Posts Tagged ‘marriage’

Lessons from a weekend apart: why every wife needs to fly solo sometimes

February 21st, 2012

A couple of weeks ago, I went away on my own to visit my parents.

The anticipation of an airport good-bye fills me with dread and reawakens the muscle memory of all the tough good-byes from my eight years living in London. I felt anxious when Tom dropped me off at the airport, even though we would only be apart for a few days. I feel this way whenever we travel without each other. No matter how many times we do it, my mind always conjures horror stories of things that will go wrong while we’re apart. Maybe my plane will crash. Maybe he’ll get in a car accident. Maybe the dog will be run over by a bus. Worst case scenarios dance through my brain as I check my luggage.

Flying solo can be a good thing

Then something funny happens as I pass through security and head to my gate. The cars stop crashing in my mind and a lightness comes over me. Being a lone traveler feels energizing and full of possibility. When you’ve been in a relationship for a while, you’re used to consulting with someone on choices all day. It’s liberating to say: Yes, I’m going to grab a latte at Starbucks and not ask Tom if he wants one, too. Even though he’d say yes, there’s just something about making my own decisions that feels like an indulgence.

I worry I’ve become too dependent on Tom. He’s naturally good at pretty much everything, which has made me lazy. When we travel together, Tom glances at a map of a new city and has his bearings right away. I can travel the same route 10 times and still not remember the route. So it’s easier to let him do the navigating. We’ve fallen into gender stereotypes when we’re out together. He always pays at restaurants or the grocery store for some reason, even though we share a bank account and the money is coming from the same source. If anything breaks (electronic or otherwise) I don’t bother trying to figure out what’s wrong with it. I just call for Tom and he fixes it in seconds.

While it’s lovely to have such a smart, reliable husband who takes care of me, I worry that my independence has eroded. I come from a long line of not-so-independent women, and I feel like I’m fighting against a genetic “dependence default”. Traveling on my own reminds me that I’m capable and connects me to the importance of carving out time for myself.

All that said, being away reminded me how many times during the day I really want to share something with Tom. I don’t feel like I’ve had an experience if I can’t talk it through with him. I’m used to blurting out any thought that comes into my head to him (much to his chagrin now that we’re working from home together). The truth is that most of the things I do in life are better with Tom by my side. I guess that’s a good way to feel about your husband…

How about you? Do you relish your alone time, or do you like to do everything with your partner? Women, have you fallen into some bad habits when it comes to independence, like I have? Any tips for making sure you keep the balance?

A letter to my husband on our fifth wedding anniversary

February 17th, 2012

Dear Tommy,

Eight (eight!) years ago this month, you decided to go to that party with Rik and both our lives changed. We had one of those conversations where the world disappears and time slows down. We kissed on Poland Street. We delighted in a shared love of Waterloo Bridge. You made me lasagna and we watched Lost in Translation (you passed the test). I walked you to the bus stop, then you walked me back to my apartment and that was it for us. We were together.

One the second anniversary of us meeting, you planned a whole day of fun for me in London. It was freezing, but we walked through Highgate Woods and watched a French film. You were quiet all day… because you were walking around with a ring in your pocket.

Early signs of our future obsession, circa the honeymoon

Just under a year later, our family and friends converged in London for one of the most wonderful, chaotic, exhausting, amazing weeks of our lives. If I could live any week over again that would be the one, especially that Saturday at The Groucho Club which, in addition to being the day we were pronounced husband and wife, was the best party I’d EVER attended. The less said about the cyclone on our honeymoon the better, but it certainly taught us that married life would have its fair share of storm clouds. And that all we needed to survive them was a few (hundred) games of table tennis and a camcorder.

By our first wedding anniversary we had uprooted our entire lives and moved to Boston. We were so tired and overwhelmed that winter that we only had the energy for a quiet dinner at a local restaurant. We started our anniversary rituals: treating ourselves to a bottle of champagne and buying the traditional anniversary gifts (which I might not have agreed to if I realized how long it was before we’d get to “diamonds” on the list).

For our second and third wedding anniversaries, we were in the midst of the failed suburban experiment and let’s face it, we were a little bit lost. No one tells you how tough those first years of married life can be. Well, maybe someone tells you but you just ignore them. Either way, there were points when I think we both wondered how many more wedding anniversaries we might see.

