Part 4: Is This Justice?

Where was I? Oh, yes, I was telling you about my alien-invasion-stylee pregnancy. I think I had left off at the ultrasound, in which we discovered that I would not have to name my child “Demonicus” or “Linda Blair”* on account of the fact that the baby did not have horns or a tail (visible).

The rest of the pregnancy was uneventful, as they say, inside my body. Strudel grew her funny little pointy eyebrows like her dad’s and her widow’s peak like her dad’s and her ability to completely lose her shit when presented with any new way of doing things and become as obstinate as a donkey up a minaret, why…just like her dad does. To be fair, after pitching a fit, she has also has his ability to change her mind and accept new things with open arms a very short time afterwards. My modus operandi around here is to introduce one of my new and crazy ideas, jump into the nearest foxhole, and then wait five minutes.

Sometimes I feel like we didn’t so much make a baby, as I acted as a host for his clone, if you know what I mean.

Outside my body, life was eventful as hell. I told you recently that Seattle Federline, my first babydaddy, was trying to pry money out of me last December. At this point I had really run out of money to litigate, and had been told I would need another $15,000 to finish the investigations and take it to trial. I approached him about settling and he agreed to it. He knew I was pregnant again / still because I had told Frannie, and we decided to keep my pregnancy a secret. For me, my initial decision to lie on the court paperwork was because of the fact that in Washington State, a woman has to declare if she is pregnant on the divorce papers, and if the husband is the father. At the time, Sea-Fed had an unreversed vasectomy, and I had gotten pregnant after I had moved out of the house we lived in. I saw no need to bring it up. This is no justification, but it certainly made me angry that I was supposed to declare a pregnancy, even if it was physically impossible in more ways than one that it was the husband’s, while the husband does not have to declare if he has impregnated other women. Don’t tell me that’s not important, either, because supporting another child will affect his income and ability to support other children.

While I was pregnant there was quite a flapdoodle in Washington about Shawnna Hughes, who was denied a divorce even though she was pregnant with a child who was not her husband’s. When Hughes got pregnant her husband was in prison for beating her. As my lawyer told me, in this state it is presumed that the child is the husband’s despite such things as vasectomies and not wanting to touch somebody’s groadie ass for 1 million gold doubloons. So this was a hot-button topic at the time. As an aside, I am not the first woman who considered lying on the court paperwork.

Anyway, Sea-Fed was trying to shake me down for some money, and if I don’t trust him with my kid you know I don’t trust him with the secret of my new pregnancy. So I made one of the biggest mistakes of my divorce: I told my lawyer that I was pregnant. He immediately said that it was going to have to come out in court. Papers would have to be signed. My companion was going to have to declare paternity and Sea-Fed was going to have to deny it. “Fine,” I said. “They will. Just get me divorced already.” “It’s not that simple,” he replied. “It’s illegal to get divorced in Washington State if you’re pregnant.” Illegal? Crap. That meant I would have to wait three more months, until Strudel would be born in March, to finalize.

I went away then, and I got angry. I talked to everyone I knew about it, some of whom thought what my lawyer said was fishy. I emailed the reporter from our local weekly who was on the Shawnna Hughes story and told her what happened to me. The reporter is a law student and told me that what my lawyer said wasn’t true. She met with me and interviewed me for another angle to the story, but it did not go to press. If I was angry before, I was livid after this.

I called my lawyer and confronted him. He backtracked and attempted to talk circles around me. “I need this to be over,” I told him. When I told him I wanted to settle and finish before I went bankrupt I remember him saying something stupid like, “But is this justice? Is justice being served here?” I snapped, “No, but he’s not drinking himself to death fast enough, so I have to end this.” My lawyer sent me a letter that said it was reiterating what we had discussed on the phone, but not once did he commit what he said about “divorce being illegal in Washington state while pregnant” to print.

So my lawyer and Sea-Fed’s lawyer played pattycake with each other via a volley of incorrect and misfiled paperwork. When I would call him up to ask him what was going on, and tell him to finish already, and that I didn’t believe what he was telling me, he would take pains to remind me that he’d been “a family law lawyer for over twenty years,” so who was the expert here? He would vacillate between being a condescending expert or total fuckwit depending on what resulted in more billable hours. My bill, which I had paid down to a reasonable amount because I did temp work until I was 35 weeks along, trebled in February due to intentional lollygagging.

As far as I was concerned, the jig was motherfucking up. I wasn’t going to get my divorce before I had Strudel, so I had pretty much stopped caring. I just wanted to throw the brakes on before my bill got any higher. In late February I sent my lawyer a letter firing him. He came after me two or three times after that, basically saying, “Are you sure? Are you out of your mind?” I admit that being married to a sociopath for eight years can make you feel like you’re a little barmy at times, but firing my lawyer actually brought on an excellent amount of clarity.

I remember the last phone conversation I had with him. It was a Friday night and I was out to dinner at Chinese food, the awesome “American” kind with the florescent orange sauces, when my cel rang with a blocked call. “It’s my lawyer,” I said to my family. “Sorry.” I answered it.

“Yeah,” I said.

“SJ. Shifty McLamepants here. I just wanted to make a final confirmation that you no longer need my services,” he said.

“No, I’m done.”

“We can finish really quickly once you have the baby.”

“I don’t think you understood me. I wanted to get divorced before I had the baby,” I said. “Now I don’t care.”

