of the kind I like, and then there are broken chocolates strewn across my bed.

I am not crying, though. I think I am past that. I am looking for solutions.

I tried reading but I realized that the book I'm reading, In Other Rooms, Other Wonders, is not actually about Pakistan, but about how men choose land over women over and over again. How could I be in the middle of this book the week the farmer dumps me? The world aligns itself in shockingly horrible ways.

When the kids are gone, I traipse downstairs and take four showers. I think this might be an Asperger Syndrome thing (a sensory integration thing). I take scalding hot showers in order to organize my thinking.

A good consequence of not being with the farmer: I could never get the water hot enough at his house.

I put on clothes that are sort of clean. I use a baby wipe to clean off places on my jeans that might reveal that I have not washed them since Thanksgiving. I drive into work because this is what one does to resume a high-functioning life.

People at work do not say anything to me like, “Sorry you got dumped and seemed to have stopped working.”

I spend the day thinking of things that are totally inappropriate to write and then putting them in my Brazen Careerist group, because it’s small enough that it feels like my living room.

Ryan Paugh, our community manager, calls me to say that he thinks I need to start having someone look at what I post in the group before I post it. Later he says, “I think you need to stop posting stuff in your group for today.”

I go to the coffee shop where I usually cannot stop eating bagels, and I am excited that I have lost my appetite. I play a game with myself. I stand in front of the bagels and ask myself if I want one. I don't. It's fun. I order a bagel and sniff it. Usually that's enough to send me over the edge. Today it makes me nauseous. I bring the bagel to my table and tell myself that suffering is interesting.

I tell myself I need to make a plan to go to the gym. I look at my to do list and nothing looks pressing except that I am supposed to be redesigning my blog.

There is an email asking if I want to have a forum for people to talk about Asperger Syndrome. I reply that I want a forum for people to talk about how I am going to marry a farmer and move to a farm. Can you use a blog as a dating site?

Oh. Wait. That's how I got in this mess.

I answer another email. About a business idea. I tell the person that the problem with most business ideas is not that they are bad, but that they are not big enough to be funded. You have to be able either to fund your own business, or to show that you can have $100 million in revenue in five years.

I send this email ten times a week. I tell myself that I need to write a detailed, clear email about this and copy and paste it every time someone asks me about getting funding.

I need a copy-and-paste speech to run through my head every time I think I'm going to the gym and then I tell myself maybe I'm not going to the gym.

I tell myself maybe one more day.

That feels bad. Like I'll say that forever.

I tell myself in an hour.

But I've told myself that ten times.

I tell myself the gym will only work when it's part of my new routine.

But I know that I will not get a new routine til I know I can get to the gym.

Everything is chicken and egg. And then I have to tell myself not to think about how the farmer helped me and the kids incubate chicks last summer. The farmer is so fun.

I go back to the office. There is a shower in our building. I consider stopping there and scalding myself before I go back to my cube. But then I'd have to reapply makeup.

At my cube I try to think of what I could do that would be sort of work but would not be too taxing. I remember that my favorite positive psychology Ph.D., who wants to remain anonymous on this blog, said I could call anytime.

I call her to ask what I should say to the kids.

I call her from the hallway of the office. I have to do this because there are five offices with doors in our company, and I don't have one of them. I am hoping that people think I'm going to the hallway to make a highly sensitive call about the funding for the company or something. But I'm pretty sure everyone knows that I'm making some sort of personal call.

My favorite positive psychologist tells me that I have to frame it for the kids that I make the decision. She explains that people who are optimistic in life perceive that the locus of control is with them. “Show your kids that you decide. That you are deciding what's best for you and the kids.”

I do not go to the gym. I know myself well enough to know that eventually, I'll get myself back to the gym. I have been going to the gym since I was fifteen. That's just who I am.

Then I pick up my seven-year-old at school. I give him a donut so he will associate taking control of your life with sweetness. And I tell him that I have decided we will not be moving to the farm any time soon. We can still see the farmer. We can still visit the farm. But we need to decide what's best for us. And what's best for us is to continue our fun family life in our house.

He says okay. He has frosting on his lips.

I feel like I am believing what I'm saying and I start to say it again. Reinforcement.

He says, “I know, Mom. Did you bring me milk?”

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  1. Promotional Products Man
    Promotional Products Man says:

    As someone alluded to above – if you pay for a gym and you value money – that may be a great motivator. I recently recieved a free 6 month membership when I leased a car from my dealer – and I use it religiously.

  2. saltwater
    saltwater says:

    I wonder what it means that so many comments are focused on the gym part of your post. I’m not being critical of the comments, truly, because I love the gym, and a good workout can be amazingly cathartic and helpful for unwieldy emotions. I’m just wondering out loud, not because I don’t get the symbolism (gym+you=better days, or gym+you=control, etc) but because I am surprised at the focus on it. I’d like to hear someone’s opinion on this.

