My oasis
Most days were manageable, just, because I was lucky enough to have a good job that I loved and hated at the same time, working with and for people I also loved and didn't love quite as much. So, my life seemed normal enough at forty-one years of age, as a divorcee carrying a few more pounds and inches than I should, but still with all the curves in the right places and not a victim yet of southward migration on my chest.
It was the 'not most' days that were the problem. They seemed to come out of nowhere and knock my feet out from under me. I used to feel like someone lost in a desert, a place full of light but almost empty of life. Unlike the desert, those days were dark, as if I was groping my way along under a cloud of volcanic ash and yet, miraculously, surviving. Hungry and parched, with no idea how to find the food and water I so desperately needed to bring my inner woman back to life.
It was on those days that the video player in my mind would run through the whole chain of events from that fateful day when I was asked if 'Auntie Maggie' was coming in our car when we went on holiday back to Wales.
'Auntie Maggie', it turned out, was more than an honorary relative. I liked her enough and I trusted her, but that was before I found out that my husband already knew her much better than he should have done before we got married and kept that relationship alive and very well concealed.
The body has a protection system that sometimes works for people with terrible injuries. I wasn't physically injured, but the pain was no less when my life split wide open and I had to run on instinct and to force myself to focus on my responsibilities as a mother and to concentrate on my work, as I tried in vain to find out where I had gone wrong, how I had made my husband look for his comfort in another woman's bed. If you've been there, you'll know exactly how it works. If you haven't, I don't want to spoil your day.
I know we should forgive. If it had been a flash in the pan I might have done, for my family's sake. But to my way of thinking, he already knew this was happening even as we exchanged our vows. I couldn't find a way to repair that, I still can't, but my ex was, is, without doubt, a very charming man and he can be very persuasive. I became the enemy and basically lost my closest family.
So, what do you do as that video plays over and over? I tried loads of things. I tried to boost my self-esteem as a woman by sleeping with just about any man who asked me to, but it isn't eagles and noble animals that hang around over the relics of a dead relationship, it's scavengers that cash in on a free meal.
Not the best way to build self-esteem. A good way to end up with nasty pelvic pain.
How it happened, I don't know, but my guardian angel must have been working behind that dark, suffocating cloud. I managed to hold my job down, even to do well at it. People either didn't know or didn't let my private life cloud their impressions of me.
When the video started up one day, actually on one of the most miserable days I can remember, when everything from the drenching incessant rain to my aching body was conspiring to make me feel down, it suddenly stopped. It was a ping announcing a text message that did it. All it said was 'Message from Sian', with an avatar that I carry round with me all the time in my purse, a picture of one of the loveliest, kindest faces ever to shine on our world.
Sian and I had been neighbours after I got married. She and her new husband moved in next door but one to us after we had been living there for a couple of years.