For example, back when we were newlyweds my husband
had a habit of going around and making definitive proclamations about how
everything HAD TO BE, and I had the habit of believing that I had no choice but
to follow each and every one of them to the letter.
Like the
time that we ran out of vacuum cleaner bags and my husband declared that before
I could buy any new bags and continue on with my vacuuming, I had to shop
around, compare prices, and find absolutely the best value that I possible
could.
Because, when faced with the need to buy
something my husband compares approximately 800 jillion styles, prices, sizes,
locations, options, and, please, somebody, kill me now and end this
misery! Whereas I decide what I need, go to a store that sells it, find
something that meets my needs, and buy it. His method works great when you're
buying things like cars, washing machines, and computers, but it can be a real
problem when you run out of something like, say, bread.
So
I tried to shop around, I truly did. But what I never knew until I became
a vacuum cleaner owner myself is that, just like each human being has their own
personal blood type, and some blood types are more rare than others, each vacuum
cleaner also needs its own particular type of bag. And apparently our vacuum
uses the AB- equivalent of vacuum cleaner bags, because I could not find those
suckers ANYWHERE.
So the pressure was building, and the carpets were
dirty, and I wanted my husband to approve of me, and then one day...I discovered
online shopping. I just entered in our type of vacuum cleaner bag, and up popped
this luscious list of bags, all ripe for the buying. And I thought, "I just
can't take it anymore-I MUST be able to vacuum!" And so I bought the very
first package I saw. And then I sat and waited for the earth to crash into the
sun, because I had just made a decision to do something other than what my
husband wanted.
Surprisingly it actually turned out to be no big deal.
And I began to suspect that I might not need to take my husband's proclamations
quite so seriously after all. So I began to make cautious little experiments
here and there, and slowly my confidence began to grow, and eventually I began
to trust in my own abilities to buy things like closet organizers and crock
pots all by myself. And now I have become such a Brazen Consumer
Hussy that I recently bought myself a brand new MP3 player while my husband
was off in a whole other state, and I never consulted him once.
So we
eventually worked our way through the thorny issues involved with taking each
other seriously-or not-and then we smacked right up against our deeply held and
completely unquestioned belief that, "MY way is the only right way
to see things."
I think the most vivid example of this particular impasse
took place back during our first year of marriage when my husband, who is
himself an Eagle Scout, worked as a volunteer with a Boy Scout troop and I,
caught up in the flush of wanting to impress my new husband, agreed to go along
on one of his troop's camping trips.
I really should have known that I
was in over my head when my husband and I went to the outdoor store to buy me
some gear. We did not go there to buy a cool backpack, or a kicky bandana, or a
nifty trail tool. We went so that I could buy my very own, neon orange, plastic
poo shovel.
But I stuck to my decision to go on this trip, so we packed
up all our gear, drove to the mountains, hiked all the way up the trail to the
spot where we were going to camp that night, and then things kind of took a turn
for the worse. Because foolishly, we had drunk all the water we'd packed, so my
husband went down to the river, filled our two plastic bottles with water, ran
some iodine through the bottles, and handed one to me. I looked at the bottle,
looked at him, and said, "It's brown, and there are bugs in it!" And he looked
at me and said, "The bugs are dead. And we have this lemonade mix to add to
it."
Even now, nine years later, I can't think of this story without
experiencing total incredulity at his response. And to this day my husband
insists that we would not have even had this problem, if only he had packed a
darker colored drink mix. Hm, so I guess we haven't actually changed very much
at all in that area. Oh well.
But eventually we did get to the point that
I guess most couples do, where we realized that we in fact going have to at
least consider being flexible and compromising in some areas, so that we
could work out all the different roles in our marriage in the ways that worked
best for us.
I believe this process officially began three
years into our marriage, when we bought a new house and then six months later
experienced a severe ice storm.
We thought the worst that
happened was that we lost power, but we soon discovered just how wrong we were
when I walked into our bedroom and saw a GI-NORMOUS tree sticking through the
roof.
Naturally I called for my husband, and he responded by saying,
"What?" Now I'm sure you can picture this situation, so you know the tone I was
using. It was not, "Could you please come in here when you get a minute, hon?"
It was, "COME! NOW! BAD!" Fortunately he decided to amble in and see what was
going on. That was good because I only had the one yell in me, and then I lost
all ability to speak and was reduced to quiet whimpering.
So he came into
the room while talking on the cell phone to his dad, saw the giant hole in our
roof, and...started describing it in precise, rational, scientific terms to his
father. Like, "Hm, the hole is about the size of a dinner plate, and the tree is
protruding approximately eighteen inches down from the ceiling."
And I'm
standing there looking at him, the love of my life, the man I waited seven years
to marry, and I'm thinking, "Who are you, and what is the MATTER
with you?! Why are you not freaking out when CLEARLY that is the response called
for in this situation?!"
So that was the point where we decided to take a
whole, "division of labor" approach to our marriage, deciding that in times of
stress it works best for us if my husband is the person in charge of Being
Calm, and I am the person in charge of Getting To Freak
Out.
So here we are seven years later (still living in America), and
we've gotten our routine down pretty well. He is in charge of Things That
Sting, Time, Calling People On The Phone, and Knowing How To Get Around
In Any Given Location, and I am in charge of Funny Smells, Sneaking In
Decluttering So He Doesn't Notice It, Knowing Things About People, and
Holding His Drink When We Go Out Somewhere.
It works for us.
Jenny Ryan is a writer who enjoys exploring the humor she finds in the contrasts and stories of everyday life. You can find her, using her powers for good, at jennyryan.com.
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