Early Marriage | Part 5
by Elouise
Today I’m taking a short break and a deep breath. When I began this series on Early Marriage, I wasn’t sure I would survive writing these posts. That may be a bit over the top. Nonetheless….
Writing about Courtship and Engagement was a lark. Fun, with hardly any anxiety. But this is different. It’s more difficult to find the right words, partly because I’ve kept the truth hidden for so long. But also because words convey more than facts.
When I think about my past, there are any number of Elouises in my life. Each has a different age and outlook on life and what it means to be who I am. In a way, writing these posts means getting to know myself again. Almost as though I were a stranger to myself.
For years I was hard on myself. Even harsh. My self-talk was along the lines of “You stupid so-and-so (fill in the blank)!” I didn’t know what it meant to be an ally. Not just for other people, but for myself over against my inner critic.
Writing about my past is about more than simply ‘telling the truth’ about myself. It’s also about how I now perceive myself back then. Am I still my own worst critic? Or might I be changing into my own best ally, or at least making progress in that direction.
It seems this is connected to the way I write about my past self. Am I writing in a way that welcomes and has compassion on myself back then? I don’t need to justify myself; I do, however, need and want to empathize with myself in the past.
Is it possible for me to become the ally I didn’t have back then? Can I talk with that girl or that young married woman and let her know I’m standing with her?
I’m not talking about a general ‘wouldn’t-it-be-nice’ need to become my own ally. I’m talking about immersing myself in the specifics of each post and actually empathizing with the child or young woman I was then. What would I say and do if I saw her today? And what tone of voice would I use?
This is already happening. How do I know? I don’t feel the shame and embarrassment I used to feel when I write. I still struggle with some of it, but I also feel empathy and compassion for the woman, teenager or child I was then. Sometimes I have conversations with myself in my head, telling myself what I desperately needed to hear back then.
I’m not saying this makes everything wonderful and OK. It doesn’t. Instead, it puts me at ease, no matter what age I might be remembering. It’s OK. I can tell that girl or young married woman that I’m present, and I’m on her side.
This includes standing up for myself right now. It’s strange to describe an inner world that only I experienced, while my outer world often seemed to be totally functional. I can’t point to readily visible damage that would ‘explain’ or make acceptable the level of dysfunction within me.
I can, however, stand calmly and confidently with myself, even when others don’t understand what I’m pointing to, or why it was disruptive and damaging in my life. I don’t need to prove anything. I need to find the best words I can to describe my inner world, and to comfort the young woman or small child who already lived through it all.
I’m grateful for the opportunity to write in this way, especially at this time of my life. Somewhere back there and in ‘here’ a little girl or young married woman is laughing and crying a bit. I think she’s overjoyed because I finally found and acknowledged her.
© Elouise Renich Fraser, 29 April 2015

Love that pic, elouise!
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Thanks, Kev. I think I was 9 or 10. Sister #4 had probably just arrived! Time flies….
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I love looking at old photos. 😀 Yes it sure does, I often find myself wondering where it all went. 😀
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Dear Elouise, Why? I am not saying it is wrong but I am just positing an idea. Is it necessary to try and come to terms with your younger self. For whose purpose do you do it. In my case I can sit down and look at all the stupid mistakes I made and all the stupid mistakes I repeated, but what value is it? It would be arrogance supreme to plagiarise Matthew 6 34 but can I put it this way “Take therefore no thought for yesterday: for yesterday shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto today are the problems thereof.
And if you wrote that I’d probably have a very clever comeback.
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Dear John, Thanks for your comments and good questions. I do this for myself and for the people with whom I relate. Not just in my family, but generally. When I have contempt for myself (as I have for much of my life), I project it out onto other people. If I can’t have compassion on myself, I won’t have compassion on others, including those who may wish to harm me. That doesn’t mean I excuse them. I don’t. It means I don’t judge them. I might distance them because they aren’t safe, but that’s different.
Am I unusual? I don’t think so. In fact, I learned this in my 12-step work. If I can’t befriend myself, I won’t be able to relate well with others. For me, the answer hasn’t been so much about looking at my mistakes, but asking why I’m making them. This is different than dealing with the daily problems of what I’ll eat, drink or wear in order to survive. It’s more about acknowledging my broken humanity and the reality that I’ve passed bits and pieces of that along to others. Often to the very people I love most. For me it’s rooted in a deep need to be right (in order to stay out of trouble!). Good motive, impossible standard (being right all the time).
I’m not saying everyone needs to do this. I do think, however, that any person holding office or a position of leadership needs to do this kind of ‘homework.’ Otherwise, their family, their students, members of their congregations, the people being served and others will pay a price. In my experience, what I don’t attend to comes back to haunt me, not just the next generation. And of course the work is never done! Which actually takes the pressure off my back, believe it or not.
Elouise
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OK, a very acceptable explanation.
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Thanks, John. 🙂
Have a great day!
Or is it night already?
Elouise
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It’s night. I always have the following page open on a tag and flip to it whenever someone outside Aust. Comments.
http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/sunearth.html
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I figured it was at least evening, if not actually dark yet. I’m going to check out that intriguing link you sent. Thanks!
Elouise
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OK. I just checked it. It’s awesome! I often check time of day (anywhere) online, but I’ve never seen this site.
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