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How Old News Can Affect Us Today

By Ann Richardson December 25, 2022 Family

A charming married man in his early 40s, a father of three, has a two-year affair with his young secretary.

So, what’s new? It happens every day. Indeed, it is an old, old story.

What is new is that it was my father. I was in my early teens at the time and the secretary, herself in her early 20s, was a frequent visitor to our house. This was ostensibly because she was far from her own home in Australia, but of course, there was undoubtedly another reason.

I knew my father was very impressed with this woman, as he told me that she had had no college education, but could recite long passages of poetry, including Shakespeare. He was trying to help her to move from a secretarial to an administrative position.

The affair only stopped when my mother found out. Evidently, she offered him a divorce, but he decided to stay with her and us children. To the great heartbreak of the writer. Again, a very old story.

And I found out 60 years later. When everyone has long died.

How I Learned This News

You may well ask how I came to learn of this affair so many years after. The simple answer is that the woman kept a diary.

Some years after the affair, she became a novelist (as well as a writer of non-fiction). And she was a good enough novelist – some say a brilliant one – that now, after her death, a professor has written her biography. It is gaining very good reviews and considerable attention.

And the diary was, of course, a wonderful source about her life and thoughts. Leading to my father.

Life lesson from the above – don’t have an affair with a writer. They tend to love writing things down.

Our Many Inner Selves

We may be 60 or 70 or, in my case, 80. It doesn’t matter. Inside this older woman is the little girl of five, the teenager of 14, the young uncertain adult of 25 and so forth on up.

We don’t shed these personas like snakeskins. Rather, we grow new layers like trees. But all the layers are still there. They don’t come out to play very often, but when they do, we remember the pain from before.

Or, I should add, the joys experienced along the way.

So, when I learned about this affair, for a moment I went back to being a teenage girl in New York City. All I could think about is, why didn’t I notice?

And what would have happened if my parents divorced? I got on much better with my father than with my mother. Who would have taken me? And how would my life have been different?

Perhaps I should have worried more about the main participants in the affair, as well as my mother. But teenage girls, which I temporarily became, are much more wrapped up in themselves. And the participants have all passed on in any case.

The Importance of These Layers

The widespread importance of the layers lying beneath came home to me just this week, when I was talking to a man in his 60s who said he never liked Christmas. When I asked why, he said that his mother had walked out on the family on Christmas Day when he was seven years old.

What a tender age. And every Christmas time, he becomes seven years old all over again and very vulnerable.

A lot of pain to live with each year.

These things hit us from time to time. For some unexpected reason, we are reminded of an event in our 20s or 40s or whatever – and all of a sudden, we are back there with a vengeance. If we were hurt then, we are hurt now.

If it was something exciting then, it is exciting now. Perhaps I will write something about this more positive side of things on another occasion.

The Here and Now

Yes, we have some perspective and, happily, we can switch into our older selves and the pain – or the joy ­– recedes.

I wonder whether we would prefer to be different. We have no choice, but I think it makes our lives richer to have these many layers, like filo pastry, underneath.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Do you often re-experience events from the past? What sort of events do you remember? Positive or negative? Do you welcome their emergence from time to time?

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Katherine Carrigan

I was an abused child of a damaged father. He was left fatherless at 8 and had a sociopath mother. He was a participant in the Battle of the Bulge with lifelong implications. Everyone outside our family thought he was the perfect husband and father but in private his demons came out causing terrible pain for all of us. I was the oldest and was a female image of him. He began to touch and fondle me when I began to develop an adult body. He would lose his temper and whip my brothers over almost any action that affected his self image as a successful adult. I find myself very proactive about injured people. I misunderstand situations when confronted by anger or disagreements. I have had many years of counseling and am trained in pastoral care where I can frequently help others recognize that this is not the past and we have better tools to deal with the present. I do feel like that injured child when tensions are high and have to rebalance myself to the current situation. This past has made me more compassionate and not as likely to turn away from others’ pain

Ruthy

I occasionally have a memory That makes me cringe and hide my face like a teenager but I just think I grew and do things better now. It’s all about learning, growing and being okay with that for me. I’m cool with it .

Mary Lou Harris

Thank you for sharing this experience. How did you become aware of the author’s book? In these days of DNA testing many of us are being alerted to information that explains so much.

Lori

My husband chose to reveal at breakfast on Boxing Day that he was leaving me. He said he hadn’t wanted to ruin Christmas Day although he was miserable all that day. This no longer bothers me. Life is what we choose to make of it. I have many memories of other past events that I’m only now beginning to understand. I feel like with time, gradually learning of pieces of information, and understanding, I’m finally able to put the pieces of the puzzle together that I call the mystery of my life. With understanding comes compassion, empathy, and forgiveness for those in my life. It’s unfortunate that so much was kept from us in those early years but that was another time.

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The Author

Ann Richardson’s most popular book, The Granny Who Stands on Her Head, offers a series of reflections on growing older. Subscribe to her free Substack newsletter, where she writes fortnightly on any subject that captures her imagination. Ann lives in London, England with her husband of sixty years. Please visit her website for information on all her books: http://annrichardson.co.uk.

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