We gave it all we hadā¦.
The first thing that comes to mind is us standing in the line at the pharmacy. We had both done this before but never together. This was a first for us. Little did we both know that this was one of the last times we would see each other. I am not sure if I would have said or done anything different in retrospect. My ticket number flashed on the screen and I approached the counter. We had come together but only one of us would bare the shame of asking for emergency contraceptives. He was there to āsupportā me. I would have preferred to go alone but he had INSISTED. Randomly asking questions and trying to empathise. It was a strange feeling. Half of him afraid that I would lie about taking them and trap him with a child. The other half of him was afraid to tell me he didnāt love me enough to imagine a child or a family with me. Whatever it was, I felt it. His discomfort was clear.
We had both made a mistake the night before but only one of us was responsible for me not falling pregnant. I realise now that it bothered him that I was so decisive about it. I didnāt lament about having his baby and the joy it could possibly bring. I have always been on the fence about children but with him it was definite no. He had this expression on his face the whole time. As if to say āyou should want my babyā. The āyou should romanticize the possibility of a child with meā face. I was doing what I wanted, when I wanted, with no one to worry about and I didnāt want that to change. I didnāt want my life to change because of him and a moment of weakness (if ever I have children it will be because I want them, not because I had a reckless night of passion). Itās not selfish, its self-love and its survival. I learnt that day that I didnāt want to be with someone who looked at me through a sinister lens. Someone who thought I was capable of the worst, who didnāt let their wound breathe but instead kept it a secret and then let it control them. Someone intent on being sick to garner attention, someone who didnāt understand that I would always love myself no matter how much I gaveā¦I simply didnāt want that for myself.
Hi! I am Amo Elle, a serial runaway with deep seeded fears of commitment and rejection. I also have a strange thing with control but thatās for another day.
After the trip to the pharmacy. Many moons later, post breakup and a meet cute in conversation with My Muse for the Season. He highlighted that some relationships fail. Although many of us never like to imagine ourselves as failures in any form there are moments in all our lives where we have FAILEDā¦.but what is failure really? Like really really, what is failure? Google says its ālack of success.ā Or āthe neglect or omission of expected or required action.ā However in the context of the long lesson that is life can relationships actually fail? I ask myself this because if so then my only successful relationships are with friends and I have never had a successful relationship because they all ended. What is really baking my noggin is there is no real answer for what a successful relationship looks like. Does the mere fact that a relationship ended mean it was a failure? Does it devalue the experience, was it all for naught? It's not like anything else where at the end of an experience you get a marker for completion. A certificate for school, a medal for a race, hell in some sports you get a participation trophy. That is simply not the case with relationships. You get heart ache and a new version of yourself after all is said and done. That makes me wonder even more if we were looking in the wrong direction hoping to see the sun rise in the same place it set.
What if, instead of happily ever after you and this person were just meant to get where you got? What if, the perspective you have chosen is the wrong oneā¦..what if just because you donāt like it, it doesnāt mean it's not where you were meant to be? What if the success story is just that you got to give love and receive it and thatās all it was meant to be versus this happily ever after?
Letās keep this in mind but letās also open this door that most people donāt want to. Letās address why we feel we have failed when something no longer serves us. Letās talk about how we are sold the notion that you need to stick it out to make it work and if it doesnāt work there is something wrong with you. Letās talk about it! Why do we want to hinge points in our lives especially in our romantic lives on whether someone could or couldnāt weather the storm with us? Is it failure if the journey still served us?
I would argue it feels like failure because you may have not forgiven yourself for the way things worked out. Forgiveness as we have learned so eloquently phrased by Ms Oprah Winfrey herself: āis giving up the hope that the past could have been any different, it's accepting the past for what it was, and using this moment and this time to help yourself move forward.ā So I ask you, have you forgiven yourself for loving someone who didnāt love you back, for being emotionally abusive, for staying when you should have left, for letting past traumas inform current decisions, for holding back, for wanting to prove something to someone who was intent on misunderstanding you? Have you forgiven yourself for not giving the best version of yourself because you didnāt know how? Have you forgiven yourself?
Granted, some relationships arenāt meant to work out and some are. What I have realised and what is true for me is that relationships cannot be held to a standard of success or failure because there are no pass marks. It's just you trying to achieve your ultimate goal of giving and receiving love in a healthy manner that grows you. If two people are in a relationship that doesnāt satisfy them but they stay together, have a family and ultimately die still together was the relationship successful? Were they honoring themselves? The same if two people who love each other canāt make it work past a certain point because of their personalities, was their relationship not successful simply because they were aware it wasnāt going to work?
I have been in a number of relationships and after each one comes to an end I mourn the loss, put the hopes to bed and find something new to fixate on. Never in my life, never not never a day in my life did I ever feel like my relationships failed. I always felt like thatās ALWAYS what it was meant to be and there wasnāt meant to be more. I take the lessons introspect and emerge a better version of myself, knowing more about my needs and non-negotiables. Isn't that what relationships are about?
This was just meant to make you think about your growth and what you define as success and failure in relationships. Iām not saying wear your heart on your sleeve, I am saying fill the pages of the book of your life and every so often, read your book! You have grown and therein lies the beauty. Iāve taken a long long road to say, you make the rules in your life and relationships and if it makes you happy, you donāt owe anyone an explanation. Whether you view it as success and failure doesn't matterā¦.whether you are happy doing it does!
Bisouā¦Bisou