Anniversary walk (well, sprint) on the beach

But then things changed. By our fourth wedding anniversary we were in the midst of a revolution in our lives and were starting what was the very best, happiest, most fulfilling year of our marriage. We kicked it off with a new tradition: a winter walk on the beach and fried clams (well, for me). In the past year we learned a lot about ourselves and decided to take a major risk together. We had more fun than we’d had since we first met. We worked really, really hard. We laughed all the time.

Now here we are after five years of marriage and almost eight years together. We have a lot to celebrate and a lot to anticipate. Experience has taught me that there will be other storms, other arguments, other tough periods in our marriage. What I hope is that we never lose sight of how much better we’ve made each other’s lives; how much we’ve challenged and pushed each other; how much we’ve been able to grow together. Married life with you has been an incredible adventure and I hope it keeps feeling that way for a long time to come.

Happy 5th wedding anniversary, husband-face!

Love,
M

P.S. Don’t think I’m giving up on the vow renewal idea….

 

This Valentine’s Day we’re embracing all things cheesy

February 14th, 2012

This is an extra special big week for love in the Dowler household. Friday is our 5th wedding anniversary, but first we have a warm-up lovefest in the form of Valentine’s Day.

The perfect gift for a cheesy V-day. Hope Tom got the memo.

Because we met, got engaged and got married within the same week as V-day, we never used to celebrate the holiday. And let’s face it, even when you’re madly in love there’s something annoying about being ordered to feel romantic for a whole day. Especially when that day is in February and usually cold, gray, rainy or snowy. But last year, I decided to embrace the spirit of Valentine’s Day as part of my year-long effort to stop being grumpy about major holidays (you might recall the whole “kicking the Grinch out of Christmas” initiative).

This year we decided on a theme for V-day. We wanted something that captures the essence of the day, and decided what better way to celebrate the cheesiest of holidays than with actual cheese? We’re having a cheese-themed V-day, from the cheesy scrambled eggs we’re eating at breakfast to the cheese plate we’ll nibble on while watching one of the many cheesy romances I’ve put on our Netflix queue (I’ve been waiting for the perfect excuse to watch Melissa Joan Hart and Adrian Grenier in Drives Me Crazy).

What’s your plan for Valentine’s Day? Will you be celebrating or ignoring it? Any cheesy plans of your own?

Does not having kids mean that I’ll never really grow up?

February 8th, 2012

Regular readers of The Long Haul Project will know that I periodically write about our decision not to have kids. This decision has not been an easy one. I reassure myself that not having kids is a valid choice for someone who feels limited (to no) maternal instincts. I relish the opportunities and experiences that we’re able to explore because we’re not in nesting mode. But, thus far, I haven’t managed to completely quell the creeping voices of doubt and uncertainty. I wrote about them before here, contemplating if the decision not to have kids meant I was callous and unwomanly. And I’ve been thinking about the topic this week, but now I’m wondering if our decision not to become parents means that we’ll never become real grown-ups.

Livin' the Downton way

I just spent a few days visiting my parents. It’s weird but wonderful to visit “home”. A place where other people procure and prepare food for you, always picks up the tab at a restaurant, buy you cute clothes just because, even make your bed while you’re taking a shower. It’s what I imagine life would like with a Sugar Daddy, or if I lived at Downton Abbey.

My parents’ house is spotlessly clean. I don’t know how they do it, but I never see dust on shelves or dishes left in the sink or scuff marks on the floor. They never run out of anything– there’s an abundance. The refrigerator is always stocked, their huge bathroom is full to the brim with yummy-smelling soaps and lotions, there’s a stack of magazines to read, the television in the guest bedroom has more than 1,000 channels. When I’m there, I feel a soporific sense of being safe and protected; like I’m a kid again.

I’m 34 years old. Every week, my husband and I stare into the bright, bare abyss of our refrigerator trying to figure out what recipe we can concoct from half a cucumber, olives and a block of cheddar cheese. We’re often on the brink of a toiletry crisis. We don’t have cable TV or a car. Sometimes I wonder when we’re going to grow up, and suspect maybe we’re not… or at least in the same way our parents grew up.

When my parents were 34, they had a 7 year old (me) and a 4-year old (my brother). They had to think about getting us to school, preparing our meals, taking care of us when we were ill. Letting the refrigerator go bare or giving up their car wasn’t an option. Neither was the risk of starting their own business, renting their house and moving to the city, or taking time off to travel. My parents’ decision to start a family put them on the path towards a specific kind of adulthood; one with responsibilities that Tom and I don’t have. And let’s face it, responsibilities that we’ve run a mile to avoid.

