Monday, July 26, 2010

Untying the Knot

For years, I’ve been wondering what to do with my wedding rings: two simple white-gold bands, the engagement ring featuring a pink tourmaline surrounded by two tiny diamonds. During the two-year separation, I occasionally brought them out of their black box in the bathroom closet and wore them (usually while cleaning, for some reason) to give myself a jolt of weird security. Their existence suggested I had once had things figured out: there had been a man, a cat, a rented house, and dinner to come home to, followed by Law and Order reruns. At the same time they were a reminder that I had failed to fulfill their promise. I had loved and, like so many others, lost, leading to a division of zero assets and the temporary moniker of “defendant.” Once in a while I would actively consider parting with them, especially after my ex remarried two summers ago, pushing our unsuccessful union further into the zone of irretrievability. But I felt paralyzed by indecision. Pawning them seemed so crass. Better to keep them—out of sight, out of mind?—or, someday, do something meaningful and ceremonial like toss them over a waterfall, experiencing a cathartic sense of release.

In the end I sold them, today, to pay my energy bill. The transaction was held at a cardboard box-cluttered jewelry store in a strip mall in the suburbs. The buyer—a guy with the same first name as my ex-spouse, which seemed poetic—dropped them in a plastic Krewe of Rex cup intended for beer conveyance during Mardi Gras; weighed their slight physical presence; and wrote down an amount that almost covers one month of AC use in New Orleans. Goodbye…

4 comments:

Ramona Quimby said...

It's so good to see you back on the interwebs, Liz. I totally get that strange attachment to a wedding ring, engagement ring (although my wedding band DID get tossed into a river, in a fit of not-realizing-how-divorce-will-also-hurt euphoria). My ex VERY quickly moved on (three years since the divorce, and I'm still trying to untie the rope of that marriage from around my neck), and there are times I think: wtf is wrong with ME?

But there are those of us (um, me) out here in the ether who are really, really excited to hear your voice, and who are very thankful for the beauty and eloquence of your words. I won't say it gets easier; I'll just say it gets different.

So glad, again, to hear your voice.

Liz said...

Sara, thanks so much. A marriage takes a long time to untie, as you say. My divorce was final 3 years ago, too. I like how you say it gets different. That is somehow very affirming and expansive.

Also, I appreciate the kind support after my long silence. This prose thing feels awkward to me but I also really believe in it (your blog is a beautiful example of all that can be achieved in this form...thank you for being here on the webs!!)

Tania Rochelle said...

I went into the oldest, largest, most historic cemetery in Marietta and threw my ring as far as I could. That marriage was DEAD.

Liz said...

Tania--love it! I wish I had done what you and Sara did with your rings. Very poetic. The next time, I will. Just kidding.