Read Wearing My Halo Tilted Online

Authors: Stephanie Perry Moore

Wearing My Halo Tilted (4 page)

BOOK: Wearing My Halo Tilted
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Problem was his release came too quickly for me. Within ten minutes the passion was over and I hadn't even gotten the most enjoyment yet. However, too bad for me. He was no longer into me. He reached for the remote and started flipping the channels. No more intimate talk. No more body rubbing. He was just there, but in another world. Yeah, he was in our bed this time. But I still felt alone.
“Good night,” I said, disappointedly, as I pulled the covers over my bare, unsatisfied body.
I silently prayed
, I'm just not content. I'm telling you, Lord. You need to speak to him or he's gonna lose me.
I tapped Dillon one last time after my honest prayer with God. He didn't even tell me good night, happy birthday again, or baby I'm sorry. As I watched his actions, I thought,
Yup, he's already lost me.
 
 
During the night, I went to check on Starr. I ended up holding her in the rocking chair until she and I fell asleep. I was asleep until Dillon lifted her out of my arms and placed her in the crib that was finally the right level. He then lifted me up out of the cushioned chair and took me back to our bed.
“I need to get up,” I said, still quite disappointed in the way my birthday turned out.
“I'm gonna feed you this morning,” he said, trying to be sweet. “But before I do all that, let's talk. The girls are still down.”
I couldn't believe what I was hearing. He wanted to talk to me? We hadn't had a heart-to-heart in months.
“What's going on with us, Shari?” He was propped up on his elbow, and with his left hand he stroked my eyebrows.
On my back, I peered over at him. Maybe God does answer prayers. Was he really ready to listen? There was only one way for me to find out.
The concerned stare in his eye made me believe my husband was truly ready to dig deep down into the root of our problems and try to solve them. Life was beginning to be a lot like the hair I was growing under my chin. I'd shave it the first couple of times, but that wasn't enough to stop the irritating problem from resurfacing. Before the morning came, little stubbles were coming out again. It wasn't until I pulled the unwanted hair from the root that I really removed it. Such was the case with my marriage. I needed to get the trouble out of our marriage or at least pull it with the tweezers from the core. Dillon and I needed to dig deep and straighten some of this stuff out so it wouldn't just keep popping up.
“I had a talk with Mrs. Kindle the other day,” I said softly.
“Yeah, your regular lunch,” he cut in, as he smiled.
Putting my back to him, I said, “I know you don't like it when I share so much about us.”
“I understand you need counseling,” he replied, as he turned me back to him. “She's around you for a reason.”
“I told her that I was real unhappy.”
“You told her that?” he said in an upset tone, telling me that he truly did not understand, like I knew he wouldn't.
I nodded my head.
“What did she say?” he asked, a little calmer.
Reaching for his hand, I said, “That maybe we need to do what you're willing to do now. Really talk things out. Talk about the stuff that I love, talk about the stuff that I hate, and talk about what I think is ideal for us. Really try to see if we can work through our issues.”
“Things aren't that bad, Shari, seriously now. You exaggerate stuff,” he responded, as he ignored my hand and sat up in bed.
I sat up beside him and spoke with conviction. “Maybe not for you, Dillon, but for me. I don't know. I just don't feel loved.”
As soon as I said that he moved to the edge of the bed and retorted, “I don't feel loved either. When I come home, what's supposed to be my castle, it's a mess. It's not like you have to keep the girls. They're in school most of the morning and part of the afternoon. I don't get here until what—four or five hours after that. And the place is still like a pig's pen. I have to step over my own clothes. Clean the heck up, girl, if you want me excited to be here.”
“Do you want to know what I'm thinking or am I just supposed to listen to you?” I asked, trying to hold back my own frustration. “You can tell me what's wrong and right. But you don't want it to be a two-way conversation. You bully me with your overpowering demeanor. I'm sick of it.”
Dillon stood up and peered out the window. He knew I was telling the truth and the brotha' wouldn't look at me. He could dish it out, but it was high time he took the criticism as well.
