This is more manipulative bullshit. Recognize it for what it is.
I read stories here of people’s waywards that truly come to see that they, the wayward, are the offender. I envy those people, my wife is nowhere close and I predict will never get there in this lifetime. So that means that I will be the villian in her story and for those who chose to listen to her. That robs me of a piece of resolution in this shit show, but I just have to let it go and let her live in her delusional version of reality. Their manipulative fantasies cannot be allowed to chain us to their chaos.
I talk a lot about The Great Divorce by CS Lewis, and I’m going to quote a longish passage of it here, chapters 12 and most of 13. It’s not a very long book, I recommend you read it, it has immense wisdom in sorting such things out.
THE REASON why I asked if there were another river was this. All down one long aisle of the
forest the under-sides of the leafy branches had begun to tremble with dancing light; and on earth I
knew nothing so likely to produce this appearance as the reflected lights cast upward by moving
water. A few moments later I realised my mistake. Some kind of procession was approaching us,
and the light came from the persons who composed it.
First came bright Spirits, not the Spirits of men, who danced and scattered flowers-soundlessly
falling, lightly drifting flowers, though by the standards of the ghost-world each petal would have
weighed a hundred-weight and their fall would have been like the crashing of boulders. Then, on
the left and right, at each side of the forest avenue, came youthful shapes, boys upon one hand, and
girls upon the other. If I could remember their singing and write down the notes, no man who read
that score would ever grow sick or old. Between them went musicians: and after these a lady in
whose honour all this was being done.
I cannot now remember whether she was naked or clothed. If she were naked, then it must have
been the almost visible penumbra of her courtesy and joy which produces in my memory the
illusion of a great and shining train that followed her across the happy grass. If she were clothed,
then the illusion of nakedness is doubtless due to the clarity with which her inmost spirit shone
through the clothes. For clothes in that country are not a disguise: the spiritual body lives along
each thread and turns them into living organs. A robe or a crown is there as much one of the
wearer's features as a lip or an eye.
But I have forgotten. And only partly do I remember the unbearable beauty of her face.
"Is it? ... is it?" I whispered to my guide.
"Not at all," said he. "It's someone ye'll never have heard of. Her name on earth was Sarah Smith
and she lived at Golders Green."
"She seems to be ... well, a person of particular importance?"
"Aye. She is one of the great ones. Ye have heard that fame in this country and fame on Earth are
two quite different things."
"And who are these gigantic people . . . look! They're like emeralds . . . who are dancing and
throwing flowers before her?"
"Haven't ye read your Milton? A thousand livened angels lackey her,"
"And who are all these young men and women on each side?"
"They are her sons and daughters." "She must have had a very large family, Sir." "Every young
man or boy that met her became her son-even if it was only the boy that brought the meat to her
back door. Every girl that met her was her daughter."
"Isn't that a bit hard on their own parents?" "No. There are those that steal other people's children.
But her motherhood was of a different kind. Those on whom it fell went back to their natural
parents loving them more. Few men looked on her without becoming, in a certain fashion, her
lovers. But it was the kind of love that made them not less true, but truer, to their own wives."
"And how ... but hullo! What are all these animals? A cat-two cats-dozens of cats. And all those
dogs . . . why, I can't count them. And the birds. And the horses." "They are her beasts." "Did she
keep a sort of zoo? I mean, this is a bit too much."
"Every beast and bird that came near her had its place in her love. In her they became themselves.
And now the abundance of life she has in Christ from the Father flows over into them." I looked at
my Teacher in amazement. "Yes," he said. "It is like when you throw a stone into a pool, and the
concentric waves spread out further and further. Who knows where it will end? Redeemed
humanity is still young, it has hardly come to its full strength.
But already there is joy enough in the little finger of a great saint such as yonder lady to waken all
the dead things of the universe into life."
While we spoke the Lady was steadily advancing towards us, but it was not at us she looked.
