There is something rejuvenating and therapeutic about going through a divorce. At least it was for me. While my ex-husband wanted to divorce immediately in 2014, I really wanted to wait 2 more years until the kids were out of the house. He said he couldn't wait that long. As he stated his position , I remember a strong voice in my head saying from God above, "Don't fight this. It will happen now. Do it now." As soon as we were divorced, my life starting coming together in so many ways. Sure, the kids were trying to grapple with the change, but I was finally free and it was feeling good.
I remember very clearly the need to clean and make things 'new' again. It was like trying to clean out death. When a person dies in the home, death lingers. It's color, weight, smell, and aura permeates everything and oozes into other rooms, sometimes overtaking the whole house - depending upon how long death has been visiting. It's not always a blackness - like a shadow - the color of death is different depending on the spirit. After the earthly body is removed, it takes a very long time for the residue of death to dissipate which is why we find ourselves with a strong need to clean the room and the rest of the house in its entirety. No one tells us to do it. Our souls know it must be done. Death has to be cleaned away in order for light and life to fill back into the space.
While I was legally divorced, reclaiming my life required more of me. It wasn't about being in control. I've always been the CEO of the house and the kids. After all, I managed to live more than half my life with someone who preyed upon my inherent ability to organize, multi-task, manage, and plan. In our dysfunctional marriage, I spent decades being an enabler and it was clearly disguised as being the 'glue holding everyone together'. Now that I was single and free, this journey was to be about me. Finally - me. To stop putting everyone else's needs out in front to my own detriment, to stop feeling guilty for taking time for me, to stop making excuses and feeling the need to justify myself when I needed to make a 'me' decision. It would begin with cleaning out the death of my marriage and the end of my old life.
Everything got cleaned, the walls, floors, closets, crawl spaces, the garage (and yes, Stephanie, even my lingerie drawer!), you name it - I cleaned it. It was cathartic. While I had an inflated mortgage payment, a lot of financial responsibilities, and an ex who was not taking care of his part of the divorce settlement agreement as legally required, I felt the need to splurge a hundred dollars to have someone to clean the windows of the house! It seemed odd - yet important- at the same time. My financially practical side of me battled with my spiritual side on whether or not I should incur this expense. It's been almost 15 years since they were cleaned but a hundred dollars was a lot of money! Early one morning, as I lay in bed letting the rising sun gently warm my face and brighten my room, my mother's voice came into my head. She said, "Your house needs light to help clear out the darkness that has been in this house for so long. You need to clean the windows to let as much light in as possible." She was right.
Cleaning out death and filling my house with light and love has been the best, life-changing decision I've made in a long time. The energy in the house feels lighter and more loving. There is a peacefulness that is comforting. My friends and their children even say they prefer to come to our house. Even thought it's not as big or sprawling as others' homes, they feel good vibes and energy here. I am conscientious of all energy brought into my home. I take care of cleaning out the bad energy when they leave and work hard to ensure my home is a positive, truthful, loving, light-filled home.
I cannot adequately articulate how one's life will radically change when life is led with positivity, honesty, and selflessness. It's beautiful and better than one can imagine. I am truly blessed and grateful.
While I was legally divorced, reclaiming my life required more of me. It wasn't about being in control. I've always been the CEO of the house and the kids. After all, I managed to live more than half my life with someone who preyed upon my inherent ability to organize, multi-task, manage, and plan. In our dysfunctional marriage, I spent decades being an enabler and it was clearly disguised as being the 'glue holding everyone together'. Now that I was single and free, this journey was to be about me. Finally - me. To stop putting everyone else's needs out in front to my own detriment, to stop feeling guilty for taking time for me, to stop making excuses and feeling the need to justify myself when I needed to make a 'me' decision. It would begin with cleaning out the death of my marriage and the end of my old life.
Everything got cleaned, the walls, floors, closets, crawl spaces, the garage (and yes, Stephanie, even my lingerie drawer!), you name it - I cleaned it. It was cathartic. While I had an inflated mortgage payment, a lot of financial responsibilities, and an ex who was not taking care of his part of the divorce settlement agreement as legally required, I felt the need to splurge a hundred dollars to have someone to clean the windows of the house! It seemed odd - yet important- at the same time. My financially practical side of me battled with my spiritual side on whether or not I should incur this expense. It's been almost 15 years since they were cleaned but a hundred dollars was a lot of money! Early one morning, as I lay in bed letting the rising sun gently warm my face and brighten my room, my mother's voice came into my head. She said, "Your house needs light to help clear out the darkness that has been in this house for so long. You need to clean the windows to let as much light in as possible." She was right.
Cleaning out death and filling my house with light and love has been the best, life-changing decision I've made in a long time. The energy in the house feels lighter and more loving. There is a peacefulness that is comforting. My friends and their children even say they prefer to come to our house. Even thought it's not as big or sprawling as others' homes, they feel good vibes and energy here. I am conscientious of all energy brought into my home. I take care of cleaning out the bad energy when they leave and work hard to ensure my home is a positive, truthful, loving, light-filled home.
I cannot adequately articulate how one's life will radically change when life is led with positivity, honesty, and selflessness. It's beautiful and better than one can imagine. I am truly blessed and grateful.

