Sometimes I feel like Job: a love story, from a Quiet Life reader
"I lost everything, only to have it repaid beyond my wildest dreams”
“We do not choose randomly each other: we meet only those who already exist in our subconscious.”
-Sigmund Freud
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A few weeks ago, I sent you a Kindred Letter on the subject of “Five Ways to Set Boundaries Lovingly.” It was based on an earlier letter, on “grown-up love," in which I’d asked to hear your own experiences.
One of your fellow Quiet Life readers—a man named David Alexander—wrote back with the following breathtaking story. I share it now, with permission.
Take a few minutes to read this: I think you’ll love it as much as I do.
And if you’re going through any Job-like moments of your own, I hope that David and Eleni’s story will give you inspiration, and hope.
Here you go:
Dear Susan,
You asked for it…my grown-up love story. It may sound incredible, but it’s true.
In 1982, I met a beautiful girl at college - she was an immigrant from Greece. Her name was Eleni. We fell in love. I was 19, and she was 18. We were together for one year. She moved to Houston, and we separated. Life moved on. I graduated from university and decided I wanted to be a Catholic priest. I entered a monastery, but left after a year. I moved to Arizona, married a woman much older than me, and we had two children. I began a career in IT. The marriage was unhappy from early on, but, mirroring my parent’s loveless marriage, I stayed long past the time I should have left. In my mid 30’s I was (mis-) diagnosed with bipolar disorder and doctors put me on a host of medications. As time went on, and medications took their toll, doctors diagnosed me with Parkinson’s disease. I eventually became unable to work, and went on disability. As my life grew more and more desperate, I became suicidal. Any love that was in the marriage was long gone. My children grew up, but they knew a father who was unable to do much of anything - dysfunctional, unstable, barely able to walk, not much of a presence in their lives.
When our children were grown, we divorced. I found my Greek college girlfriend on Facebook in 2014. My now ex and I divorced. In the divorce settlement I gave my ex-wife everything - what savings I had from my previous job, a house, cars - you name it. I moved to Houston with one carryon suitcase and the diagnosis of two incurable illnesses. But Eleni didn’t care about these - she had always loved me, and had never married. She held a torch for me for thirty-two years.
A month after arriving, we married in the county courthouse. She married me as is, no questions asked. A few weeks later I saw a new neurologist. He was one of the world’s leading researchers into movement disorders. She knew him because of her longtime work with an oncologist, who had been White House Medical Advisor under Presidents Bush and Clinton. The neurologist did a complete exam, and at the end of it, told my new wife, “I believe the cause of the Parkinson’s is the combined effect of the drugs he is taking. I think I can reverse it.” My wife burst into tears. She got me in to see a leading psychiatrist, who told me, “I don’t think you are bipolar. Let’s get you off all these medications.” More tears.
Over six months, I titrated off the drugs that defined who I was for seventeen years. I gradually became asymptomatic. I threw away the cane I had used for years, learned to eat and drink by myself, bathe myself without help, and even learned to ride a bike again. I had lost the ability to read, and Eleni taught me to read again. In every way possible, I was reborn. I had lost the ability to play the bagpipes - my passion in life - but I was able to start playing again. My father died a few months later, and I played Amazing Grace on bagpipes at his funeral.
In July of that year - 2015 - when she was 50 and I was 52 - we married in a small church in her village in Greece. She was the girl who had never married, but who had found her college boyfriend, so nearly the whole village showed up for the wedding.
When we returned to the States I tried in vain to find a job. A new friend offered to mentor me if I’d do the IT support for her TV show. The mentorship became a close friendship, and three years after starting my own production company, I won my first Award - the Bronze Medal at the Greek Event Awards. The next year, my first Emmy Award. A second Emmy followed a year later. I had always wanted to play the piano, so in 2017 she bought me a piano as a Christmas gift and I took lessons. Five recitals and two years later, I played in a piano recital at the Royal Academy of Music in London. Apparently, I have a gift for playing music beyond the bagpipes. When I turned 60 last year, with her encouragement, I applied to graduate school. In two weeks I start a Master’s Degree program in ethnomusicology in the UK. I started to write poetry about my life, and finally got published. I saw the anthology on Amazon and had to pinch myself to believe it was true.
As I write this from the patio in our vacation home in Greece, she’s inside cooking breakfast for me. This afternoon, we’re going to the beach to swim in the Aegean for the thousandth time. Sometimes I feel like Job - I lost everything, only to have it repaid beyond my wildest dreams.
When I tell her she saved me, she replies, “You saved me right back.” I think I did. But I think that Love saved us both.
Sincerely,
David Alexander
Today, would you like to share your own stories – of love or loss, joy or sorrow, bitter or sweet? Needless to say, they don’t have to be as dramatic as this one; I doubt they will be; we welcome them all.
And, if you’d like to share today’s letter with a friend, subscribe, or leave a comment, you can do that here.
We are grateful that you’re here,
and do not take it lightly,
xo Susan
P.S. If you’ve been reading the Kindred Letters for some years, you may recognize today’s story. I’m sharing it again because, believe it or not, we have a “sequel” coming soon. David’s life seems to take one extraordinary turn after another!
"For better and for worse"
In 1983, I started my academic career as a psychology student in Tilburg [The Netherlands]. In my introduction period, I met a girl - two years younger than me, but already a mom of a three-year old boy. We studied together for two years, but the spark of love was present from day one. However, we were both in another relationship. In '85, our relationships were over, and we felt free to examine what we could build up together.
I've already shared some things about my youth: I grew up in an abusive environment, with two alcoholic parents. And even before I was born, it was clear that I wasn't welcome. During my childhood, I also found out how sexual abuse of children, that is in my case: a boy, can distort a person's view on reality. And how difficult it is to learn the basics in emotions, like attachment, feeling secure and safe, knowing what healthy intimacy means, and growing up with the constant fear of violence or abuse.
Studying in the '80, regretfully we didn't have the insights of professor dr. Bessel van der Kolk and his book "The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma" [2014]. But we sure did know that growing up in a dysfunctional environment could be transferred to a new generation. So I was petrified to have children of my own, let alone raising a boy that was not my biological son. However, the relationship with my girlfriend deepened, and we married in '88 after I did my master in clinical psychology.
One thing I knew from the start: she had to know about my childhood. After long deliberation, we chose to try and have a child together. In '89, our daughter was born, and in '91 a son followed. My work as a management consultant and owner of a consultancy firm kept me busy, until a car accident in '01 ended my professional career. I became a full-time father, trying to do everything right what had gone wrong in my childhood. And my wife supported me, although I also suffered from serious pain, due to the accident.
Long story short: I finished my law degree in '18, had various serious health issues from '01 up to now. About my children: they keep telling me what a great father I've been, and still am. But... when you don't know how love feels, if you're disconnected to pretty much all your feelings anyhow, the "stupid" answer on my wife's question whether I love her is: "I know I do feel something for you, and I think - in my head - that it's probably love". Nevertheless, she keeps giving me all her love, although we've had some bumpy rides due to my health issues and my dissociative disorder.
We're together now for almost 40 years, the empty nest has been resolved. I'm still not sure how I could deserve such a loving wife and three kids [and two grandchildren] who love me... Just every now and then, I can dig in deeply into my feelings - yes, I do have them - and whisper silently "I love you" when she's asleep.
What an incredible story. It would be wonderful to have a second chapter from Eleni's viewpoint. Thanks for sharing.