Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Rain on Me

It is just before six in the morning here in Montreal, Canada, where I sit alone in my hotel room across town from Natasha. She is probably asleep at the moment, obliviously sedated from the heavy thunderstorm that woke me about 45 minutes ago. It's a wonderful sound, the thunder. I can hear the rain tapping metal on the roof, too, and it reminds me that rain is cleansing. Unlike in Phoenix, where the accuracy of the weather reporters only extends to if it will be hot or hotter, the Vermont news guy two days ago said it would be storming in this area today and he was right. So, we knew it was coming and that it was coming on Natasha's surgery date. How appropriate, right?

I am accepting this storm as cleansing for me as well. These last few days have been difficult on many levels. For one thing, I'm alone in an unfamiliar place. Although I spent the majority of my adult life navigating big cities alone, I had no interest to do so again. But I am riding the subway and bus, finding my meals, lying in bed by myself. Thank goodness for Skype! It's not that I feel particularly stressed about the being alone part; it's that I'm essentially isolated during a time when I really wish I had someone to stop me from worrying about the last step in this transition.

Our very wonderful friends, who live in New Hampshire, drove us up here on Sunday. I broke down in front of Jack while Natasha was registering in the recovery house. I wasn't worried about the surgery. I have complete confidence in Dr. Brassard, who by the way is a handsome guy despite his age, and his staff at both the hospital and recovery house. I have no doubts that Natasha will come out of this a healthy and whole person. No, I am worried about two things. First, I worry that Natasha will still not be happy. I worry that there is still something more that makes her sad and that healing from this procedure will allow her subconscious to push out yet another issue. Frankly, having to keep our house in order essentially on my own is wearing on me, and I don't know how much more I can stand. Again, it's not that Natasha is changing. It's that the change has occupied her for so very long that she has retreated somewhat from the other obligations in her life. I want her back, you know?

The other thing is that in the next few months, she should be ready and able to be sexually active. I worry that I will not find happiness there, or enough pleasure to have the ability to give her pleasure. This will not end our marriage if it happens, but I will be very sad because I am not ready for that part of my life to come to a close. No, I will not go outside of the marriage. I don't go for that. Neither would she. I think that I'm worrying about this more than I need to, but I can't help what goes on in my head. There is a lot riding on the next few months of her recovery. It's like I've been dreaming of a day when the sun will break through dark clouds and shine into our house and everybody will he happy and joyful... in slow motion. It's a cheesy image. I'm expecting a cure-all. I'm probably projecting a lot onto the sexual intimacy of our marriage when, in fact, there is so much more to intimacy than sex. That's what our friends reminded me about on Sunday when I broke down. Our friends know a lot more about sex than most people, due to their careers. What I realized because of them is that Natasha and I have not been intimate at all in about two years because of GID. Every time her male appendage would react to something, she'd get very upset. So, we didn't do anything. Anything. What I realized was that my worry about sex was my worry about intimacy. We don't ever have to have sex again, but we need to be intimate. I need to be able to be intimate with her and if I can't be, that will be painful.

I spent the last couple of days examining this issue. I concluded that I would not be able to be intimate with her as long as she was wearing makeup and had her wig on. Without these, she still looks enough like the person I married that the rest of her curves and bumps don't matter. She had moobs before, anyway, and those never bothered me. I told her this and she thought it was reasonable. I hate lipstick anyway. :-)

I'm having to remind myself about what I've said before, and that is to take every day as it comes. I've been projecting into the future again and that's what's gotten me so stressed.

So, I'm going to get dressed now and head across town to where my Woobie is preparing to get a new vagina. I'll write about that soon. It's actually quite funny, that surgery center. Anyway, I'm anxious for this all to be over and for us to be back home with our wonderful children, whom I miss terribly.

More to come...

7 comments:

Samantha Shanti said...

You're going to be okay Marni. It'll take some time to adjust, to grow, but you'll get there. I believe, based on what I went through, and the stories of other women on both sides of this big step, that you'll find your way again. Your other half will adjust to her new life and body, and there will be freedom in not having to deal with a form that doesn't fit. This is major. You have a strong love, and you'll find your way to something that makes you both happy.

As to lipstick? Really? I'm hoping this is a metaphor? Admittedly I've never been big on makeup to start with, and while some of the women I've dated have partook, it was not really something that joined us when we were spending quality time together. So goddess willing, she'll know the value of some Noxzema before hand? It's reasonable enough to want that all over the place, at least I've always thought so.

You're doing great, and I really believe better days are coming. And yes, Dr. B is, well in a word, yummy.

Montreal is one of my favorite cities, you should be in good shape, but I agree, dealing with it alone, well that is less than optimal. Mayhap you and Tasha will get to spend some time there together before heading back to the desert.

I'll be keeping you all in my heart and prayers.

Marni said...

Hi Samantha,

The lipstick I was serious about, but I was thinking about those moments when a couple may be out somewhere romantic and, you know, you start making out. I don't think I will have any of those moments.:-)

Unfortunately, Natasha is still at the center and I have returned to the states. We'll have to go back some day to enjoy the city. I saw some interesting buildings on the way out of town that I would like to have seen up close.

Thank you very much for your support. I truly believe that if Natasha has found herself, she will be more present in our lives and will enjoy it, too. That will make it all worthwhile for me.

Anonymous said...

"I truly believe that if Natasha has found herself, she will be more present in our lives and will enjoy it, too. That will make it all worthwhile for me"

Again...that awful, *if*. I cannot but notice that constant nagging doubt that seems to always be there in so many of your posts. Could it be that by ignoring that doubt, rather than examining it thoroughly, you are just hoping it will go away?

At this point, one can only hope and pray that this choice was the right choice and for the right reasons.

Marni said...

@anonymous - Your question contradicts your statement. You comment that I use "if" a lot, which implies that doubt is there and is discussed. Yet you ask why I don't examine it. Are you asking why I don't examine my doubt further? If that is the case, the I can reassure you that I examine my doubt just about every day.

My doubt exists because the future is not fact. It could be that the happiness she finds with her new femeninity may only further unmask the anger and resentment from her crappy childhood. That is certainly a strong possiblity. However, she was already in therapy for this struggle and I believe in her ability to work through it and come out better for it.

So...IF...she remains unhappy enough to remain "absent" from us, we will have issues. We will have to address them head-on in order to save our marriage. They will be issues separate from her transition and will be dealt with as such. However... IF... her transition does, indeed, bring her the happiness I expect it already has, then all will be well.

Of course I have doubts. But they are not about the need for her to transition. I have no doubt that this was the right thing for her. But as I am human and only trust that the Universe loves to throw things at me, like shoes and pidgeons, I am always on the look-out for a wrench being thown into things.

Does this response assuage your concerns?

Becca said...

I hope the recovery is going well. As for the rest - time will tell but I am sure you will both find a way through this

Becca
X

Marni said...

@Becca - Thank you very much! :)

Noelle said...

Marni,

I sigh with relief reading this because there is someone else who feels the way I do - someone else who doesn't think they can be intimate when their spouse is wearing makeup... oh, how I am going to get through this transition escapes me... but I see that you are doing it, and setting a find example for the rest of us. I wish you both the best - and I will continue following your story. (PS, I have Natasha's novel on my Kindle!)