Before I get into this, let me just say that I adore my
spouse. He has fabulous hair, an adorable bottom, and about seventeen bajillion
wonderful qualities that make him the perfect match for me. And yes, I am
including the qualities that challenge and grate me, too (as iron sharpens
iron). But let’s be honest. Marriage
atrophies about 50% of one’s skill set.
When excited persons prepare to engage in their nuptials,
they often think in such saccharine clichés as:
·
“I can’t wait to spend the rest of my life with
this amazing person!”
·
“I am so excited to share my space, time, and experience
with my best friend!” and,
·
“I swear, by the moon and the stars in the sky,
I’ll love you with every beat of my heart.”
However, the underlying secret, unconscious thinking is more
along these lines:
·
“Yes! I will never have to do laundry again!”
·
“Now I can do whatever I want sexually without
social stigmatism!”
·
“Thank God
I can start eating normally again!” and, for those who previously spent
evenings staring into one another’s eyes and arguing over who will hang up the
phone first,
·
“Finally, nights will be spent actually
sleeping!”
Eventually, even these thoughts morph over time, as slowly
as a frog boiling to death in a gradually heating pot, into unmentionable
atrocities that you somehow manage to mention all the time.
Once those vows and rings and kisses have been publicly
exchanged, the “muscles” you once used to lure and hook your mate seem
extraneous. They get filed away into unexercised corners of your being along
with Grade 7 insect collections and that time you used the school dictionary to
look up the definition of smegma in
French. Somehow, everything you’ve
learned and practiced about being a decent individual has shriveled into a
useless mass like a chewed up piece of gum with hair stuck in it. The worst
part is that you don’t even know this has happened, until you make a snide
remark comparing your spouse’s helpfulness for others with brown-nosing. Or
when you engage in a sloshy booze fest, sans
spouse, at the bumping club for which you were a decade too old, without
calling to tell your partner what you’re doing, leaving fear of The Worst in
the wake of your inconsiderateness.
Communication skills you rocked in your literary,
analytical, and persuasion papers get chucked out the window; the type of
gentle discussion and compromise you practice regularly on your co-workers has
fled the scene like a meth cooker during a DEA raid, making simple and
ridiculous things, like how your spouse turns every article of clothing
inside-out upon removal, into the stuff over which you behave about as well as a
Reality TV personality.
The atrophy of skills by marriage doesn’t just negatively
affect appropriate styles of communication or the ability to impress your
partner by being neat, tidy, responsible and sophisticated at every meeting.
Parts of your brain go, too. For instance: the part that remembers how to find
things in cupboards and closets; the part that closes the door when coffee and
gravity do their work; and yes, even the part that remembers one should urinate
in the commode, not in any other plumbing fixtures.
For example, this mini-dialogue has actually happened in my
home:
“I just pooted a little bit,” I announced, almost proudly.
“Good push honey,” my husband replied.
Things one must keep on top of, like maintaining an
appropriate stock of toilet tissue and eating the chicken before it grays, are
not a problem. It’s the exercise in things that a spouse does for his mate that
get weaker over time. I, once fiercely independent, have not simply forgotten
how to wash, wax, and vacuum the vehicle (an act which I completed almost
weekly during my first six years of ownership of Dante, my trusty blue Saturn).
The very fact that I haven’t had to do this during the past six years has
completely erased the process from my ongoing Take Care of It checklist.
“We need to wash the car,” my husband might say, eyeballing
with grievous displeasure the many coils and splashes of bird excrement that
have costumed Dante as the 102nd Dalmation.
“Do what now?” I inquire, not having understood a single
word of my native language.
Now, I am faced with going overseas without my spouse for
the first time in a very long time. An irrational fear of The Unknown has
welled up within me, because my husband, out of love for me, always takes the
reins and leaves me to enjoy everything without stress. Once a fearless world
traveler, conquering such places as Hanoi, Jakarta, Manila, and Phnom Penh on
my own, I am now reduced to a quivering heap of uncertainty as I prepare to
tackle Athens alone. Things that never bothered me before (being a white
American female traveling alone, not being able to read the script or speak the
language, having almost no knowledge of the cultural climate) are looming over
me, making mince meat of my perceived independence.
The protection of marriage against unwanted male attention
or rip-offs due to assumptions about my gender, or even of having to think
about who will accompany me to the next X-Men
film, have atrophied my muscles of independence, for sure. But isn’t that
part of the beauty of marriage and partnership? That someone cares about you
enough to take care of something for you, just to make your life a little bit
easier? That you get to bond so closely with one person that you never have to
be ashamed of your imperfections and failings, and no longer have to keep up
certain appearances? That you always have someone to talk to and be supported
by? Even better, marriage helps you
develop new muscles, which being alone often does not: serving others, even when
it’s hard. Loving through the difficult times. Selflessness. Sharing of burdens. These are pretty great
muscles too, and they’re infinitely likeable.
But even without them, if marriage comes with my husband, a caliber of
man rarely found in this world, I’ll take it. No matter if parts I once used to
define “Me Solo” start to wither away. The
real truth of the matter is that those things have to disappear, because I am
not “Me Solo” anymore. I get to be part
of the only equation I regularly use in real life: “Me + Him = Us.”
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Howell Island Conservation Area (c) 2012 by Heidi Tauschek |
I *love* the song quote from ?Boyz to Men?! And wow, I wish I could write as well as you. I love your phrasing, your analogies, and I understand everything you've written... Now go conquer Athens! (And have an ouzo for me!)
ReplyDeleteMy heart may have melted just a little bit ... :)
ReplyDeleteOhhooo, love this heidilou
ReplyDelete