THE RED CHRISTMAS BALL

 

     I wrote this blog in honor of the many betrayed spouses who experience a marital crisis that hits them hard during the holidays, especially Christmas (or Hanukkah for Jews). This is when memories loom large and emotions run high, when confronted with sad events that occured during what is supposed to be the happiest time of the year. 

     If you feel as though the Christmas season's festivities "mock" you by reminding you that you are unwanted, unloved, or forsaken, when others appear to be happy and celebrating special family times that are not the same for you, take heart. God still has a plan to redeem what's been stolen from you or broken in ways that seem too big to fix. 

     Here is my story about how the Lord has redeemed Christmas for me in ways I couldn't imagine 25 years ago.

Here is an entry dedicated to betrayed spouses who are struggling with pain through the holidays. Triggers, painful reminders need not ruin Christmas forever. There is hope for your future.

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     I remember feeling empty and sad as I met with my small women’s support group of 10 years at Christmas time. While they had their own struggles, they were not living the disaster I was experiencing.

     When they would talk about their holiday family vacations, remodeling their houses, and other such normal things, I’d be dying inside, thinking, “I don’t have a family to vacation with! Ours is torn apart! I am displaced without a home to remodel.” I felt jealous of their intact families and lives going on with only minor stressors like mine used to. As tears rolled down my cheeks, one friend just kept talking faster, hoping to help by distracting me. This only made me feel worse and more alone. Why didn’t she just ask, “What’s going on, Linda? Talk about your tears.” But no such questions came. I felt isolated in my sorrow.

     Flashing back to two Christmases earlier, after learning that my husband’s affections were attached to another woman. Terrified of losing him completely, I was such a nervous wreck, I couldn’t even find the strength to reach above my head to decorate for Christmas. I also shook all the time and hardly slept. My gracious friends helped me decorate our house for the sake of my kids and hosting an upcoming office party that included her. I remember sobbing through Amy Grant’s, “My Grownup Christmas List,” with the longing for “no more lives torn apart.”

    I share all that, also remembering that during my desperate times in prayer, the Lord kept reminding me of a Christmas card a friend of mine sent me, with a lovely, red Christmas ball enveloped in greens on the cover. This image often came to mind whenever I closed my eyes.

    At first this picture was difficult, as it harkened back to earlier memories of when my charming future husband asked me to marry him while lying on our backs on the rug in his living room as we gazed at the glistening tree lights above. That Christmas had seemed so magical. I had waited many years for the day when “my prince will come” and my dreams back then seemed to be coming true. Such remembrances only sharpened my current pain.

    After our summer wedding, I went into our first Christmas as a married couple full of anticipation. I wanted to make it a special memory for us. After a day of making a large batch of cookie dough to decorate on Christmas Eve, I was shocked when he let me know that I didn’t make the Christmas cookies “right.” I also learned that he hated my treasured rust-colored Christmas balls from Mexico that matched my former home (back when rust carpets and furniture were “in"). I felt unwelcomed and put down. That night, I hid in our bedroom, sobbing on the phone with my best friend, telling her I wished I could “run away.”

     However, over the coming years our Christmases grew sweeter as he learned to appreciate my ability to create lovely Christmas arrangements and I learned to keep our Christmas colors more traditional. Yet, each year I secretly I hung one of those rust-colored balls on the back-side of the tree as a memorial to my individuality. Looking back, I can understand why he found my out-of-date rust balls unappealing compared to typical Christmas colors of red and green. I just wish he had expressed his preferences more kindly.

     Fast forward to when our kids were in high school and college. I learned just before Thanksgiving that my beloved husband was in love with a woman at work. This lead to two years of hell that seemed to intensify at Christmas each year, tainted by his attraction for “her” and his total disdain for me. Through multiple separations and moving back in together, I was puzzled that during my tearful pleas with God to save our marriage, that little image of the lovely Red Christmas ball kept coming to mind. Why, Lord? What did it mean?

     After all, he loved me the Christmas we got engaged. And, despite the insensitivity on both our parts during our first married Christmas together, many happy Christmases had followed.

     What happened? I thought perhaps the ball-vision meant we would be happily reconciled again at Christmas, this year or the next. Instead, I was crushed to learn from a friend at a Christmas party, of all things, that my beloved husband was telling friends he planned to divorce me in the New Year. The irony was not lost on me.

     Devastated, I believed Christmas was ruined forever for me. That I would never again find the holidays a time to celebrate. But rather, a time to mourn.

     When I lived separated and alone in a small condo (in contrast to our former huge waterfront house, the bustling center of so many happy family and community activities), I searched for a tiny tree to fit in my new, smaller living space. I found a skinny, fake tree that would fit. Then when shopping at a local Christmas store called “Seasons,” I fell in love with some beautiful red balls with gold accents that I could hang on this straggly tree to brighten my living room. I purchased two dozen of them, not making the connection yet. But God was with me through those next grief-filled Christmases.

    I had no idea that three years later I would meet, date and then become engaged to a new and wonderful man who genuinely loved Jesus — at Christmas time! During our engagement, those new red Christmas balls seemed to sparkle with joy, even though I had forgotten about the prayer image of promise from years ago.

     After being remarried to this kind, faithful man for the past 20 plus years, those lovely red balls (which not only celebrate Jesus’ coming but also represent His blood at His dying) are still my favorite tree decorations. No rust colored one to be found.

     Upon reflection, these large red Christmas balls that hang on our tree each year, remind me of the prayer image of the single red ball of many years ago. I realize that God saw it all—from the beginning — through the many Christmases of my life— from the initial joy of getting engaged to the man of my dreams, during the heartbreak of betrayal through the holidays, then the Christmas nightmare of facing unwanted divorce, the comfort of God during a season of lonely Christmases, and on through to the joy of fresh love and rebuilding new dreams. Not just with Dan but many new friends, extended family, and redeemed purpose in my career.

      I hope my story can bring hope and comfort to those of you who feel betrayed and/or forsaken at this time of year. Jesus is with you during Christmases of joy, seasons of weeping, and future celebrations of renewed Hope.

      If this Christmas only seems to bring reminders of loss, hang in there. This is not the end of your story. New meaning is yet to come.

      Jesus’ name in the book of Revelation is FAITHFUL and TRUE. He will never betray, leave or forsake you. Our Christmas Messiah is rightly referred to as “God with Us” — He is with you in your past, present and future. Lean into His loving presence through the worst of times and the best of times. And hold onto the loveliness of Christmas and all that it represents — no matter your current feelings and circumstances. “This too shall pass.”