I love the life that Tom and I have made for ourselves, I really do. I can’t help but worry, though. If I don’t have kids and experience that kind of adulthood, am I an adult at all? Am I in a state of suspended adolescence, never moving past the inherent self-absorption of youth?  Am I on a path to being 70 years old and still shopping at Forever 21? Will the day ever come when I learn how to buy enough food at the grocery store to make it through a week of cooking dinners?

How about you? Do you feel like a “grown-up”?  When did you realize you had passed into adulthood? Did it involve having kids or was it another rite of passage? As always, love reading your comments!

Cape Cod wedding trailer: Becky & Brian at Chatham Bars Inn

February 3rd, 2012

We posted this on Facebook, so you may have already seen it, but if you didn’t here’s the trailer for Becky & Brian, who got married on the Cape in mid-November.

We had a mild fall here in New England, so there were actually still leaves on the trees. Becky & Brian had great weather for a November wedding – clear and sunny, with just a little wind when we got close to the beach.

Like us, Becky & Brian are not only married, but also run a business together, a fashion line called Mahi Gold (if you look carefully you’ll see their logo in the trailer), and, in fact, when we emailed them the link to watch the trailer for the first time, they were at a trade show in Florida, and had to race back to somewhere with a good internet connection to watch it.

We’ve been meeting a ridiculous number of awesome, talented and super-friendly photographers lately, and we had a great time shooting alongside Meghann and Ruth. You can see Meghann’s shots from the day on her blog.

 

Making the commitment to a whole new life

January 30th, 2012

I wrote a blog about commitment last June and still haven’t got around to posting it (oh, the irony). I keep looking at it, in my Word Press drafts, wondering when will feel like the right moment.

It’s now. Because today is the first day of my new life. Day #1 of going full-time at Long Haul Films.

AHHHHHHHHHH!

I'm committing to doing a lot more of this....

Before we talk about that, let’s cast our minds back for a moment. Last June, I drafted a blog about turning from a commitment-phobe into a commitment-fan. I spent a lot of my 20s not committing to a city, a job or a relationship. Whatever the situation, I told myself that there was something better out there. I felt rootless and I liked it. I actively chose (created?) non-ideal situations to ensure that I wasn’t tempted to commit.

By last June, I was on a path toward a very different existence. One where I took the time to know myself, figure out what’s really best for me, and go for it. That’s been my slow, difficult but illuminating journey for the past couple of years. In that time, I’ve committed to building a conscious marriage with Tom. I’ve committed to the city I live in. I’ve committed to new friendships and connections. I’ve committed to living outside of my comfort zone… in many ways.

But there was one commitment I hadn’t made. That’s why it didn’t feel right to post the blog. For some time, I’ve been in a demanding full-time job while trying to get Long Haul Films off the ground. Tom went full-time 6 months ago, but I held off. I’ve done everything to balance the two worlds, but the 7 days weeks have really worn on me.

More than the hours, something else was getting to me. I knew I wasn’t fully committing to either situation; not totally investing myself. My heart, for some time, has been with Long Haul Films. My head, for a long time, held me back from fully embracing it. Committing 100% to our young business means accepting risk, change, fear, exposure. It means closing doors on certain opportunities. It means going whole-heartedly for others. Commitment takes courage.

I’ve been struggling with the choice to make this commitment for a long time. Now that I have, I’m experiencing excitement and nervousness. I’ve been a bit anxious. There are sleepless nights, where my mind can’t stop whirring with plans and possibilities. But overall, I feel a huge sense of relief and inner calm.

I’ve committed to my business. Committed to my dreams. Committed to myself. Pretty big deal for a former commitment-phobe.

I have a theory about the Seal & Heidi breakup

January 27th, 2012

Is it just me or is every celebrity marriage dissolving in front of our eyes? I mean, Russell Brand and Katy Perry is one thing – not even they can have imagined it would last as long as it did – but now the news that Heidi and Seal are to divorce? It’s just too much.

The interwebs are aflame with disbelief. Not Heidi and Seal! they say. Of all the celebrity couples out there, we thought at least they would last.

Am I the only one who thinks a white scarf runs the risk of making you look like Mumm-Raa from ThunderCats?

This got me thinking.

Why is it everyone was so convinced that Heidi and Seal’s marriage was so goshdarnit perfect? It’s not like any of us could tell how well they communicated, or how well they physically clicked and used intimacy as a glue to hold their relationship together. We don’t know what their respective love languages are, and how fluent each was in the other’s.