Following the direction of her eyes, I turned and saw an oddly-shaped phantom approaching. Or
rather two phantoms: a great tall Ghost, horribly thin and shaky, who seemed to be leading on a
chain another Ghost no bigger than an organ-grinder's monkey. The taller Ghost wore a soft black
hat, and he reminded me of something that my memory could not quite recover. Then, when he had
come within a few feet of the Lady he spread out his lean, shaky hand flat on his chest with the
fingers wide apart, and exclaimed in a hollow voice, "At last!" All at once I realised what it was
that he had put me in mind of. He was like a seedy actor of the old school.
"Darling! At last!" said the Lady. "Good
Heavens!" thought I. "Surely she can't-,"
and then I noticed two things. In the first place, I noticed that the little Ghost was not being led by
the big one. It was the dwarfish figure that held the chain in its hand and the theatrical figure that
wore the collar round its neck. In the second place, I noticed that the Lady was looking solely at the
dwarf Ghost. She seemed to think it was the Dwarf who had addressed her, or else she was
deliberately ignoring the other. On the poor dwarf she turned her eyes. Love shone not from her
face only, but from all her limbs, as if it were some liquid in which she had just been bathing. Then,
to my dismay she came nearer. She stooped down and kissed the Dwarf. It made one shudder to see
her in such close contact with that cold, damp, shrunken thing. But she did not shudder.
"Frank," she said, "before anything else, forgive me. For all I ever did wrong and for all I did not do
right since the first day we met, I ask your pardon."
I looked properly at the Dwarf for the first time now: or perhaps, when he received her kiss he
became a little more visible. One could just make out the sort of face he must have had when he
was a man: a little, oval, freckled face with a weak chin and a tiny wisp of unsuccessful moustache.
He gave her a glance, not a full look. He was watching the Tragedian out of the corner of his eyes.
Then he gave a jerk to the chain: and it was the Tragedian, not he, who answered the Lady.
"There, there," said the Tragedian. "We'll say no more about it. We all make mistakes." With the
words there came over his features a ghastly contortion which, I think, was meant for an
indulgently plavful smile. "We'll say no more," he continued. "It's not myself I'm thinking about. It
is you. That is what has been continually on my mind-all these vears. The thought of you-you here
alone, breaking your heart about me."
"But now," said the Lady to the Dwarf, "you can set all that aside. Never think like that again. It is
all over."
Her beauty brightened so that I could hardly see anything else, and under that sweet compulsion the
Dwarf really looked at her for the first time. For a second I thought he was growing more like a
man. He opened his mouth. He himself was going to speak this time. But oh, the disappointment
when the words came!
"You missed me?" he croaked in a small, bleating voice.
Yet even then she was not taken aback. Still the love and courtesy flowed from her.
"Dear, you will understand about that very soon," she said. "But to-day-."
What happened next gave me a shock. The Dwarf and the Tragedian spoke in unison, not to her but
to one another. "You'll notice," they warned one another, "she hasn't answered our question." I
realised then that they were one person, or rather that both were the remains of what had once been
a person. The Dwarf again rattled the chain.
"You missed me?" said the Tragedian to the Lady, throwing a dreadful theatrical tremor into his
voice.
"Dear friend," said the Lady, still attending exclusively to the Dwarf, "you may be happy about that
and about everything else. Forget all about it for ever."
And really, for a moment, I thought the Dwarf was going to obey: partly because the outlines of his
face became a little clearer, and partly because the invitation to all joy, singing out of her whole
being like a bird's song on an April evening, seemed to me such that no creature could resist it.
Then he hesitated. And then-once more he and his accomplice spoke in unison.
"Of course it would be rather fine and magnanimous not to press the point," they said to one
another. "But can we be sure she'd notice? We've done these sort of things before. There was the
time we let her have the last stamp in the house to write to her mother and said nothing although
she had known we wanted to write a letter ourself. We'd thought she'd remember and see how
unselfish we'd been. But she never did. And there was the time . . . oh, lots and lots of times!" So
the Dwarf gave a shake to the chain and-.
