autonomy

Dec. 29th, 2020 04:36 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist
I realized that one of the things I'm finding really strange, in the absolute sea of strangeness that I've pushed myself into, is that yes I have fearsome tasks of bureaucracy and logistics and finances ahead of me. But...that's all. I can definitely do this. I can decide to do it and say that I'm doing it and that's all it takes, in a way.

I'm so used to immigration stuff and benefits stuff where the things I want, the things that are good or healthy for me, the things that reflect my choices or my autonomy, could be taken away from me at any point or never granted to me in the first place.

So I keep feeling -- not thinking, but feeling -- that surely someone has to approve of my decision, surely I have to wait and see if some authority greater than me will allow it. But...no, not really. England isn't enlightened enough to have no-fault divorce so I guess someone technically does have to decide that my reasons are good enough, but that's nowhere near as big as the kinds of things that I'm used to looming over me, determining my future.

It's a very weird feeling to not have that. I'm doing the emotional equivalent of looking over my shoulder waiting for the other shoe to drop. And I actually feel kinda lonely that there's no one there waiting to fuck me up, heh. You mean it's just me, I'm enough?

It's kinda freaky that I've gotten to be thirty-nine and still have this idea that me wanting something is nowhere near enough of a reason to make it happen.

I know this isn't the point, but

Date: 2024-02-10 06:19 pm (UTC)
sparrowsion: female house sparrow (female house sparrow)
From: [personal profile] sparrowsion

Is there some specific meaning to "no fault divorce" here that isn't covered by "by mutual consent"? (Like, not having to have a petitioner and respondant? Or somehow having it pass without having to be rubberstamped by a court?)

Re: I know this isn't the point, but

Date: 2024-02-11 04:10 pm (UTC)
sparrowsion: female house sparrow (female house sparrow)
From: [personal profile] sparrowsion

So England and Wales have had no fault divorce since 1969, which caused a massive uptick in divorce, although you had to prove separation before 2020. Which would explain why things were so smooth for our 2022 divorce (proceedings started 2021 after separation in 2019, decree final delayed by having to wrestle a financial order through the courts, which was not smooth)

I suppose the point here is that was still having to prove separation to the satisfaction of some arbitrary judge (who may or may not read your submission correctly, like the one sitting on our financial order) rather than your word being sufficient.

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