I did a quick google of all the blog posts and news items and it turns out that everyone in the entire world who thought they were a solid couple based that belief on one main factor.

They renewed their vows each year in a lavish ceremony.

As far as I’m concerned, there’s definitely a risk that if you do a lot to outwardly show how in love you are and what a great couple you are, it’s either an attempt to mask the fact that you’re a terrible couple, or at the very least it’s an activity that takes your energy and focus away from actually spending time doing the real things that will sustain and improve your marriage. Melissa thinks that the fact I’m making this statement on a blog all about our marriage is hypocritical. But the difference (I think) is that this blog is reflective of the amount of work we put into our marriage. When things aren’t going so well, we share it.

I’ve got nothing against vow renewals. Melissa is desperately trying to convince me that we should have one, as a way to mark the amazing improvements we’ve made in our marriage over the past couple of years. TLHP alum Alisa Bowman and her husband Mark had one because they turned their marriage around from the brink of failure.

But an annual vow renewal has all the power stripped out of it because it becomes a foregone conclusion. Which means you stop thinking about whether you want to renew your vows, and start doing it because that’s what you do. It’s a little like giving medals to all the kids who take part in the race. Sure, it makes it look like everyone’s a winner, but that doesn’t mean you won’t find someone crying under the bleachers before the afternoon is over.

Do you think there’s more to the Heidi and Seal situation than meets the eye? What’s your theory?

What a skittish cat taught me about relationships

January 17th, 2012

Letting yourself be loved. It sounds like the easiest thing in the world, right?  But it’s not, or so my cat Mini reminded me.

A rare sighting of Mini

Mini has always been an unhappy kitty. She is deeply suspicious of pretty much everything, but especially people. Tom and I have worked hard to draw Mini out of her shell. We’ve sprayed kitty pheremones around the house. We approach her carefully, trying to avoid alarming her in any way. We never yell at her, chase her, or otherwise lead her to believe that we would cause her any harm.

But, despite all evidence to the contrary, Mini remains firmly convinced that we’re plotting against her. She will only approach us when we’re lying in bed, at which point she’ll let us pat her for about 3-4 minutes before getting a wild look in her eyes and running away. Around the house, she slinks around the peripheries of rooms, ensuring she keeps a watchful distance between us. She spends a lot of time hiding under furniture. Sometimes, if she’s in the wrong mood, she becomes convinced that we’re using her dinner to lure her into a trap and won’t come out to eat. When we push her bowl under the couch, she hisses at us.

This Sunday morning I lay in bed with my two other pets snuggled up happily at my side. Mini, meanwhile, crouched in the doorway, alternating between glaring at us and howling. I realized that deep down, she wanted to curl up in bed with us. She really wanted to be loved. But somehow, she had convinced herself that trusting us was a dangerous thing and that love would lead to harm.

Mini has let perception shape her reality. Where our other pets see a chance for a cozy morning nap, she sees a hotbed of hazards. And how often do humans do the same things in their relationships? We assume the worst, we anticipate problems, we fear letting down our guard, we lack trust. And just like for Mini, those negative thoughts manifest themselves as the reality of our relationships.

Letting go of those fears and giving over to love is without a doubt one of the most frightening and vulnerable things you can do. But the rewards are worth it. I hope Mini can figure that out one day, and until then we’ll save a spot in the bed for her.

If you like it then you shoulda put a ring on it: why I love wearing my wedding ring

January 13th, 2012

We tweet a lot. Or, more accurately, Melissa tweets a lot on our behalf.

In need of a polish

Some of the things we tweet garner little attention, but others provoke a lot of response. Like this story about how some football player never takes off his wedding ring, even though leaving it on could be an injury risk. Most responses to our question about whether people wear a ring echoed @kaitlinmaud‘s, who said ” yes. Because I love it (1) and it’s a symbol of the commitment I made to @AJScissorhands & myself & our marriage (2)”.

Last year, Prince William announced that he wouldn’t wear a wedding band because he doesn’t like jewelry, and I felt a little bit sorry for Kate that he wasn’t prepared to get over that for the sake of making an outward show of commitment. I mean, he did allow his wedding to be televised to a worldwide audience of millions, so that’s something…

I never take my wedding band off. When I’m sleeping, showering, working out, washing the dishes, it stays on. It’s always seemed important to me to keep it on, but I’d never really thought about why.

