Tag Archives: marriage

Commonalities

One is oneself, then when there is a connection to another that seems random or ill-fitting, you marry and figure it out.

My husband is educated as a physicist and works as a software engineer/consultant. I majored in soc/psych and worked for government and non-profits. He’s a genius in the field of science and technology. I’m smart but my talents go to literature, legislation and people skills.

Somehow we clicked, two weeks after 9/11 when Americans were talking to strangers about what happened. The next day he asked me out, opened the car door, took my hand and never let go.

We really didn’t have disparate backgrounds. He grew up on a dairy and I lived above one. The farm kids were our friends and we made hay forts and stepped, inadvertently, into cow patties. And they protected me from bullies on the school bus.

We shared a lot about ourselves before we married a little over a year after we met. We met the parents et al, then eloped because of my family, not his. After years of marriage things settle (believe me) and a wise person is wont to figure out why.

We’ve more in common than our differences in what he calls “hard skills” vs. “soft skills.” Traditional male/female roles. Over the past few years he’s learned soft skills and it’s not as easy as writing code that transforms trading systems.

Honesty, integrity, leadership skills, people skills, technical skills. We each bring our own to the table and they mesh. For years I’ve been a volunteer leader and mentor, creating projects and managing ten times what anyone else did.

We both have disdain for bosses who cannot lead or teach the job at hand and who can never admit to making a mistake. We believe in the servant leader relationship where one is only as good as one’s “team” however large and the ladder goes up, rather than down.

Know what you’re talking about. My husband was all business and tech. He lived in a man cave in the dark with a mattress, first dual-brained computer he built from scratch. He had a desk made from two file cabinets with plywood on top, a chair and a lounge chair and only a 72 oz Dr.Pepper and individual string cheese in the frig with wrappers going from frig to computer. And he used a Scooby Doo towel from the shower and had a clean/pile and dirty pile laundry “system.”

Yes, I have tamed the beast, so much that I’m beginning to regret some aspects of the transformation. Yes, we’re on a high floor with a great view and floor-to-ceiling windows. About ten years ago he learned how a grilled cheese sandwich was made but still prefers me to make them.

I have created a food snob. From string cheese and Monterey Jack to judging cheddar by age, I messed up. He now asks if he can help in the kitchen. Conveniently he always asks when I’m almost done or are prepping and ask him to get his ice and water and please take the dog out.

He has his library which includes Numerical Recipes. I’ve 150 cookbooks that give me references, memories and comfort. We’re both technicians, scientists and good, smart folks that make a difference. I got a crosswalk last year. People were getting killed, the city finally built it and now that the paint is fading I got the Mayor’s office to re-paint the lines as no-one stops for me and our old dog.

There’s another similarity. A year after we married we adopted a rescue dog, a sweetheart who needed her hips taken out and physical therapy as a pup. She’s 10.5 years old now and I’m the food wench and disciplinarian and he’s the fun guy.

When we wanted to take her to his parents 10 years ago they said they’d mow one of the goat pens and she could stay in there. I told my husband I wouldn’t go. He told his folks she’s a house dog and sleeps on our bed. His dad scrubbed a crate and placed in the room we’d be staying in. She now has full run of the house, jumps up on his Dad’s section of the sofa to see him coming in on the four-wheeler after feeding the cattle, sleeps on our bed. Now when we fly in and have someone stay with her at home, Mom says “what, she’s not coming?”

She has to do extra kitchen floor vacuuming and mopping when Zoe’s not there during our three-day Thansgiving cooking extravaganza where we unintentially drop crumbs. I used to bring one dish, now it’s six but there are 60 people at Nanny’s Thanksgiving. Ahh, you can’t even imagine the dessert table.