Sliding nearer to him, I said, “I'm not saying that I'm trying to cast a stone. I'm just trying to tell you that you forgetting my birthday and trying to make it up the way you did is just not enough. You don't really talk to me to find out what's going on with me. I don't feel appreciated either.”
Dillon turned toward me. He gave me a look like I was lying. It took me no time to give him specifics.
“Okay, example, you never come in and ask me how my day is. You just run to the girls and see what's going on with them. Over the last six months,
I
have planned date nights for us—
you
don't even plan one. To me it's like you're not trying to put anything into our marriage. You just take it for granted that I'm here. I'm supposed to love you. I just turned thirty and it seems like I'm sixty or something, because we make love, what, maybe once a month? And even when we do it's not that good.”
“You trying to humiliate me now, huh?” he said, turning back to the window. “We're together more than that. And you never complain.”
I shook my head with disgust, and said, “Alright, sometimes maybe it might be twice in one month, and I might not say anything bad about it, but that still proves my point. It's not even enough and I don't complain, because I don't want to hurt your feelings. But don't you think I'm disappointed when it's over as quickly as it began. You're a selfish lover.”
He stormed to our bathroom. I wasn't out to tear him down. And I surely knew I wasn't without fault. But I could admit when I was wrong. He needed to hear me out. I wasn't yelling. He had to know how I felt about him, darn it.
Sitting beside him on the edge of our Jacuzzi tub, I said, “I think you look like a big slob sometimes. And I'm not trying to be mean, but you can't even wear any of those clothes in your closet. You've gone from a size thirty-six to a forty-two. I'm a tiny girl. I want a good lookin' brotha', not Fat Albert.”
Walking over to the shower and looking into one of our many mirrors, he said, “I'm running every morning. I'm working on my weight. I even watch what I eat so it's not like I'm not trying to do anything about that. But what about you? You've got three rolls in your back.”
“I didn't even know you noticed. And I only have one left, thank you kindly. Plus, I had a baby. What is your excuse?” I asked to be vindictive.
He was right though, so I couldn't be too mad at him for telling the truth. I had gained some weight in my tummy and my back. I had a double chin, almost, and in addition, I had hair under it. If my current changing body was an indication of what I had to look forward to as I grew older, I was going to hate myself.
“You're completely unattractive,” he told me bluntly, as he grabbed the side of my waist. “And your nagging doesn't make me feel attracted to you either.”
“You're saying my body and my mouth is the reason why you're not trying to jump my bones every single week, or better still, every other night like I would hope?” I asked. “I'll take your constructive criticism. Maybe I'll try to do something about it.”
“I'm just saying, Shari. Don't think that I'm the only one that's changed, because you are dramatically different too. You write this book, but we don't see any income from it. I gotta work overtime in football. Coach is always giving me something to do. Most of the time I think you're mad at me because I come home late or whatever. I'm trying to do what I can to help coach win so next season we'll have a chance at the national championship. Do you even remember what the athletic director said at the end of last season?” Dillon uttered in frustration, as he bent down over his dirty sink that I hadn't cleaned yet.
I remembered for sure. After the team went 7-6 the last two years, the athletic director told the head coach that they'd better win at least eight games this year or he'd fire the whole staff. For that reason alone I hated his profession. There was no loyalty or stability in coaching.
He looked at me through the mirror, and said, “If I'm fired what will we do then? NCAA coaching jobs are hard to come by, especially for black coaches.”
I hated to admit it, but he was dead on. Shoot. Approximately eighty-five football scholarships are given out per school, with about sixty-five of those going to black players. Yet, Division I schools averaged two black coaches out of a staff of twelve or sometimes fourteen. Pitiful. In my opinion, black boys needed to protest or go to historically black colleges. They'd make the necessary changes then.
After waiting for me to give an answer, he said, “You can't support us. You can't even support yourself.”
He said that last comment sort of under his breath, but I heard him. Any other day that little crack might have hurt my feelings, but not this time. My career was doing better and so were my emotions.
