I am a very sentimental person. When I was a kid I made scrapbooks from those old “magnetic” photo albums, which contained everything from concert tickets, to cards people gave my mother when I was born. I think there are even some dried flowers still clinging to a few of the pages. All of these books are still stored in my house and have moved everywhere I have. I also have bins full of old letters and photographs, cards and other paper keepsakes. I assume the same penchant I have for saving things is why I love to write about my life and ultimately why I became a blogger/writer.
I mention my sentimentality because though I see it as a good trait, it can also be to my demise. That is, my emotional demise. It’s especially hard for sentimental people to go through a divorce. Suddenly, all those keepsakes from your years together feel tainted in some way. It feels like they should be thrown out and discarded, as if that time of our life never happened. However, it is hard to completely discount so many years of your life and the events during that time, such as the birth of children, other celebrations and travels. It also doesn’t help that Facebook has a “Memories” section. It’s difficult for someone like me to to go back and delete all those photos.
Even though I am remarried, I have kept most of the stuff from my first marriage, mostly so my kids can have these items if they want, and see there were good memories. Honestly, I have never taken the time to separate and decide on each and every photograph or paper memory. When I have come across them, I have simply stuck them lower or farther back in the box. It hurts my heart to think of throwing them away, but I also cannot really think of a reason to keep them all. Looking back on that time in my life is fine in regards to my children, and our marriage wasn’t a complete disaster, it just wasn’t ever going to be for the long haul.
I also received several gifts from my ex husband over the years. An item I kept and probably will continue to, is a pair of diamond earrings. He gave them to me shortly before we split. I told some friends the other day how I consider them a “parting gift”. I believe he gave them to me in good faith at the time because he knew I would enjoy them. The only thing is, someone I am no longer with gave them to me and yes, is seems a little strange. Because he wasn’t just a boyfriend, he was my husband and we had three kids and many years together. One friend suggested I trade them in. My response was, “for the same thing?” Maybe trading them out would be a good thing but is it really worth it?
Is it okay to be reminded of my ex husband every now again? I mean, I don’t hate him. I just don’t like him very much anymore. For the sake of moving on and away, should the earrings go away too? I think the only reason I would do so was if my husband now were offended by them, and last I checked he is not. Would I care if he wore a watch his ex wife gave him (he would never, by the way)? I don’t think so, as long as he saw it as just a watch.
So, if I can label the earrings as “The Earrings of Indifference”, it is not a big deal to still decorate my ears with them. I can view them as the small, hard rocks they are and be fine with it. In the end, does it really matter who they came from? They were a birthday present and I continue to celebrate that every year…
The past photos and other keepsakes are what they are. They represent a part of my story I cannot completely deny, but which has been written and put away in the archives. My sentimental self will remember them occasionally because I just cannot help it. However, my focus now is on my current love and the family we have built together, making new memories and cherishing them all the more.
Christy says
All of those keepsakes will be important to your children, as it’s a part of their history as well. Your daughter will love to one day have the earrings given to her mother by her father and likely all of them will enjoy seeing photos of their parents together in happy times. Our past is our past, and you can’t change that by getting rid of memories of it. I have several jewelry pieces given to me by a former long-time boyfriend, and I still wear them.
Cheryl says
I’d keep the earrings. They were given in good faith, and meant to celebrate you, which you feel they do, so keep them. COVID-19 made it easy for me to stop wearing my wedding ring, as I mainly wore it when I left the house. I’m excited to think about what I’ll wear next instead.
Melisa says
YES. I love this so much! I like your outlook on all of this and it’s important for your kids that you don’t “burn it all to the ground.”
Melisa recently posted…Always Learning, Sometimes Annoyingly.
Andrea Eisen says
I have all the things. Not every single memory or moment, and I don’t have “earrings,” but I have the photos and the cards, if there were any, and things I’d like my daughter to someday have – or at least see. As a reminder.
I think I have one ring, from my first Mother’s Day. With her birthstone. I couldn’t get rid of that – it’s more her than it is him. I love this. Thank you for sharing. xo
Andrea Eisen recently posted…Signs.
Karen says
It’s a very mature way to look at things. I am a pack rat, I keep everything and I have lots of keepsakes-so many “things”. But that’s what they are, things, it’s what importance (or lack of) that we place on them in our minds. I’m glad you’re keeping them.
Angela says
I think it’s a beautiful way to look at them (a parting gift), and if you love them, keeping them makes sense! All of those things made up different parts of your life, and I am sure your kids will appreciate the opportunity to sift through tangible memories at different times.
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