As to thanks I have to thank Nanny and my husband’s parents for raising a great man, one that I love, trust and is my best friend in the world. I’ve said this before but marry a geek. He’s smarter than the football quarterback and may be someone you’d like to have a breakfast chat with for the rest of your life. Similarities. Cheers, Dee

 

 

Chopsticks

I called Nanny to tell her what a wonderful, marvelous, supercalifragilisticexpialidocious grandson I married. Today, I figured out that Mary Poppins dropped in and left some fairy dust behind that made our childhood street a wonderful place to live.

My husband usually gets off work and comes home around 7:00 so when he called (I was walking the dog and of course, forgot my phone) it was shortly after five and he was very ill.

I think it was food poisoning, certainly not intentional but I looked after him all weekend. He’s allergic to anything that swims so if someone dunks his french fries in oil that has been used to fry fish… that could do it.

While I normally cook, he was well enough to go out Sunday afternoon and got me some spicy tuna sushi. He forgot the chopsticks. Luckily a kind waitress at a local Thai restaurant, after hearing he did not use chopsticks, had fashioned a set with rubber bands that one would give a three year-old. I took off the rubber bands and used those.

So what did I get in the mail? A set of five Chinese bamboo chopsticks hand painted with Peking Opera facial masks.

A week after we met we talked marriage in a hypothetical way and I said it was always about the marriage, not the wedding. I also told him it was unfair for a potential wife to get an engagement ring. We eloped, but only because my parents were divorced and it was unfair of me to ask them to sit in a small room together.

As to jewelery, we got two matching rings for our wedding, I’ve two magnetic golf bracelets to stem my arthritis, a pair of earrings I’ve worn day and night for over ten years and last year, a silver Claddagh ring I’ve always wanted.

No diamonds, I married mine. As we go through life together I’ll remember that he doesn’t want me to carry in bulky or heavy stuff, so orders it online. And he bought me chopsticks when he doesn’t eat fish. This one’s for Tommy and all the birthday parties we had in our garage. Pin the tail on the donkey up there, kiddo. Dee

The Movie Pact

Our first date, in 2001, was at the movies, big screen and reclining seats, and then a Mexican dinner. We saw Anthony Hopkins in Hearts in Atlantis.

Years after marriage, we know several things. I love Star Wars, IV and VI especially, not the prequels. He is joyful to find me up on a Star Wars marathon and goes back to sleep knowing every detail that was changed from the original version.

It’s usually tit for tat. I get one, he gets one. Normally we agree but Netflix and Amazon Prime have thrown us for a loop. We live in the city and have two small cinemas close by. All the megaplexes are in the suburbs.

I think our paid channels should at least make us walk around the block before viewing. We always went to a movie every weekend afternoon and now we don’t.

Here’s the deal. My husband is always paying me back for giving in to a colleague and making me see “The Ring.” So he’s seen Memoirs of a Geisha twice, once with me, and once with a former friend.

Let’s just say it’s spy/intrigue/cops vs the Brontes and Jane Austen. And I love my spy novels. Horror films are off the charts. Nightmares ensue, The Ring.

When we disagree, seldom, I get one movie and he gets one movie. When in LA we stayed up ’til midnight to see the opening of Harry Potter without kids. Did you say movie buffs? Happy viewing, Dee

How Do You Know?

I see Amy Adams singing and dancing through Central Park asking that question. For real people, it doesn’t come that easily.

In a serious relationship, I was supposed to marry two weeks after college graduation. I called it off because I needed to know myself and be able to fend for myself before I could attach myself permanently to someone else.

Bridal magazines show couples snuggling on a sofa reading the newspaper or doing a crossword puzzle together. That’s not how it works. It looks pretty in photos but that is not life.

Life is having the occasional disagreement, surprising one another every once in a while (we don’t do birthdays or holidays, especially the Hallmark Valentines Day).

Life is walking the dog. Walking on ice and holding his arm. In the summer just knowing when to hold hands without even looking at each other.

In our first week of dating my husband challenged me in terms of what I wanted in a relationship. I said I never wanted an engagement ring because that’s not fair. Also that a relationship is about a marriage, not a wedding.