    I’m sorry about the breakup; your grief is heartbreaking. Maybe you should buy a farm, for real, though. That was a good comment. It seems you love the land as much as the farmer. Could you buy into a collective? Is there such a thing? Like a time share farm? If anyone could figure out how to live on a farm and not be an actual farmer, it would be you and your wonderful mind.

    To put my two cents in, it sounds like the farmer has a long history of getting close and then running, with other women as well as you. He already has an emotional base (his family/farm) and doesn’t seem to be able to widen or enrich it, in spite of the fact that his actions say he obviously wants to do so. A husband who will put them (his sisters and his parents) first, and you, a distant second, is going to create a really stressful marriage. Marriage is hard enough without a spouse with conflicting loyalties. You were very smart to start marriage counseling, I think every couple should do likewise. I’m just sorry the farmer doesn’t seem to know how to balance what he wants, because until he does, the romantic relationships in his life are going to pay the price. I wonder what he sees, when he thinks about the farm ten years from now. Does he see his wife and children there? Or does he just see his birth family there, with those relationships staying the same forever? For a original thinking businessman, he seems stalled in the past emotionally.

    • D
      D says:

      I agree wholeheartedly, saltwater! Penelope, I hope you are able to take a mental break from all of this if even for only a few minutes a day.

  3. Anonymous
    Anonymous says:

    Thank you for reading this. If you like what you read, just send an email saying you read this. It would be lovely.

    I recently saw your work in your collab with Seth in What Matters Now. I am an eighteen year old Bio major who believes that he can change the world. I am a black belt and know that the first step is exercise you enjoy.

    The main reason I love this is that I also have Asperger’s Syndrome. Even the simplest tasks seem overwrought and impossible balancing a simple part-time job and simple college courses. Add this to attempting to craft a new social life while losing my friends all over again. I believe I get a couple breaks and I’m incredibly thankful. But it still hurts.

    I can’t say anything about your grief. Sadly, I feel I have enough self-confidence and ego issues without passing them to another one. But I believe in people now. I am learning to truly care to improve the beauty in my life. And it hurts still. And there have been setbacks. But ultimately, it’s still giving all you can to be the best you can. So please enjoy a minute, breathe in and out. Stop reading comments for a moment. Write down, and start the smallest part of your most important task.

    But no one reads these anyways…

    • Tina
      Tina says:

      I beg your pardon!

      I just read it! Simple tasks may elude you, but your writing is excellent, IMHO.

      Simple tasks overwhelm me too, but all I have is ADD, anxiety, and a bad case of not being raised right! (We were very isolated growing up, & I’m a bit of a rebel– with a good cause!)

      Yes, somebody IS paying attention.

      Thanks for the great post. I was reading WHAT MATTERS MOST (& posted it to my blog) just before your post arrived in my e-mail.

      Take care.

      Sincerely,

      Tina

  4. Aran
    Aran says:

    Instead of going to the gym to workout, sometimes it’s easier to have a goal of just showing up at the gym. Breaking down the process to the smallest thing that you CAN do, then ramp it back up again.

  5. Lance
    Lance says:

    I work out like a madman when I get dumped and when I do the dumping. I helps more than anything else, except perhaps getting another girlfriend. Not just that, but I play a lot of sports, which makes it easier to take my mind off whatever else. I would be in BIG trouble if I didn’t have working out. Plus, it has the benefit of making you look better for your next partner.

    Get thee to the gym!!

  6. faisal habib
    faisal habib says:

    u r doing it good.
    i would have dated u if i could, to relieve u of your sadness. LOLS.
    everything gets normal at last. and u would be past this.
    take care

  7. Sympathetic
    Sympathetic says:

    Penelope,

    I am sad for you. Please know that in your pain you bring strength to others. Good luck to you in your travels.

  8. Prahlad
    Prahlad says:

    Well, Penelope, I recently discovered your blog and I love your writing. :-)
    Because it’s honest, straightforward, alive, enticing, deep and fun.
    And because it makes me discover something new about myself. :-o
    So, thank you very much, for how you are and what you do.

    Regarding your relationship’s pain and difficult moment, I’d like to share some bits I had in mind; not really suggestions, more like inspiration, perhaps.

    “Be who you are
    and
    Say what you feel,
    because
    those who mind don’t matter
    and
    those who matter don’t mind.”
    (Dr. Suess)

    Don’t fight the pain.
    Pain is like a wave: the more you can allow its flowing, the faster it will pass.

    “If it didn’t stop at the station, it wasn’t your train.”
    (Marianne Williamson)

    Love,
    Prahlad

    • Tina
      Tina says:

      Wow! I love this comment! What a healing message!

