Sara Quigley - The Divorce diaries
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Funny, honest, confronting and wise, this is a bitter-sweet true story of breaking up and breaking through.
I hear youre divorced? a friend greets me.
Congratulations!
The Divorce Diaries outlines the difficult and often heartbreaking process of leaving a marriage and starting over. Sarah Quigley has garnered numerous accolades for her articles on the subject, including Columnist of the Year in the MPA Awards. Now she revisits and reconsiders the tumultuous months leading up to exiting her marriage and the equally confusing emotions that followed.
Living in a tiny rooftop apartment, surrounded by glossy millionaire neighbours, Quigley begins the process of overcoming grief and loneliness. As she takes the first tentative steps back into the world of dating, she shares both her darkest and most hilarious moments as a divorcee. Against the colourful bohemian backdrop of her adopted city, Berlin, she rediscovers the satisfaction and joys of independence.
Brave, insightful and utterly compelling
Judges on The Divorce Diaries column, MPA Awards, Columnist of the Year
If youve been through it, this ones for you
I HAD MY FIRST PANIC ATTACK on a quiet sunny morning in Berlin. It was mid-summer. The city was drowsing, baking, in the grip of a heatwave. The massive chestnut trees were heavy with leaves, the grass on the sides of Karl-Marx-Allee grew dusty and long. Bats flickered like quicksilver through the sultry evenings. Every day I sat working with my feet in a bucket of cold water.
On that particular morning, when I first woke up, I felt as if there were no air in the bedroom. I pulled back the black sheet (wed never bought curtains), flung open the window, saw the familiar ochre walls of the Babylon cinema across the street. Behind, a blue cloudless sky which suddenly, inexplicably, felt too low. It was like a lid to the world, pressing down on the trees, on the houses, and especially on me, crushing the breath out of my lungs.
I hung out the window, gasping, feeling as if I were suffocating. For half an hour I stumbled around the apartment trying to breathe: lying on the floor, standing up again, half-crying. What was happening? I had no idea. I only knew I felt close to dying.
My husband had already left for work, gone before 9 a.m., off to his large cluttered studio under the roof in a disused factory building in Kreuzberg. I grabbed my phone and quickly typed a text. Can u call, I need u.
But then, instead of hitting Send, I put down the phone and left it lying by the bed. In the living room I lay flat on the hot sticky floorboards and stared at the spines on the lower bookshelves. Art catalogues, Kunstforum, Frieze, novels, memoirs, The Paris Review: the eclectic mix of our life together. I forced myself to read every name and title, using the orderly letters to pull myself out of the engulfing panic.
You can get through this Then, more emphatically, You can get through this alone.
Gradually the pressure in my chest eased. I took some deep breaths and felt my clenched muscles starting to loosen. Rolling onto my back, I looked at the ceiling: it was normal again, no longer like the lid of a coffin. And when I glanced outside, the sky had also returned to its usual self: friendly, clear, innocuous blue, offering a wide-open day.
But still I lay there. An unwelcome equation was ticking over in my head:
At first, he was my Best Friend.
Then he became my Best Friend and my Husband combined.
Now
Now
Now he is only my Husband.
The sudden realisation that I could no longer rely on him to comfort me, to save me pushed me to my feet. I brushed my sweaty hair back and went to run a bath. Youre okay, I reassured myself, sitting on the ceramic edge and holding my hands under the stream of cool water. Youre okay. Its over now.
I lay in the half-full bath, watching the planes travelling like well-aimed arrows towards Tegel Airport. At night, you could star-watch from our bathroom window, as the Berlin sky is so unpolluted by artificial light. By day, you could see the roof of the gallery, one block away, where my husband and I had first met. Concentrate on the good things. Think about the positives. Your home, your friends, your work. But soon I realised that my face was wet not from water, but from tears.
A Friday evening, some years earlier. The central neighbourhood of Mitte, German for middle, is humming with art openings. Exhibitions in hole-in-the-wall spaces run by artists, or in glossy commercial galleries. Paintings hung in deserted petrol stations, in temporary showrooms erected hastily and illegally on overgrown parking lots, or in huge shabby apartments on Torstrasse. Girls with tattoos and stilettos. Boys with long hair and slouching attitudes. Art, sex, alcohol. Not just Friday night every night is party night if you want it to be, at this particular time, in this particular place, in the relaxed, tolerant, dirt-cheap, fringe-creative, mixed-up playground thats our Berlin.
Then I grabbed the mic and sang, Happy Birthday to Me! Can you believe it? Veronica is telling me about her recent breakdown back home in Los Angeles. My husband took me off stage and straight to hospital. And later he brought me to Berlin. She looks at me earnestly with her forget-me-not-blue eyes. Hes my white knight.
White knight. A phrase to raise feminist hackles but tonight it just makes me feel wistful and warm. I go inside for drinks. The sculptures are being ignored in favour of social interaction. Sometimes art in Berlin seems like nothing more than the centre of the word pARTy. Everyones lounging and chatting on windowsills, drinking copious amounts of tepid beer out of squishy plastic cups.
A large black-clad body collides with me. Entschuldigung, sorry! Its the son of a famous art publishing magnate and the gallerist to boot. Somewhat strangely, considering his job is appraising art, hes almost completely blind. Oh, its you, Sarah! Do you know He turns, almost knocking over a plinth holding a Chinese vase thats been deliberately smashed and glued back together, and grabs the arm of a man with glossy brown shoulder-length hair. Do you two know each other? If not, you should.
I stick out my hand automatically and then retract it again. Sorry! Ive been in Germany too long!
The man laughs, revealing a flash of silver tooth. We dont shake hands back in Sweden. Were a country of huggers.
Really? So are New Zealanders. We hug on sight. Hugging is like a national OCD.
Hes wearing a dark-blue T-shirt and has startlingly clear, light-blue eyes. His cheeks are rosy, his forearms tanned. We call this a labourers tan, he says when I comment on it. He pulls up his sleeve to reveal a much whiter bicep. I was working on a friends boat for the past month. Taking a break from making art.
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