We eloped a year later. I planned it in five days and we found a secret, illegal venue 24 hours before the event. I got two 18K gold rings on the internet and rented a dress and tiara.

It’s more than watching Star Wars IV on tv, when we walk we both know when I need to take his arm or hold his hand and it comes instinctively. We don’t look, or ask, we just know. Let’s hope other brides and grooms aspire to this level of closeness. Cheers and happy couples all! Dee

ps Dee, should I (put on the humidifier, walk the dog, turn over the steaks), yes, dear, without even knowing the substance of the sentence verbally I know it.

Years

I was always impressed by our dear friends J and J who were married 62 years. He married us and her name is on our wedding certificate. Last year we went to his alma mater for his burial, Annapolis, for a special ceremony.

Today I was in a doctor’s office for the second time and the same couple came in as I’d seen two weeks ago on my first visit. We engaged in conversation even though the wife kept telling me she couldn’t hear.

During our wait the gentleman said they’d been married 73 years, that she’ll be 94 in two weeks and that he’s “older.” Amazing! We’re heading for 11 years of bliss next month but I can’t imagine 73.

They knew instinctively what the other wanted. He helped her doff her coat, then she his. Later as she got too warm without a word he helped with her sweater. It was so sweet.

After my visit I found myself out in the hallway with the doc. I asked if he had seen this lovely old couple and he said yes they’ve been married and we both chimed in “73 years!” I believe we were both astonished, amazed and have a sense of peace and knowledge that true love is in our midst and can last. At least I do, can’t tell you about doc.

I love my husband dearly but right now he’s home with a cold and driving me nuts. Luckily I gave him his usual breakfast (eggs, bacon, toast) and chicken noodle soup and egg rolls for lunch, made spaghetti with homemade meat sauce for dinner. He’s sleeping soundly and the dog is  on the bed. I may actually have an hour before he calls out for tea!

Let’s hear it for successful marriages.My folks split on their 35th anniversary. My brother said “it’s about time.” At least we were grown. I waited and married 20 years late because I didn’t want to make the same mistakes others did. That means we have a dog, no kids.

We can be sent anywhere because the dog has what amounts to nine years of quarantine and annual rabies shots, yes a three year shot every year because the US doesn’t do one-year shots anymore and the UK (the most restrictive body in the world) will not recognize a three-year US immunization. How’s that for fraternization?

Doc asked me how much more cooking I had to do for family and guests, worried about my hands. I said I need to find a Capon here to feed us two for Christmas, other than that it’s just three square meals a day. I even have gloves, hot pink ones up to the elbow for doing dishes! Cheers, Dee

Bridal Magazines and Spouses

You can make this your bride-zilla day or you can say to yourself and your husband-to-be that your marriage is more important than your wedding day.

Our second week of dating we had lunch and talked of such things and I said that. I also said that engagement rings were unfair and I never wanted one. Turns out after we met all the parents and the one grandparent who remains we eloped, I had four days to plan the wedding. We got a dear friend a license to marry us. Eight of us were there and everyone had a role.

We did the wedding, two lovely 18K gold rings, dress, shirt, tie, flowers (a gift) reception and weekend honeymoon for under $2K. Yes, after the wedding and luncheon we hosted, we went to our new home and called our parents.

All the bridal magazines show photos of fiancees lying together on the sofa reading the paper or doing a crossword together. I can tell you in over twelve years, nearly 11 married, that does not happen in real life.

First, my husband is very tall. We have an L-shaped sofa so we can lie head-to-head watching the latest Burn Notice.

What I can tell you is that this weekend I had a 24-hour bug and my husband took the dog out all day and fed her, and went to the store and got me chicken soup and ginger ale.

When he goes away on business the dog takes over his pillow so when I reach out to touch his shoulder I feel fur. I go through the day wanting to tell him something and he’s not there.