      I’ll try to remember it in my own life!

      I agree with what you say about pain and how it works. Avoidance of pain often just leads to great problems down the line, like an unattended cavity in a tooth.

      Thanks again for your healing comment. Posting it has allowed the whole world to reap the benefit.

  9. Sara
    Sara says:

    Penelope,

    I don’t think you can begin to bounce back until you decide, with finality, that the relationship is truly over.

    As long as you have hope, you are undermining your recovery.

    Recovery begins with great pain, but with a feeling of relief as well, because you know that at last you are putting this struggle behind you. Once you feel that, you will have the strength and the energy to move on — to go to the gym, to throw yourself into work, to do whatever you have to do.

    Don’t worry about the kids too much. Yes, they’ll miss the farm and the farmer — but their sense of loss in no way resembles your pain. They would only experience that sort of grief if they lost YOU.

    I wish you all the strength and determination in the world. I think you already have it, actually. Carry on.

    • Tina
      Tina says:

      Words of wisdom!

      I think this is really true.

      However, it may be that Penelope is continuing to hope that things could work out, as you must well know.

      The truth shall set you free. All of us.

  10. Jackaroo
    Jackaroo says:

    The only other comment I’ve ever made to you was about dating my coworker. I came hear to voice an ignorant and cocky opinion about how it’s no big deal to “have fun and flirt and be sexy with her all day”. And then I messed things up.

    After 8 months she dumped me (about a month ago). I’m miserable. Can’t eat. Can’t sleep. Write letters that won’t be sent. Found out that men have tear ducts. Play out way too many scenarios in my head (I’m pretty sure she’s now dating my friend from college…ouch).

    I set an appointment with a trainer, and met her this morning at 6:00a.m. for an hour session. I came away thinking about my own health; about the things I can control; and, about strengthening myself. I’m now literally and figurtively strengthening my heart. And now I’m here on your amazing site, on the other side of the circle of love, seeking guidance and others’ opinions.

    My break up has taught me powerful lessons about the kind of man (person) I want to be. It’s a transformative experience, and it’s not easy. Transformative experiences never are easy.

    My “farmer” is a barefooted beauty who works at a desk across from me, all day, and she’s gorgeous and kind and creative and everybody loves her. (At least you don’t have to see your beloved everyday!)

    Anyway, practical ideas: 1.) get a trainer for at least a week or two to establish the routine. You might skip a workout, but you won’t skip an appointment. 2.) If you’re serious about working out, the hunger will come back and you’ll begin to eat without thinking about it.

    Good luck my dear. We’ll get through this. I’ll check in in a fwe months when we’re happy, healthy, wealthy and wise!

    Learn and love, learn and love, learn and love…
    ~ROO

  11. doctora yvonne
    doctora yvonne says:

    Dear Penelope,
    you are suffering from a illness called “Lovesickness”. This maladie has its own symptons and in the past it used to be diagnosed by the doctors and treated as such. In spanish (I´m uruguayan) it has its own special name “mal de amores” and it is more widely talked about than in saxon countries)
    Lovesickness is serious and there are studies which reveal that it is one of most common causes of depression and suicide. The bad news is that there are no quick remedies for lovesickness, even if some laboratories have been trying to discover a pill or a preventive inyection.
    The english doctor Frank Tallis has written the most interesting book about this emotional illness. “Lovesickness: love as a mental illness”.
    Also, my blog Mal de Amores (written in spanish) treats this topic deeply. I give advice on how to overcome it the best way possible.

  12. VinC
    VinC says:

    Giving much of your time to go to the gym will help you recover from your lost, and let your anger flow. This is a good choice to had. Also, spare some of your time playing with your children, reading a book, and playing music is another good choice of therapy

  13. Irina
    Irina says:

    I just discovered this blog yesterday and I’m amazed of your thoughts and feelings and the way you find the best way to express them.
    Most of all I’m puzzled because I thought that the way I feel, the things in my mind are my little secrets and no one knows them.. But, voilà! I found them on your blog!
    I don’t know when I got dumped, I’m not yet divorced (thanks to my persuasive force), he only comes home to shower and change..
    Now I lost appetite and I got incredibly thin in two weeks (he says:” you know I don’t like thin women, that’s why we can’t be together – you don’t care what I want!”), I take many hot showers (but really can’t wash away pain), I plan to go to gym.. Sometimes I go but it doesn’t help much (sometimes I find him there).
    I’m constantly visualizing the discrepancy between what it should have happened and what’s really happening. Sundays were family days (today is Father’s day, too!) but now we are alone (yes, we are three, but we feel alone!). The husband/father quit our lives to live his.

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