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After you’ve gotten out of a bad relationship it
leaves you questioning lots of things. First off, how did you end up with that
person in the first place? What did you see that led you to end up with them? If there are
no kids involved it’s easier to walk away and never see the person again, but
kids make it a lot more difficult. For better or worse you are stuck having to deal with that
person.
My wife and I were out with a friend and his
date recently and the date was describing her ex as a great friend. They have
three children together. She went on and on about how they are on the same page about everything, they
just realized they didn’t want to be married anymore. Wow, a happy ending
with kids, what a concept. It left me wondering what they’d both find in the
world since they were starting over but leaving their great friend behind.
It’s tough enough to find someone compatible to
be with, if they wind up being your "great friend” you have hit the jackpot.
No one will ever accuse me, and my ex of being
great friends, probably the opposite, so I’m always intrigued when I hear about
the “happy ending”. Statistically half of marriages fail, so how many of
them end well. If they ended well divorce attorneys wouldn’t be driving fancy
cars and living in big houses, while their clients usually lose these items.
When you make the decision to move on in a
relationship it seems like fantasyland to assume that you’ll both just shake
hands and all will be well with the world. It’s a great goal to shoot for, but
more than likely one of you will be angry or bitter, and you’ll fight over
possessions or custody of children, and being friends will
be the last thing on your mind.
I hope to get there some day but a line that
always seems to ring true for me is from one of my favourite movies The Shawshank
Redemption. Morgan Freeman’s character says to Tim Robbins character “Hope is a dangerous
thing”. It’s an emotion you have to wait on as opposed to being able to have
some control over it. You can spend lots of hours hoping for things and they will never
come. I’d rather do something proactive.
If you are one of those that can walk around
feeling good about how your relationship ended consider yourself very lucky.
There are a lot of us out there scratching our heads wondering how the
relationship ever started in the first place, and it’s always refreshing, yet
hard to believe, when someone is boasting about a “happy ending”.
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