We know when to hold hands walking down the street without even talking to or looking at each other. I know when to take his arm on snow or ice.

I’m a really good cook but for a guy who had one frozen lasagne purchased by his mother on a visit, string cheese and one 72-oz. soda in his frig when we met, and a litter of string cheese wrappers going from frig to computer, now he compares a four-year to a five-year cheddar. Yes, he tells people I created a food snob.

Lest you think it’s all about who’s sitting at which table, the dress, how many bridesmaids forget it. Yes, it a big day for both of you, not just the bride.

The proof is in the pudding.If the marriage works out, it’s like reading a well-loved and well-worn book every day. And you miss them when they’re gone, even for one day.

He asked if I wanted kids. I said let’s get a dog and see how bad you are first. He’s horrible, sneaks food off his plate and spoils her rotten. We were not able to have children together and decided not to adopt. Today we have a loving dog for nearly 10 years who is so content on his pillow, though she follows me around 24/7 that even though he’s gone she knows I’ll not leave her. That’s married life. Trust, love, honor, respect, and flowers every once in a while….. Dee

Trades

Do you know one of 199 reasons I love my husband? He went to the movie theater not once, but twice to see Memoirs of a Geisha with me.

Yes, we switch, he gets one and I get one but this was painful for him.

I now know nearly every word of Star Wars: Episode 4 and actually choose to watch it in the middle of the night when he is asleep.

Of course I’m into oldies, indies, drama, history, rom com. He likes more action and violence. So we trade. Get married 10 years and it’ll all sort itself out. Dee

Vegetarian

Yes, I’m thinking of it. My husband has been away the past two weeks on business and I’ve been vegetarian. No, I haven’t lost 20 lbs. or anything but all he wants is meat and potatoes.

He only likes beef, not pork and only sometimes if I disguise chicken it’s OK. Especially yesterday’s chicken piccata, no fish as I know he is deathly allergic to it. Beef is OK on the grill or in a stew, but not every night.

Tonight I made my ten-minute lasagne (on this site) but couldn’t find no-boil noodles so it took me longer to cook the noodles, cool and cut them to size. In the end, he liked my choices (didn’t know about them) about a whole milk mozzarella and choice of ricotta.

It was his favorite lasagne to date. Let’s see, twelve years, four-hour lasagne, ten-minute lasagne, and now it’s about an hour before placing it in the oven. That’s what marriage is all about, compromise. I think he liked the pasta’s frilly edges that got crispy. Cheers! Dee

Changes

We decided to get married on Monday night and sealed the deal that Saturday morning then went home to call our folks. I ordered rings, we got my husband a new shirt and tie and had his hair cut, I had my hair cut and highlighted. I rented a dress and arranged for hair and makeup the morning of the wedding and to have my love be taken care of by the Navy Captain (USN Ret) and his wife “the Admiral” as everyone still calls her. Capt. J married us and it was very emotional to ask him to do so.

I just talked to a young groom, and told him not to be nervous, it’s only the rest of his life! Seriously. I did say not to think of work for a couple of weeks, no matter what my husband, his colleague, says.

On our mission, we chose the wedding site less than 24 hours before the event and poached a site overlooking the Pacific for 20 minutes, there were only eight of us but I knew the Parks department would never allow me on the beach even walking alone. No outstanding warrants, they just didn’t like me because I was trying to get the City Council to give dogs legal space in public parks.

I remember clinking of my wedding band in the sink, we had no dishwasher in the “Barbie House.” I thought I broke a dish when the ring clinked. We dealt with finances, taxes and bank accounts. I learned that I could buy him everything but pants and shoes. Then I learned that there is one type of loafer I could order in the same size every six months and those were his leisure and dog-walking shoes.

Over ten years later I don’t regret a moment of our 11.5 year relationship except not having a “real” wedding. Not for us, for our parents. We decided early on that the marriage was far more important than one grand day, I didn’t need to be a princess and it was OK that he booked us into an old folks home for our wedding night. That’s another story. Luckily he brought our new DVD player so as he took a hardware store’s worth of bobby pins out of my hair, we watched a few movies.