Now, after nearly five years of marriage, I like that there’s a permanent indentation on my ring finger. I like that, even if I took it off because I wanted to obfuscate my marital status, there would still be a mark there. I like that there’s a part of my body paler than my legs, and it stays wonderfully hidden under a quarter inch of white gold.

I like that it’s a little beat up from having been worn while doing manly things with my hands.

Ultimately I like being branded. I like being marked out as someone’s.

And I think that’s because I really like the someone I belong to. If I was a woman, I’d probably feel all sorts of feminist guilt about feeling that, but as I’m a dude I can totally get away with it.

Do you wear your wedding band all the time? Or at all? How do you feel about having an external marker that tells the world what your status is?

Death, snow and unpainted walls: remembering our first year in Boston

January 11th, 2012

January, 2008. Four years ago this month, Tom and I (plus our little cat, Pedro) moved from London to Boston.

We had been married for just under a year. A year defined by endings and good-byes. Our new life hung before us like a blank canvas, waiting to be painted. It was the start of an adventure.

View from the window, January 2008

But I don’t remember feeling like I was on an adventure. When I look back at those first months in Boston, I recall an omnipresent anxiety about getting our lives in place, making decisions, becoming established. I had a peculiar sense of disorientation as I tried to settle into a place that hadn’t been my home for more than eight years. The bewildering familiarity. The foreign sense of sameness. Like trying on old clothes that don’t fit anymore.

I always said that I would never move back to Boston in winter. Yet there we were, arriving in hard, frosted January. The ground was piled with snow and the drifts got deeper with each week’s storms. It was a frigid winter. The cold got into my bones early and left me chilled for the whole season; I never felt warm that first winter no matter how many sweaters and socks I piled on my shivering skin.

We were staying with my brother, who had just bought an old colonial house in the suburbs. A place called Melrose, it was small and neighborly with a little Main Street and not much to do after 8 PM. You needed a car to get anywhere and we didn’t have one. Couldn’t get one until we got jobs. After London, Melrose felt like Mars. The house my brother bought was a “fixer upper” which he would soon make over into a beautiful home.

Our bedroom at my brother's house, January 2008

At that point, in the winter of 2008, it was a crumbling relic. The wallpaper had been stripped and the walls were yet to be painted, the ceilings were cracking, the furnace was on its last legs and the kitchen looked like time had stopped in 1972.

Every day, Tom and I applied for jobs while a parade of painters, contractors and appliance delivery men worked around us.

And then there were my grandparents. My grandfather, unable to breathe without an oxygen tank and painfully underweight, couldn’t get out of bed one day in April. He asked why there was a bird perched on the wall, watching him. We took him to the hospital and that’s where he died, a few days later. My Grandmother, his wife of more than 50 years, didn’t want to live in their house alone. Never the easiest woman, she didn’t want to go anywhere else either. She went through hired homecare workers like tissues, none of them strong enough to last with her.

My Grandmother was lost and scared, but it was hard for any of us to be patient with her. She wanted every member of our small family to be with her at all times, so Tom and I spent many nights and weekends at her house. Tough, draining nights and weekends that defined our first year in Boston, our second year of marriage.

Weeks after my Grandfather died, my Grandmother was diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer in her lungs and liver. She succumbed in October, on a hospice bed in the formal living room at their house; the all-white room that no one ever sat in. She was the first person I saw die.  She didn’t seem ready to go.

In the midst of all this, Tom and I got jobs. We bought a car and a house, too. We filled the house with furniture, we painted the walls and landscaped the garden. We were getting our lives in place, but none of my anxiety was easing. The job gave me little satisfaction. I resented the long hours and dreaded the commute from the city to the suburbs. I was convinced there was a ghost in the house. I hated to be there alone. I looked at the paintings on the walls, the flat screen televisions, the vases, the lawn furniture and flower pots and I wished they didn’t belong to me. They pressed on me like a weight that I couldn’t get out from underneath.

A lot happened that year, but none of it felt like it happened to me. It happened around me, I was present, but I wasn’t really in it. Later, Tom and I would talk about some of the decisions we made and neither of us could really remember who made them, or why. Big decisions, like about buying the house. I thought you wanted to buy a house in Melrose. No, I thought you did.

Oh.

We could have got stuck there, at the place where we started four years ago. But we didn’t. Sometimes I’m surprised we made it through. But we did. Looking back, I remind myself that we wouldn’t be where we are today if we didn’t start there.

But I also thank my lucky stars that January, 2008 is far behind us.