Tag: marriage (page 1 of 1)

A Rollercoaster Jam Called Love

I really miss my boo-boo hoping [s]he don’t stay away.

— Rapsody

By Wednesday of last week, I had taken to telling people outright that I was cranky. I was frustrated with usual work stuff. I was annoyed with having to move desks and floors. I was uncharacteristically curt with folks for whom I usually have more patience. My emotions were at the surface, an occurrence so rare that others were commenting on it. By Friday, though, my story had changed. I was cranky and annoyed and frustrated but the cause was, I was lonely.

This week I’m grateful for longing. Tiffany spent the week visiting a friend in Vancouver, leaving me on my own at home. It’s not common for me to be home alone. In the last few years, I’ve been the one prone to solo travel multiple times a year for work. Work travel is so busy; I don’t get that sense of being alone. All my time is filled with meetings and movement and managing time zones. Over the last seven days, though, I sat in this house listening to its creaky floors and cupboards, forgetting to eat dinner at a reasonable hour, working too much, off my routine, and missing my wife.

My schedule never filled with appointments and events with other people. The few I made were canceled or postponed. So, I was left to spend my time thinking about how much I appreciate her presence in my life. How much I enjoy caring for her and being cared for in return. One morning, I nearly made coffee despite knowing she wasn’t here to drink it because the feeling of not doing it felt so… wrong. I joked with her about enjoying not having every television tuned to MSNBC whenever I chose to turn one on while she was away but I would’ve gladly traded Maddow for our nightly discussions of dinner plans that were sorely missing from my every day.

We’ve been together over a decade now. Diana Evans, in an interview with NPR about her novel, Ordinary People, talks about what we face when we are coupled-up for the long haul:

I think the real challenge of marriage or a long-term relationship is trying to appreciate the wonderful things about it. That sense of human understanding and sort of compassion and home — a sense of home that is always there and is always accessible to you.

I’m thankful for getting the chance to appreciate the beautiful things about my partner, the home we’ve made, and the life we share. When we came back together last night, our faces lit up, again on this rollercoaster jam called love.

Louisville is for Lovers

“Like a kiss of sunshine on my face”Basement Jaxx, What A Difference Your Love Makes

Tiffany and I were asked to do a reading that excerpted part of this conversation between Calvin and Hobbes about love at a wedding this past weekend and were delighted to do so.

I’m still all filled up with love as I type this at 36,000 feet on our return from Louisville, so let’s take an accounting of the things I loved about the last four days

  • The 21C Museum Hotel
  • Seeing Felicia for the third time in six weeks
  • Meeting the boyfriends of some of my favorite people
  • Genuinely liking and approving of those dudes
  • Rain. Lots of it.
  • Lightning.
  • Accidentally going to Indiana.
  • The Silver Dollar.
  • Babies with expressive old man faces
  • My yarmulke staying on my head
  • Not accidentally driving into a flooding creek
  • Please and Thank You chocolate chip cookies
  • Bourbon and Orange Juice
  • The giant Louisville Slugger
  • Nancy and Sheldon
  • Brigid Kaelin playing the saw
  • Photobooth antics
  • Large red penguins in odd places
  • Double rainbows
  • Endless nerdy conversations
  • Endless laughter
  • Lipgloss and vitamins
  • The delight that is the brides’ friend Allison
  • Golden Boy
  • Feeling so honored to be participating in the first wedding in the newly renovated synagogue.
  • Acknowledging the power of love. This wedding was of two women, together for 18 years, civilly married this summer in another state, religiously married in front of friends, and family, and their congregation.
  • Being so impressed by a religious institution taking the opportunity to accept and love this non-traditional couple into their flock and use it as a catalyst to re-affirm their commitment to love, to learning, and to being a welcoming place.
  • Realizing that this was 8 years after I first met them in person at the scene of their commitment ceremony. It’s the first time I’ve been a part of a Jewish wedding and the first time I’ve been part of a wedding since June’s Supreme Court ruling on marriage equality but not the first time I’ve been part of a celebration of their love and commitment.
  • Those two ladies. Our lovely brides. So best.