Category Archives: marriage

What It Means To Be Married For 12 Years (Or, Baker’s Dozen)

Today is my 12th wedding anniversary. On one hand, 12 years feels like a long time. Since getting married, we’ve lived in four cities, moved in and out of five different apartments, townhouses, and homes, and had two kids, two dogs, one cat, I have no idea how many fish, and just as many jobs. On the other hand, 12 years feels like a blip. Our kids are young, I still don’t have a headboard, and both of our parents have 40 plus years under their belts, so we’re really just getting started, right?

Whatever the case, a dozen years of marriage feels like a milestone worth some self-reflection.

Being married for 12 years is…

1. Realizing that although the intersection of marriage and parenthood is difficult, we’re fortunate to have the burden.

2. Accepting that eating Chinese food delivery while catching up on “Major Crimes” on the DVR (and being interrupted by the kids who are supposed to be in bed) qualifies as date night (occasionally).

3. Acknowledging that our flaws of 12 years ago are our flaws of today, and letting it (them) go.

4. Admitting that the roles we play may not be what we expected, but they work.

5. Recognizing that we can’t have it all at the same time, and taking turns supporting each other’s goals.

6. Loving and losing a pet.

7. Taking care of our parents.

8. Laughing because love is hard, life is short, and kids are funny.

9. Being thankful for FaceTime when business travel puts an ocean between us (even though the camera angle is hideous and forces me to stare at the wrinkles between my eyes).

10. Digging deep (deeper on some days than others) to remember our intention in the first place.

11. Knowing that stuff is something, but happiness is everything.

12. Feeling grateful that despite some minor changes, including the aforementioned eye wrinkles, a few (a lot of) gray hairs, a bulging disc, and reading glasses, we still look more or less like we did 12 years ago.

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13. Looking forward – with hope and gratitude – to our baker’s dozen.

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Laughing All The Way

He walks in the door with rollerblades for the entire family. My reaction isn’t, “Wow, what a great idea!” Rather, it’s a series of dismal and pessimistic thoughts. How much did it cost? Who will go to the emergency room first? Where are we going to store all of it?

I’m positively dreary. The “all joy no fun” force is strong in me. I’m clearly going through something. Parenthood is hard. Marriage is harder. The place where marriage and parenthood intersect (collide?) is the most hardest.

There’s a stretch of land in South Florida where I-95 and the Florida Turnpike run parallel to one another. The two highways are so close that just a thin row of trees divides them from one another. Cars on both roads move in the same direction, but they aren’t connected. They’re separate. Navigating marriage and parenthood sometimes feels this way. Like driving together but apart.

In the living room, I begrudgingly try on my new rollerblades while imagining the scrapes, bruises, and tears that will inevitably accompany this impulsive purchase. He sits across from me and says, “This is going to be fun.” It comes out a little bit like a question. The air is thick with my doubt.

I lift my right foot to pull the laces tight and out of nowhere I kick him in his left eye with the front wheel of my right blade. Hard. I gasp. He groans. I put my hand over my mouth in shock, and then something wild happens. I laugh. It’s a silent laugh, but I laugh so hard that I cry. Or, I cry so hard that I laugh. Either way, I can’t catch my breath from all of my silent laugh-crying.

I’m transported to a Saturday afternoon years ago in a dressing room at a department store in New York City. We’re either newly married or engaged.  In any case, life is easy. It’s leisurely Saturday afternoons of midtown shopping followed by late night Park Slope dinners with bottles of good red wine. He’s trying something on (a coat? a suit?), and I’m sitting on the seat in the corner. He hands me something (a tag? a hanger?), and I open my mouth as if to eat it instead of grabbing it with my hand. It’s the weirdest, most ridiculous thing I’ve ever done, and we laugh until we cry. We laugh-cry until we can’t breathe. We do it together. We’re connected.

All these years later, we still laugh when either one of us retells this strange story. In the living room, I’ve accidentally assaulted him with my rollerblade and he laughs with me. We laugh-cry together until we can hardly breathe. In between gasps and tears and “Holy shits!” I feel something incredible. I feel light. I feel free. I feel connected.

“I’m so sorry,” I manage through my teary giggles (or giggly tears). His eyelid is three shades of purple. “Are you okay?”

He looks at me says, “Yeah, I’m okay.”

“I’m so sorry.” I don’t know what else to say.

“It’s okay,” he says. “It was worth it to laugh like this with you.”

He feels it, too.  Then, we skate slowly around the block losing our balance, falling on our bums, and laughing all the way.  Together.

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