I am not ready to think of him as either insane or evil, to consider in full how I could love and have a child with such a person. I am not ready to think about anything, except ways in which this may still be averted.
Author
Suzanne Finnamore
/suzanne-finnamore-quotes-and-sayings
Author Summary
About Suzanne Finnamore on QuoteMust
Suzanne Finnamore currently has 72 indexed quotes and 2 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.
Works
Books and titles linked to this author
Quotes
All quote cards for Suzanne Finnamore
I want to own this transition, not to simply swallow the shame of it entire. I will push for every little irony.
He left a bit too easily and with obvious relief. His feet were swift and sure on the muddy path.
I played possum. I did this, as the possum does, out of fear.
A heart can stop beating for a while, one can still live.
I have a new mantra, which I chant softly to myself: "Oh My God Oh My God.
I am going insane. Yes. That is what´s happening. Good. Insane.
I was steeped in denial, but my body knew.
It´s like watching someone do a triple backflip dismount and land on two feet, solid, arms splayed in the air. I know I could never do it, don´t even know where I would begin to learn, but some people are built for it. He was handcrafted to leave, had practiced on other women since adolescence. I was one of an unnumbered series.
Such silence has an actual sound, the sound of disappearance.
I know one thing about men," Bunny says with finality, leaving the room to check on A. "They never die when you want them to.
Bushwhacked, I examine my hands. Same hands. Rings still there but no longer valid.
Already things are changing; it´s starting with small shit but oh it´s starting, the change, the irrevocable, impossible change.
This does not escape my notice, it is a context. I resent the fact of a context; my social status has shifted and no one is going to acknowldege it, that´s certain. I´m expected to be Brave and Rise Above. I dress for the role; I must look far better now that I did when I was married. I must look pulled together into a nice tight Hermès knot of self-containment. I don´t make the rules; I just do my best to follow them.
There is that, and there is also the Irreconcilable Differences line. It seems so catchall, so vague. You could say that about anyone, any man and woman at all. Jesus and Mary Magdalene: "Irreconcilable Differences." JFK and Jackie, anyone at all. It´s built into the man-woman thing. What kind of paltry reason is that? "Insanity" is another box to be checked on the divorce petition, the only alternative to "Irreconcilable Differences." I would like to check it.
To keep myself from harming or calling N and to stave off the rage and despair, I focus on my extraordinary son, drink midrange Chardonnay every night after he is asleep, and make a barrage of late-night mail-order retail purchases placed from the couch. The couch has officially become my second battle station. I am angry and I have credit And I´m all blackened inside; I should wear a pointy witch hat around Larkspur as I go to the bank and drop A off at day care. It would be more honest.
Naturally, I do blame Françoise. I blame her for having N in the first place. She was young, she was beautiful, she was married to a doctor, and she was intelligent. She could have abstained from producing her first son. It was wrong on a variety of levels.
Although I notice there is never a truly good time to have a nice long chat with one´s mother-in-law, unless you are having an extraordinary life and marriage and your mother-in-law is, say, Maureen Dowd, or Indira Gandhi. Someone of that ilk.