"I can't forget it," cried the Tragedian. "And I won't forget it, either. I could forgive them all they've
done to me. But for your miseries-."
"Oh, don't you understand?" said the Lady. "There are no miseries here."
"Do you mean to say," answered the Dwarf, as if this new idea had made him quite forget the
Tragedian for a moment, "do you mean to say you've been happy?"
"Didn't you want me to be? But no matter. Want it now. Or don't think about it at all."
The Dwarf blinked at her. One could see an unheard-of idea trying to enter his little mind: one
could see even that there was for him some sweetness in it. For a second he had almost let the chain
go: then, as if it were his life-line, he clutched it once more.
"Look here," said the Tragedian. "We've got to face this." He was using his "manly" bullying tone
this time: the one for bringing women to their senses.
"Darling," said the Lady to the Dwarf, "there's nothing to face. You don't want me to have been
miserable for misery's sake. You only think I must have been if I loved you. But if you'll only wait
you'll see that isn't so."
"Love!" said the Tragedian striking his forehead with his hand: then, a few notes deeper, "Love! Do
you know the meaning of the word?"
"How should I not?" said the Lady. "I am in love. In love, do you understand? Yes, now I love
truly."
"You mean," said the Tragedian, "you mean -you did not love me truly in the old days?"
"Only in a poor sort of way," she answered. "I have asked you to forgive me. There was a little real
love in it. But what we called love down there was mostly the craving to be loved. In the main I
loved you for my own sake: because I needed you."
"And now!" said the Tragedian with a hackneyed gesture of despair. "Now, you need me no more?"
"But of course not!" said the Lady; and her smile made me wonder how both the phantoms could
refrain from crying out with joy.
"What needs could I have," she said, "now that I have all? I am full now, not empty. I am in Love
Himself, not lonely. Strong, not weak. You shall be the same. Come and see. We shall have no
need for one another now: we can begin to love truly."
But the Tragedian was still striking attitudes.
"She needs me no more-no more. No more/' he said in a choking voice to no one in particular.
"Would to God," he continued, but he was now pronouncing it Gud-"Would to God I had seen her
lying dead at my feet before I heard those words. Lying dead at my feet. Lying dead at my feet."
I do not know how long the creature intended to go on repeating the phrase, for the Lady put an end
to that. "Frank! Frank!" she cried in a voice that made the whole wood ring. "Look at me. Look at
me. What are you doing with that great, ugly doll? Let go of the chain. Send it away. It is you I
want. Don't you see what nonsense it's talking?" Merriment danced in her eyes. She was sharing a
joke with the Dwarf, right over the head of the Tragedian. Something not at all unlike a smile
struggled to appear on the Dwarfs face. For he was looking at her now. Her laughter was past his
first defences. He was struggling hard to keep it out, but already with imperfect success. Against
his will, he was even growing a little bigger. "Oh, you great goose," said she. "What is the good of
talking like that here? You know as well as I do that you did see me lying dead years and years ago.
Not 'at your feet,' of course, but on a bed in a nursing home. A very good nursing home it was too.
Matron would never have dreamed of leaving bodies lying about the floor! It's ridiculous for that
doll to try to be impressive about death here. It just won't work."
13 .
I DO not know that I ever saw anything more terrible than the struggle of that Dwarf Ghost against
joy. For he had almost been overcome. Somewhere, incalculable ages ago, there must have been
gleams of humour and reason in him. For one moment, while she looked at him in her love and
mirth, he saw the absurdity of the Tragedian. For one moment he did not at all misunderstand her
laughter: he too must once have known that no people find each other more absurd than lovers. But
the light that reached him, reached him against his will. This was not the meeting he had pictured;
he would not accept it. Once more he clutched at his death-line, and at once the Tragedian spoke.