Jumping on his back, I playfully taunted, “I'm glad you mentioned that because I'm about to get seventy-five-hundred dollars from this production company that is turning
Luv Right or Git Left
into a play! And in addition to that, my agent wants me to go on tour with the book for the summer. How do you feel about that?”
Sliding me off him, he said hastily, “Go on tour with the book where? For how long? And who's gonna keep the kids? No, you can't do that. I know you told her no!”
Overall, Dillon was a good husband where the finances were concerned. He never badgered me about how much money I spent. He just asked that I keep the checkbook balanced. It definitely felt like his money was mine.
But I was sick and tired of him saying that I couldn't take care of myself. Though he was right; I couldn't. I wanted more for me. I had two girls for goodness sake. How in the world was I going to dig deep and tell them that they could be all that they wanted to be? I was settling for less in my own life. I wanted to spiff up my career a notch. I had to take opportunities when they came, and Dillon surely wasn't holding me here. Actually, the conversation confirmed that I needed a break from him. He was too controlling.
“I didn't give her an answer earlier. But now I've decided I'm going on the tour,” I said boldly, as I turned on the shower for it to steam up so I could get in it.
I could tell by his stern body language that he wasn't in agreement with me. I didn't care though. Nothing was holding me back now.
He quickly turned the water off. “Girl, we got two young babies. I'm working a full-time job. You're trying to take them on tour with you to some play? I've been to them plays with you. There's too much going on night after night. No, you're not going to be on the road like that. Not my wife, not my kids. That's that. You need to call whoever you need to call back and tell them the answer is . . .”
He rolled his eyes and looked at me so that I could finish his statement, but I couldn't finish it because the answer he wanted me to give to Tina was not the one she was going to receive. I had made up my mind. I was sick of him.
Yeah, he was the head in this relationship, but he wasn't acting like someone worth following. Therefore, in my mind he had defaulted his right to tell me what the heck to do. If I was wrong, I was just going to have to deal with it, but I kind of felt like I was right. Though I couldn't tell Tina yes. I didn't know what in the world I was gonna do with my girls, because I agreed with Dillon on one thing. Out on the road, living out of a suitcase, and jumping from hotel-to-hotel was not good for the girls. We were probably traveling on a bus and that was no place for toddlers. I needed to come up with a solid plan.
Dillon went over to the closet and started throwing dirty clothes out into the hallway. “See this is what I'm talkin' about. You talkin' about going out on the road and you can't even do your job here. There is nothing for me to put on. I'm really sick of this, Shari.”
He went into our bedroom and pulled out three drawers and started throwing shirts on the floor. He was ticking me off because now he was messing all that up, as if I needed more work. He was showing me more and more that we couldn't be in the same space right now.
He was right. I wasn't a tidy maid or anything. It wasn't nasty, but it was cluttered and unorganized. Yeah, I needed to dust and clean, but with two young ones pulling on my arms and then trying to finish a book, I just couldn't get any housework done.
He needed to be me for a week, for a day, shoot for a couple of minutes! Then he could see I had it hard. All he had to do was sit around a boardroom most of the off season, drinking loads of coffee with boring white men, and strategizing about how they'd win a darn football game or two.
“Can you buy me some more briefs? All my underwear got holes in them. I know we ain't that piss-poor broke,” Dillon ranted with three badly torn pair in his hands.
I knew he was madder about the fact that I was willing to go on the book tour than he was about not being able to find clothes, because as soon as I walked over to his underwear drawer I found three pairs that were wearable. They had little stains here and there that didn't come out with the Clorox, but they certainly weren't as bad as the other three he found that I needed to completely discard. Plus, the stains were his problem. He was just as bad as the girls. The joker needed to wipe better. Really, it was probably dirt from his workouts. And since I let the dirt sit for a while before I actually washed loads, when I got to it, most times, it was hard for the dirt to be lifted. Dang. I had to do better. Maybe a break would refresh us both.
BOOK: Wearing My Halo Tilted
11.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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