Things change over the years, age and wisdom, thought and compromise come into play. I cannot imagine how young people do this. There’s a morphing. He was too calculating and methodical. I was intellectual but overly emotional and involved in saving the world.

Now we both can usually frame a discussion based on facts. Example, when we moved, I did a cost of living comparison and looked at sample places to live. We came here because of my ingenuity and I set him up to sample a place with rental furniture in 24 hours. Did I cry leaving our friends? No. Are we still in touch? Yes.

In the end it’s a matter of knowing each other. I finish his sentences and know what he likes to eat. Marriage is a familiarity you don’t even have with closest siblings.

Yes, the bride magazines always show the couple lying on the sofa reading the paper together. Right. Never happens. First of all he’s too tall for any sofa. I’m not Betty Crocker in an apron but I do cook for us because we’d starve or he’d order in or go to a local haunt.

Division of labor is key to a harmonious life. Who does what best, and how can we deal with …. the dog? We adopted a very young pup nearly ten years ago and I have 90% responsibility and he tries to take her out quickly late at night so I don’t have to be out there in danger.

Good luck, young people, on this journey. It may not be easy but can be joyful, emotionally fulfilling and worth the work. I know when to take my husband’s hand or arm whether on ice or a dry street, and don’t even need to look. We just know each other so well that we think like the other and act.

We hope you’re that way too. Congratulations H & M. Cheers from us, Dee

Marriage, Ladies?

OK, so Prince Charming has arrived at your door in full armor on his white steed. With an engagement ring. You tearily say yes while outfitting yourself in full bride-zilla mode. This is YOUR day, darn it, and everyone needs to follow your rules from the dress to the decor to the food and band.

I must say that marriage is about a lifetime commitment, not a day in the life of a diva. I told that to my husband the first or eleventeen dates and even said no to an engagement ring and got us matching gold bands for our elopement.

Five years later I was asked to have our wedding date and my birthday engraved inside my husband’s ring. On our tenth, seconds before he walked in the door I looked it up and it’s the Tin anniversary so made myself a quick alien aluminum foil hat (he’s a physics and computer geek) for a surprise.

This Q&A section is sponsored by married women, one opinionated wife, anyway, otherwise write in:

* * *

Question: “Why bother making the bed? I’m only going to work, eat dinner and fall back into it?”

Answer: “Because my mother made me.”

Question: “Why even wash or fold laundry?”

Answer: “Because I’m not sending your underwear and socks out to the drycleaners. And your clean pile/dirty pile in your man cave really didn’t work out as you spent 45 minutes every morning trying to find socks that matched.”

Question: “Why even make dinner? We can go out.”

Answer: “Didn’t you say that was the best meal you ever had the other day? I made it.”

Question in mind from wife: “Do I look fat in this?”

Answer, again in brain from wife: “Don’t go there. Bad, bad place.”

Question from wife: “The dog usually goes out at 6:30 a.m. You were awake and on your computer. Why didn’t you take her?”

Answer from husband: “She didn’t ask.”

Question from husband: Why do we spend so much to live here?

Answer: “Because I refuse to live in the dark with only individually wrapped string cheese in the frig and string cheese wrappers on the carpet between the frig and your computer.”

Question from Man Cave Neighbor: “Why did you move back?”

Answer from soon-to-be husband: “Her.”

Aww, shucks. I love you, dear. Love that you get the high stuff from the cabinets and I rummage around under the kitchen sink for whatever you need.

One thing I must say is that except for twice in over 11 years he does put the toilet seat down. Props for that, gals. He loves me and our dog, and our families. He’s a keeper, no matter what he says, and no matter that the dog knows to come to me when she needs something. I’ve always spoken dog, it’s taken some time to learn to speak husband! Cheers and write in, Dee