"You dare to laugh at it!" it stormed. "To my face? And this is my reward. Very well. It is fortunate
that you give yourself no concern about my fate. Otherwise you might be sorry afterwards to think
that you had driven me back to Hell. What? Do you think I'd stay now? Thank you. I believe I'm
fairly quick at recognising where I'm not wanted. 'Not needed' was the exact expression, if I
remember rightly."
From this time on the Dwarf never spoke again: but still the Lady addressed it.
"Dear, no one sends you back. Here is all joy. Everything bids you stay." But the Dwarf was
growing smaller even while she spoke.
"Yes," said the Tragedian. "On terms you might offer to a dog. I happen to have some self-respect
left, and I see that my going will make no difference to you. It is nothing to you that I go back to
the cold and the gloom, the lonely, lonely streets-."
"Don't, don't Frank," said the Lady. "Don't let it talk like that." But the Dwarf was now so small
that she had dropped on her knees to speak to it. The Tragedian caught her words greedily as a dog
catches a bone.
"Ah, you can't bear to hear it!" he shouted with miserable triumph. "That was always the way. You
must be sheltered. Grim realities must be kept out of your sight. You who can be happy without
me, forgetting me! You don't want even to hear of my sufferings. You say, don't. Don't tell you.
Don't make you unhappy. Don't break in on your sheltered, self-centred little heaven. And this is
the reward-."
She stooped still lower to speak to the Dwarf which was now a figure no bigger than a kitten,
hanging on to the end of the chain with his feet off the ground.
"That wasn't why I said. Don't," she answered. "I meant, stop acting. It's no good. He is killing you.
Let go of that chain. Even now."
"Acting," screamed the Tragedian. "What do you mean?"
The Dwarf was now so small that I could not distinguish him from the chain to which he was
clinging. And now for the first time I could not be certain whether the Lady was addressing him or
the Tragedian.
"Quick," she said. "There is still time. Stop it. Stop it at once."
"Stop what?"
"Using pity, other people's pity, in the wrong way. We have all done it a bit on earth, you know.
Pity was meant to be a spur that drives joy to help misery. But it can be used the wrong way round.
It can be used for a kind of blackmailing. Those who choose misery can hold joy up to ransom, by
pity. You see, I know now. Even as a child you did it. Instead of saying you were sorry, you went
and sulked in the attic . . . because vou knew that sooner or later one of your sisters would say, 'I
can't bear to think of him sitting up there alone, crying.' You used your pity to blackmail them, and
they gave in in the end. And afterwards, when we were married . . . oh, it doesn't matter, if only you
will stop it."
"And that," said the Tragedian, "that is all you have understood of me, after all these years." I don't
know what had become of the Dwarf Ghost by now. Perhaps it was climbing up the chain like an
insect: perhaps it was somehow absorbed into the chain.
"No, Frank, not here," said the Lady. "Listen to reason. Did you think joy was created to live
always under that threat? Always defenceless against those who would rather be miserable than
have their self-will crossed? For it was real misery. I know that now. You made yourself really
wretched. That you can still do. But you can no longer communicate your wretchedness.
Everything becomes more and more itself. Here is joy that cannot be shaken. Our light can swallow
up your darkness: but your darkness cannot now infect our light. No, no, no. Come to us. We will
not go to you. Can you really have thought that love and joy would always be at the mercy of
frowns and sighs? Did you not know they were stronger than their opposites?"
"Love? How dare you use that sacred word?" said the Tragedian. At the same moment he gathered
up the chain which had now for some time been swinging uselessly at his side, and somehow
disposed of it. I am not quite sure, but I think he swallowed it. Then for the first time it became
clear that the Lady saw and addressed him only.
"Where is Frank?" she said. "And who are you, Sir? I never knew you. Perhaps you had better
leave me. Or stay, if you prefer. If it would help you and if it were possible I would go down with
you into Hell: but you cannot bring Hell into me."
"You do not love me," said the Tragedian in a thin bat-like voice: and he was now very difficult to
see.
"I cannot love a lie," said the Lady. "I cannot love the thing which is not. I am in Love, and out of it
I will not go."