“This just doesn’t make any sense.” He said this repeatedly throughout our conversation. Doesn’t make sense that I am tired of paying you $150 an hour to drag your feet? That’s a tough concept, I know. He was badgering me and I was having trouble getting off the phone with him. “If you’re concerned about the money, I can finish this for free.”

“It’s too late for this,” I said. “I’m at dinner with my family and I’m labor NOW, so please, I’m done.”

“You’re in labor now?”

“Yes.”

“And you’re out to dinner?”

“Yes.”

“Huh. Call me if you change your mind.” He hung up.

What can I say? I had to have honey walnut prawns one more time before I got housebound for a while.

And what can I say about lawyers and this mess? Your best bet, unless you have multiple thousands of dollars, is to avoid this mess. I was thisclose to leaving my husband when I found out I was pregnant. One crappy millennial New Year’s Eve party and I get stupid, drink champagne and sleep with my husband. A total ugh. I knew something was wrong with him back then, but I didn’t know what…I didn’t have the word for it.

My very illegal advice is this: if you are pregnant by a robot monkey, and you know something is very wrong, you know you have a narrow window of time where you can get out before your pregnancy is discovered. Go, and file for divorce remotely. Don’t feel bad about taking your kid away from their father, because this person is incapable of having feelings for your child anyway. Tell your kid that her father died saving a box of kittens from a burning battleship. Because that will be easier than putting your kid in the possession of a monkey robot with cold, dead eyes a couple of times a month until the kid is eighteen or makes another choice. You can give your kid a more loving environment as a single parent than by sharing her with something that has the emotional life of a rubber plant.

This is the lesson I took away from my divorce. My ex took away a different one, after I brought up his thieving, drug dealing, and child neglect in court his conclusion to me was, “Well, I’m never telling anyone my secrets like that again.”

Sociopaths Walk Among Us, and unfortunately they don’t respond to the sign of the cross or normal human emotions. Most of us assume that other people have normal emotions and a conscience. And sociopaths are good at faking being normal to the outside world. Protect yourself by learning the signs.

And if anyone who wants the name of an awesome lawyer who will lie to you about the law and run up your bill like mad in the Seattle area, email me.

* That’s right, “Linda Blair.” Not the name of the character from “The Exorcist,” but just “Linda Blair.” I can hear myself now: “LINDA Blair! You get yor butt back into this trailer TOOT SWEET!”

11 thoughts on “Part 4: Is This Justice?

  1. You know, you can report your lawyer to the WA State Bar Assoc. Sure sounds like he needs an ass kicking.

    Legally speaking, I mean.

  2. In Michigan a woman cannot divorce her husband if she is pregnant until the unborn child is 6 months old. My brother got stuck with his now ex-wife in a long divorce because she got pregnant by someone else and the new guy wasn’t willing to be a daddy, not even on paper. Sorry to hear your divorce was so terrible, but at least it is over with now.
    Good luck dealing with the sociopath.

  3. Sociopathy seems to have a lot in common with narcissism and emotional abuse. I’m still dealing with the after-effects of some people like that, and it’s horrible, even though it’s not nearly as complicated as a divorce. I’m glad to hear you’re out the other end of that stage of things.

  4. Well that’s one hell of a story. I’m glad it’s finally all done, that the Strudel is safe and sound and that you and the companion and your lovely girls are all off on your New Life.

    Why do they make getting married SO EASY and getting divorced SUCH a giant pain in the ass? It seems like it would be better for everyone involved if they made getting married in the first place really difficult. Maybe we could do the arabic divorce then and just chant “I divorce you” three times and move out and be done with it!

  5. Gawd, I’m glad that is over. Jeez Louise…you’ve had your share haven’t you?..Oy

    Hopefully that little piece of vermin will eventually be “Road Kill”

  6. I can remember clear as day calling my attorney and saying “Hypothetically, what would happen if I got pregnant in the middle of this divorce?” I was so brave and calm.

    He, a friend, says “Oh, Linda…..” so empathetic, almost fatherly.

    And I broke down in tears.

    I wasn’t, after all. But I still don’t understand that law that forces two adults to stay in an untenable situation. I don’t get it at all… And I never even thought about the fact that men don’t need to declare anything. Hmm…..

  7. always thought the no-divorce-til-birth (or 6 months after) thing was seriously fucked up. the top cause of death to pregnant women is homicide, usually by their partner. a huge amount of physical abuse starts during pregnancy. it’s such a contrast: they’re trying to legislate out abortion (think of the children!), yet the legal system tries to force pregnant women to stay with their partners, possibly endangering their life and of course, their baby’s.

    i am married to someone who is a borderline sociopath (been diagnosed), and i see some similarities between your life and mine. there are some big differences, too. i’d love to share my story with you sometime if you’re interested.

  8. And people wonder why I don’t try for child support. I don’t want him to know where we live. I never want my son to have to know what a total shit heel of a father he had.

    I got out with my pride and sanity. I’ll be damned if I’ll turn my son into a pawn on the money colored chessboard.

  9. i was pregnant with the child of a guy that i was thisclose to breaking up with, and i agonized. i told my friend that i was afraid that if i raised the child without a father, that the child would resent that. and she said, “he will find something to resent you for anyway, so do what’s right and then you won’t feel so bad”… and i dumped the guy. and i’ve always felt that was the right thing to do, and reading this i feel even more convinced. i’m sorry things have been difficult and i’m very sorry that you had to be so strong when what you probably needed most of all was for someone to lean on. but i’m glad for you that you’re through it, and glad for myself that you shared it, and glad all around that you got your honey prawns in before you got the struedel out.

Comments are closed.