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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Marriage

What You Do To Me

13 Wednesday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Blogging, Everyday Life, Love, Marriage

Sometimes I surprise myself by how much I share on this web log.

Yesterday’s post may have made for uneasy reading.  Everyday Life does get uncomfortable — scary even — when we take off our masks of pretense and dare to share our personal truth.  Perhaps a few readers wished to look the other way, thinking, “Oh my .. she must not know her slip is slipping or her soul or whatever is showing.  Let’s just pretend we didn’t notice until she pulls herself back together.”  But not so with everyone.  One dear reader — God bless her soul — chose not only to share a bit of her story — but dared to ask…”are things better now?”

Oh, gentle readers — surely you know by now that if you ask I will tell you.  And God help us all if I tell more than I really should, for propriety sake, about my Harlequin Romance life.

The short answer to my reader’s question is this:  “Yes, things are better now.”

And the longer answer is what?  The long answer is that twelve years later, after making a life bond with Janis in my 1972 Camaro, I ended up marrying that same boy who broke my heart in my second trip to the altar.  We have two boys together and this second husband of mine – who is the absolute love of my life  —  helped me and my first husband raise two beautiful girls.

But how we came back together was not so easy.  To begin with, I didn’t know how or whether to respond when he contacted me by letter to wish me a happy thirtieth birthday.  It was, by then, eleven years too late by my count and a girl does have her pride.

But after a while, the strange newness of the left-field letter wore off enough to cause me to write back to see what would happen next.  And then he wrote back.  And then I wrote again.  And on and on our correspondence went — fifty letters going back and forth across 500 miles —  before he proposed marriage at Surfside Beach as we searched the sky for Halley’s Comet.

But oh… was writing that first letter hard!  I didn’t want to love this guy.  After all, who wants to love someone after being discarded once before?  But as much as we might wish, we  hold little power over who we will love over the course of our lives.  And ultimately, love won out over pride and even public and private opinions.  What mattered most was what he did and does to me….

I confess to a few regrets.  I wish I hadn’t hurt my first husband… and I wish I hadn’t hurt my two girls by separating them from everyday life with their father… because even “amicable” divorces cause scars.

But mostly I’m grateful.  I’m even grateful to my sister who had the audacity to reveal my deepest darkest secret —  when she said to my husband on their first and only date — “You know, Janell never did get over you…”

So he sent a birthday card to see if sis knew of what she spoke.  And the rest, as they say, is romance history.  And about that first and only date between my sister and my husband…?

If you don’t ask, I promise not to tell.

Better Letters

28 Saturday Nov 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Christmas Letters, Everyday Life, Graduation, Marriage, Raising Children, Writing

Rather than writing next week’s Advent presentation or contemplative prayer practice, I’m twiddling  thoughts for this year’s Christmas letter.

I dropped one percolating thought right into Friday’s Food post on oatmeal cookies.  Remember this line? — Isn’t it ironic that we remember the times when certificates change hands —  like  for a marriage or the birth of a child or a college graduation — and forget that the best of real life is found sandwiched in between?

When I wrote that line, I was thinking of this year’s Christmas letter and how the contents of past letters, both sent and received, were not much more than a series of life punctuation points accompanied by certificates.

I want to write a better letter this year though I’m unsure of what ‘better’ will look like.  I’d like the letter to recognize the importance of the everyday.  But how do I do this in the age of no words please – in the age of twitters and texts and short-attention spans?  Longer will definitely not do;  and if longer is not better, this means the content must change.

Perhaps I need to write more than I need and then distill.  Cut, cut, cut.  I could even begin with my everyday thoughts on certificate days.

Thoughts on marriage:  It is in the  daily living rather than on the wedding day where two lives are joined together; where true knowledge of each other grows out of mere knowing about the other, where each learns, often the hard way, what brings the other joy or angst and where dreams and fears are shared and sometimes even heard.  On  good days, one partner may deftly read in-between the lines of a spouse’s spoken word, though not too often.  But  it is upon the smooth and rough seas of the everyday, where days of sameness collide together, that an unnoticed miracle will occur: a few threads of the mystery of each partner will gradually unravel to allow the loose threads to be woven into the others own.  The weaving  of lives together is not a pretty process or even a pretty result.  Nor does it happen overnight.  But thread by thread and day by day, two lives will become one, as long as they remember to stay loose and unravel every so often.

Thoughts on parenting: Parenting grows out of everyday care and the raising of  a child rather than in conception and delivery.  If most parents are like me, they haven’t a clue of what to expect when they bring their darling newborn infant home; no mere eighteen year commitment this, since love is sown deep to keep parents forever parents to a child, no matter how many wrinkles a child ultimately grows.  Parent boot camp consists of never-ending feedings and diaper changes and later the never-ending chauffering and coaching and all the sleep-deprived nights from sleepovers and sickness and forgetfulness of some teen- aged child who stays out  past curfew.. or forgets to come home.  Parents are made and not born.

Thoughts on graduation: It will be mixed bag of emotions (pride, joy, relief) to watch two adult children walk across the stage to receive their college diploma next May and walk off the stage and their father’s payroll.  But the celebratory moment would be hollow without awareness of  the hard work that preceded the certificate… and the hard work that will follow it.

Of course lessons in the classroom are important — but the lessons outside are the ones that birth character, as one of mine has recently discovered through a Shakespearean tragedy of errors where he became the unlucky scapegoat of the university student newspaper.  Helplessly, I have watched him suffer.  Thankfully, I am now seeing him pick up the pieces to carry on  life wiser and stronger.  He has been fortunate to attract two able mentors to see him through his ordeal. Perhaps, Hillary Clinton was right in saying that it takes a village to raise a child.   So yes, while there is pride, joy and relief, it has less to do with certificates than in the men they have become.

These thoughts will take some serious editing.  I guess shorter really makes for a better letter.  If so, perhaps this sweet tweet might just do?

This year we had one marriage, no births and two graduations.

All our best to you and the rest.

“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? — every, every minute?”

-- Thornton Wilder, "Our Town"

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