Showing posts with label Marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marriage. Show all posts

May 14, 2022

Abiding in Love

Image by Pexels from Pixabay 

As I was making coffee this morning, two different roasts, I reflected on how much my husband’s tastes have changed over the course of our marriage. When we first met, we preferred almost everything the same. Now, we are almost opposites. While mine remained mostly unchanged, his narrowed.

I still prefer mild roast coffee. He now wants medium. We once liked the same half and half creamer. He wants sweet cream. I prefer, and for dietary reasons, more chicken and fish. He wants almost nothing but beef.

His doctor blames the natural course of aging and COVID on the change. Unless it has a strong flavor or seasoning, he can’t taste it.

Figuring out a menu we could both enjoy (and eat) was a challenge at first, but after some thought, I found a solution. For example, when I make our favorite recipe for minestrone soup, instead of adding the meat with the principal ingredients, I cook those separate. We each dish the soup and then add our meat preference. For other meals, we fix two different meats and serve them with the same side dishes.

Even though the compromises mean a little more work, he’s worth it. Our love for each other has only deepened over the years, despite the changes in preferences.

We pepper our day with hugs, kisses, and sweet words. We hold hands while watching movies. When a romantic song plays in a movie or on our playlist, he pulls me into his arms and dances with me around the living room. We cuddle on the porch swing and watch the sunset. I’ll make his coffee. He’ll make mine. He’ll cook his beef while I cook my chicken.

We abide in our love in a similar way to what Jesus told the Apostles, “If you keep my commandments, you shall abide in my love; as I also have kept my Father’s commandments and do abide in his love.”

God commanded, “Wherefore a man shall leave father and mother and shall cleave to his wife: and they shall be two in one flesh.” Genisis 2:24, and “Nevertheless let every one of you in particular love his wife as himself: and let the wife fear [respect] her husband.” Ephesians 5:33. 

Charity begins in the home, so does love.

Thank you, Lord, for giving me a wonderful man to be my companion. Help me to always adjust to changes with a mind toward solutions rather than bemoan the differences. Amen. 

June 17, 2019

Seventeen Years Ago...



My husband and I were married in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, a fairy tale wedding and honeymoon with African drums, roaring lions, massive waterfalls, night skies blazing with starlight, tall tales told around a crackling campfire, and rings from a South African diamond emporium. Strange-sounding names, Limpopo, Chiredzi, Zambezi, Zambia and Botswana. Sunset cruises on the river with champagne and appetizers. A helicopter ride over the falls. Elephants, buffalo, zebra, giraffe, monkeys, kudu, impala, wart hogs and lions — enough to fill anyone’s dreams.

Settled on our little hillside paradise we listen to coyotes in the evening, dove and quail in the morning. Deer feed on the fruit that fall from the plum and peach trees. Squirrels and birds feast on the ripening cherries. Ducks, geese and pelicans dot the pounds and a nearby river. Two-hundred-foot waterfalls roar a few miles away, not quite the mile wide, three-hundred-foot Victoria Falls, but impressive just the same.

Honey, this more settled retired life may not have the same thrills as our African wedding and honeymoon, (See The Lion Sleeps Tonight - I hope! and African Wedding and Honeymoon), but no matter where we are life is an adventurous paradise as long as I am with you.

Happy Anniversary.   

August 27, 2016

Love is Kind, Patient, and Sometimes...



In accordance with my seven-day challenge of Love Your Spouse, I have resurrected this story.

RV’s are a wonderful way to travel, but they are the perfect test of marital love. The challenges abound in the best of circumstances, but after a long day of moving, they explode into another dimension.

Our relocation from sunny Arizona to cooler Idaho went smoothly, considering, until we decided to winterize the RV. We dropped off the U-Haul and drove over to the storage lot. The instruction manual said it would only take five minutes, so what could possibly go wrong?

My husband peered at the valves. “Now which way do these go?”

I repeated the instructions.

Straightening back up, he said, “I’ll will hook up the hose, if you’ll open the faucets.”

That moment things began to go wrong. Water poured out of the faucets.

I made a quick exit back out to my husband. “We forgot to drain the lines when we drained the tanks, and there’s a lot of water running out of the taps.”

