Opening The Box
Issue No. 4 - Birthday in the Park (Narrated)
Welcome to this Sunday’s issue of Opening The Box.
Today, I touched another poem. Just a short one, but filled with the visceral reality of my relationship with Rob.
I try to remember, unsuccessfully, when we actually had a meal in a restaurant. As I recall, there were no such things. No vacation weekends. No extravagant experiences.
Just presence.
Just us.
We treasured each moment together for the gift it was, never wishing to share even a breath with another living soul. Even ordering food took away heartbeats we could’ve spent in conversation. So we met quietly, bringing small offerings: flavored seltzer, a surprise treat, something handpicked and thoughtful.
When it was possible, we met at a neighborhood park — lush green grass underfoot, red maples, beech, and white pines displaying the seasons. A waterfall gurgled nearby. Sunshine — plenty of sunshine — followed us on walks. Few people gathered there, which suited us just fine.
The year we were together, we celebrated my birthday in that park.
Later, he would write this:
Was a cool shadow passing
On the lover’s waterfall that noon.
Words and gifts and touches exchanged,
It was over much too soon.A birthday in the park
Beneath the October leaves.
Hidden in a separate place
Safe within the trees.Mary, I have been catapulted by you into a new existence and I hunger for it. Yet I am tied, for now. And yes I would find relief in the end of my marriage. These past several months I have pictured myself as a great divorced father.
I have rehearsed what I would say to Sam and Justin, and how hard I would work to fill their lives. I figure Deanna will just have to hate me or understand.
And I can do it! What stops me? I have fantasized more about leaving my family than I have about leaving you. I want you that much. I try not to get critical of myself for this because I know I’m exploring my options. But deep, deep down inside I know I am capable of it — and all it takes is a simple statement: ‘It’s over.’
Right now, unless I go berserk, I’m not capable of saying this — to you or to my family.
So what can we do?
If you want to stay with your family, I will help.
If you want to stay with me, I will help.
If you want to leave me, I will help.
If you want to leave your family, I will not help.I don’t want us to end.
I don’t want us to end until one of us can’t — or won’t — do it. “It” meaning cope; maintain our balance; stay whole; find the fulfillment we had in our lives before us.
I’m discovering so many things in these letters — things that remind me of the desperation we both felt, the belief that our choices might devastate the people around us.
I’ve spoken before about Daniel, my third husband, whom I was married to for 32 years.
But in the time I was with Rob, I was married to Tim.
Tim and I had also begun in an affair. That decision had already ended his first marriage.
I know — it’s tough to keep up.
My relationship with Rob convinced me that my marriage to Tim was over.
But I struggled — hard — almost entirely because of his two daughters. They were precious to me, and they had already been through one divorce. Now here I was, staring down another.
If I’m honest, I married Tim out of guilt.
I knew from the start I wouldn’t be happy. But I had a demanding career, and we were anchored by time with his daughters. That was the part I loved most. It held us together for six years.
I desperately didn’t want to hurt them. And I knew I would.
So: unhappy marriage. Two stepdaughters.
An affair with Rob — whose very thought sent me into ecstasy.
And a challenging job.
It was, in hindsight, the emotional cocktail of a nutcase. And I was the bartender.
I don’t have any of the letters I wrote to Rob. I have no idea whether he, too, kept a box. Maybe locked, maybe hidden. Maybe long gone.
So I must rely on a faulty memory — along with all my other faults.
I don’t recall asking Rob to leave Deanna.
I knew he loved her.
They were college sweethearts. She was his first. Before me, the only one. That kind of connection deserved his full decision, and I respected that. I trusted him to choose whatever was right.
I could be mistaken. Maybe I did beg. Maybe I got down on my knees and pleaded with him to leave her.
But I don’t think so.
He struggled enough with himself.
All in all, it was a very confusing time — punctuated by relentless anxiety, uncertainty about the future, and tests of our own personal sanity.
Sounds like a walk in the park.
Happy Birthday.
Actually… it was a beautiful birthday. Because every moment in his company was a gift.
I’ve described a confluence of things that led to the tension — the anxiety, the grief, the hard-earned joy.
When have you experienced a set of circumstances that felt like everything was raining buckets of emotion — good or bad?
A wedding is one example. That’s why they make so many movies about them.
Getting married is easy.
Staying married is very, very hard.
💬 Reply to this post and let me know your story.
When have you felt the emotional weather of everything at once?
As always —
Finite Heartbeats. Infinite Possibilities.




“We brought small offerings.” That line won’t leave me.
This whole piece is a study in ache and stillness, like the park itself—safe, but edged with everything unspoken.
You told it without judgement, which somehow made it all the more human. All the more true.
Thank you for letting us walk with you through that October light.