Pages turn themselves
and I, mesmerized, consume –
words sating hunger
(For Sadje’s What Do You See Challenge: Photo is prompt.)
Pages turn themselves
and I, mesmerized, consume –
words sating hunger
(For Sadje’s What Do You See Challenge: Photo is prompt.)
Words encased,
mysteries bound –
their secrets unlock
neon possibilities –
light exploding,
neurons swirling
no containing
the magic unleashed
when pages turn.
(For Willow Poetry’s What Do You See? challenge.  Photo supplied by Hélène Vaillant.)
Bottles and books
gathering possibilities
applications considered
optimistic intent
Potions and words
measuring and recording
experimental diaries
hopeful science –
Tinctures and incantations
ritualistic manipulations
desperate contriving
insanity lurking…
Glass and paper
mold and mildew
dust covered discards
a spider’s haven
Empty and well-perused
shelf-liners stacked
memorabilia cluttering
despair’s cupboard
(Photo provided by Deb Whittam, for 50 Word Thursday.)
Jilted by a philandering husband and defrauded out of my share of the assets, I made a convincing victim.
“You are righteously angry,” a friend counselled.
Perhaps so, but something niggled at me.
“A man does not stray unless there is a reason,” someone said, and I felt as if she looked right through me, could see the flaws at my core. Â My mother’s repeated warnings came back to me: Â “No one will ever love you.”
What is wrong with me? Â my broken heart wailed.
Urgency drove me to find answers. Â I never wanted to go through this again. Â I had to know why my life had turned out this way.
I read.  I read Daphne Rose Kingma’s Coming Apart, and Susan Anderson’s The Journey from Abandonment to Healing, and The Mastery of Love by don Miguel Ruiz:  all offering glimpses of insight and understanding – something I could hold on to.  So many books passed through my hands and desperate to learn more, I turned to a galley copy of a book I’d received as a bookstore owner.  A commercial piece, now released, but that I’d never bothered with in the past, having stashed it beside many other soon-to-be published editions.
It was Relationship Rescue by Dr. Phil McGraw.
“Too Late for this, really,” I told myself but I decided to give it a chance.
Dr. Phil wrote the words I had suspected all along: Â good relationships begin with the self. Â His advice made sense, and more than that, I felt like I was finally onto something. Â I attacked the book as if reading a how-to manual, highlighter in hand and pencil at the ready.
Relationship Rescue delves into the different “bad spirits” that we bring to our relationships, and as I read along, I began to recognize bits of myself in the “scorekeeper”, the “fault-finder”, and the control freak, but when I reached the eighth category and began to read, I felt as if I’d been punched in the stomach and wanted to throw up. I was the “bottomless pit”.
I told myself that I didn’t need anything so that I wouldn’t be a burden. Â What I was actually doing was sabotaging my partner’s chances of ever meeting my needs. Â “He should know without me telling him,” was another one of those false beliefs that I measured by husband against.
The spirit I brought to my marriage was ugly. Â I had so many expectations about what I wanted and didn’t want based on my parents failures that any partner was destined to fail.
With understanding comes change.  It would not be easy, and I am still a work in progress, but Relationship Rescue gave me solid understanding so that I can be accountable and achieve a healthier relationship.
My challenge this week is to write about (or submit images of) a book that made you sit up and pay attention. Â What book(s) made a difference in your life?