
My sisters and I grew up with our grandparents. My grandparent’s relationship was not the greatest. They would constantly fight and my grandfather was always drunk. Several times he abused my grandmother both physically and emotionally. To me this became normal; the yelling the beatings and the constant fighting. It was no Disney film but I still kept my hopes high and I knew that this would never happen to me because my prince charming would never do that.
When I finally turned 10 my parents arrived to El Salvador and that was the first time I had seen my father. I remember coming home from school and seeing a tall, dark haired, light skinned man walk out of my grandmother’s room. My sister ran immediately to him and gave him a hug. I just stood there trying to figure out what was going on. I stared at that man and he looked familiar. I knew I had seen him before somewhere. He called me to go to him and then that’s when I realized that he was my dad. I had never seen him in person before but I remembered his pictures. I had spoken with him on the phone for 10 years but I had never seen him physically.
That same year my sister and I moved to the United States. It was my sisters and I first time in a plane. We landed in Maryland and everything seemed so different. No mountains, no fresh air, no hollering bus drivers, no markets on the street, it was very different. I looked around and even the people were different. I was never exposed to different nationalities and backgrounds, and worst of all I didn’t understand what they were saying.
Elementary was not my best experience. I hated school. Kids would make fun of me and I was constantly being picked on. I used to come home and cry I had no motivation to ever go back to school. My sister felt the same way but we had each other to comfort our bad times. Middle school was the same; I was picked on because I was the shy quiet girl who barely spoke English. I felt discriminated against by my peers.
High School was different. I opened up more and made unforgettable friends. But it is in high school when I started to realize how unhappy my mother was. My father had put her through very rough times and I had seen her cry tons of times even though she did not want to admit it. My father constantly would cheat on her and she was very discrete about it. I remember asking her why didn’t she just file for divorce. At that time I had no clue how divorce can affect people it just seem easy to do. She responded to my question by saying that she could not afford to raise my sister and I by herself. She had no money, she had no education and she didn’t speak English well enough. I didn’t know what to say to that. I didn’t want her to sacrifice her happiness for my sister and I. But she did.
My sister joined the Navy right after high school and I went off to college. The thought of my mother kept me trying throughout school to succeed. I said to myself I would never become dependant of a man. I will work hard for my own things and I will never have a child without knowing that I can independently take care of him/her. That fairy tale dream I had growing up of prince charming suddenly became obstruct.
It was not until my last year in college when I finally found my prince charming. I married him, of course divorced him and later went back to him. It was not until him and I was completely over without the fairy tale ending, it is then when I realized why did I grow up believing on the perfect ending? Life is not a fairy tale and it’s not that perfect movie you see on the screen now and days. You have to work hard in your relationship and it takes two people to be able to do that. My mother did not stay with my father because she feared that she could not raise us the same without him, she stayed with my father because she loved him and deep down she wanted him to change so she could have her happily ever after. My grandmother did not stay with my grandfather until he died because she could not get out of the relationship; she stayed because she loved him.
A good friend of mine once said, “I wish I could be more like my love songs. I am a hopeless romantic though, never certain of love when I have it and never have it when that is what I want most.” We as human beings are always chasing for love, even subconsciously and yet when it is in front of us we are not certain of it. We are perfectionist and we want our relationships to be absolutely perfect, and when it does not turn that way, we are quick to walk away from it. After we walk away it is then when we miss the love we had and wonder why we were uncertain and judgmental in the first place. Every relationship is different and every person is different and sometimes it is best to walk away.
What I did learn from all this is that life is hard, is no Disney film and there is not always a happy ending but there is an ending. It may not always be the one that we want but the choices we make will determine how our ending will be. It is up to us to make the film of our lives the best we can regardless of the obstacles that life throws our way. And even though I know now there is no such a thing as a prince charming that just only means that I will not be that perfectionist when it comes to relationships ☺. Relationships are already difficult as it is.
Princess Pictures by sandersartstudio.com