“Well,” The Love of My Life said, “It’s clear water. We’ll just run it into a bucket and walk it over to the dump station. That would be much easier than re-hitching the trailer and pulling it over there.”

“We don’t have a bucket. You took all of them into the house.”

My One and Only sighed, and then winked. “I told you we should keep one bucket in the trailer.”

It was an old joke between us, his way of admitting I had been right and he was wrong.

I looked up at the gray sky. The sun was hovering near the horizon. A gust of wind blew through the lot, carrying a cloud of leaves, papers, and grit.
.
I hunkered deeper into my coat. “Let’s come back tomorrow with a bucket.”

“No, I really want to get it done tonight.”

“And how are we going to do that without a bucket?”

“Let me think a moment.”

Before I could protest, another cold gust of wind blew an old bucket out from behind the neighboring RV. A quick inspection deemed it usable.  

We were lucky, the fresh water tank and both grey tanks contained very little water, and dumping them went smoothly and quickly. However, our luck turned sour when we opened the black tank. A thick, odorous black muck oozed into the bucket.

The Love of My Life stated the obvious. “It appears we also forgot to flush the black tank.”

I said nothing. My mother told me if I couldn’t say anything nice, not to say anything.

Next came the Really Big Mistake.

My Beloved announced, “Well, there can’t be that much left. We’ll just drain it into the bucket like we did the grey tanks and walk it over to the dump station.”

I watched the sludge pass the halfway mark, then the three-quarters mark. When it neared the rim, My Soul Mate shut the valve. We both stared at it, willing it to disappear.

The Man of My Dreams announced the scariest plan I ever heard him say. “It’s too heavy to carry. We’ll have to haul it over to the dump station in the truck.”

My stomach rolled. The storage lot was unpaved and filled with potholes and bumps. Coupled with a fully carpet lined truck bed, I had a sinking feeling this plan probably wouldn’t turn out well.

However, My Once in a Life Time Love had it figured out. “You sit in the back seat and watch. If it starts to slosh too much, holler, and I’ll stop.”

Oh, I’d holler all right.

We inched the truck across the lot to the dump station. I was amazed. My Darling did a fantastic job. Only once did the goop sway close to the rim.

Back at the trailer, we paused, staring at the Black Water valve. How much was left in the tank?  

The Light of My Life set the bucket down and opened the valve. More sludge poured out. He turned the valve off. “I don’t really want to try that again, do you?”

My facial expression must have given him my answer, because then he added, “Okay. We’ll hitch up the trailer.”

The sun sank below the horizon and the temperature dropped several more degrees. I was certain I had frostbite on my both hands and feet by the time we hitched the trailer and pulled it over to the dump station.

Once again disaster struck. The coupling on the dump station hose didn’t fit our flush valve.

My Dearly Beloved had another solution. “I’ll just take the hose through the bedroom door to the bathroom and flush the tank that way.”

I remained silent, but envisioned water spewing in every direction, soaking everything it touched. However, the Man Whom I Adore managed the process without any further mishap, and forty minutes later, we had the trailer back in its storage spot, the hitch and the towing equipment put away, and we were once again reading the instruction manual.

All we had to do was pump the anti-freeze through the water lines, but our hose wouldn’t fit into the antifreeze jug.

My husband looked sideways at me, then back to the antifreeze jug. “Sweetheart, would you go see if there is anything in the trailer we can use?”

“We took about everything out of the trailer, right along with the buckets.”

“Well, there might be something…”

I found a foil casserole pan just deep enough, I hoped.

And yes, from that point, the procedure took five minutes.  

The Man Whom I Adore More Than Anything made another announcement: “Let’s get a burrito at that little place I saw just up the street.”

I gritted my teeth. For the last two months, My Beloved failed to recognize any other fast food choice. I was certain if I ate one more burrito, I would not only look like one, I’d turn into one.


I gazed at My Nearly Beloved.

He said, “On second thought, let’s just go home.”

Good man.

 Love is: patient, is kind. It is not jealous, love is not pompous, it is not inflated, it is not rude, it does not seek its own interests, it is not quick-tempered, it does not brood over injury, it does not rejoice over wrongdoing but rejoices with the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails. (1 Corinthians: 13: 4-8)