Posts Tagged ‘Husbands’

Does It Count As a Date If It Involves a Hardware Store?

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Grandma wanted some time with the kids this weekend, so Willis and I found ourselves childless on Saturday morning.  We spent the time running errands together at Costco, Lowes, Bed Bath & Beyond and other such mundane places.

Romantic?  No.  Except it kind of was.

We grabbed lunch at the Chinese place we used to go during our poverty years.  We had uninterrupted conversation.  We enjoyed each other’s company and reconnected with each other.

It may not have been a candle light dinner and a stroll in the moonlight, but that’s OK.  The most important elements were there.  Our romantic stroll just happened to be at Target.

Negotiated Infidelity

Monday, August 9th, 2010

There’s been a lot of media attention for Holly Hill (aka Sugarbabe) this week, a mistress-turned-author who says that our marriages would all be happier if women would just learn to accept infidelity.  I first saw the article here on CNN.com.  According to Ms. Hill, “It’s better to walk the dog on a leash than let it escape through an unseen hole in the fence.” And “…men are hard-wired to betray women on the long-term.”  She also thinks that charging her boyfriends $1000 per week for her company is not prostitution, but women who stay in unhappy marriages are just like prostitutes.  Okey dokey.

This is offensive on so many levels, I hardly know where to begin.  She’s telling women that their husbands are inevitably going to cheat and that we’ll all be happier if we just accept it.  Really?!  When someone makes vows to us, we’re unreasonable nags if we expect them to mean it?  I expect to be honored, loved and respected by my husband, just as he promised.

A lot has been written about how womens’ expectations are set too high.  It’s tiresome and infuriating, but what really bothers me about this particular piece is Ms. Hill’s perception of men.  If a male author had written a book comparing women to dogs and calling us mindless animals, he would be burned at the stake.  But evidently it’s OK to treat men with such condescension and disregard.

Call me crazy, but I believe that men are intelligent beings.  They are adults who are responsible for their actions.  When a man behaves badly, it’s because he chooses to do so, not because he is biologically wired to be an asshole.

Can’t we please raise the level of discourse about gender?  Wouldn’t it be nice if we could all be grown-ups and lose the “men are pigs, women are bitches” commentary?

If a couple has a mutual agreement to have an open marriage, great.  I’m all in favor of consenting adults doing their thing.  But perhaps we shouldn’t take advice from someone who calls herself “Sugarbabe” (or pay any attention to her whatsoever).  And perhaps CNN should put some standards in place regarding what they publish.

Ten Ways to Keep a Husband

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Willis and I have been married for 15 years.  Better and worse, sickness and health,  richer and poorer – we’ve lived through it all.  I don’t think that either one of us are particularly easy to live with, but we’ve smoothed out the bumps over the years and settled into a comfy equilibrium.  He could probably write a dissertation on how to stay married from a man’s perspective, but as a wife, here’s what I’ve learned over the past decade and a half about keeping a husband.

  1. Good food and good sex.  It’s a cliché, but if their stomachs and libidos are happy, you’re off to an excellent start.
  2. Men need to be needed.  This took me a long time to learn.  I was raised to believe that I can do for myself.  I don’t need anyone to take care of me.  And I don’t.  But once I learned to let him be my knight in shining armor, life improved for both of us.
  3. Physical contact.  I read a study once (and I kick myself for not keeping track of the citation) that found a strong correlation between healthy, long-lasting marriages and the number of non-sexual touches in a day.  Little things like putting your hand on his knee when he’s driving or when he walks behind you through a doorway and touches the small of your back.  In this study, sex didn’t count because technically, you can have sex with someone you don’t even like.  But physical affection was shown to strengthen the bond between partners.
  4. Treat him as you want to be treated.  All of the things that women want, men want too.  Hold your tongue if you have something unkind to say.  Be courteous.  Listen when he speaks.  Treat him as your equal.
  5. Have high expectations of each other.  Anyone who wants to be treated as an equal needs to step up and be an equal.  Therefore, nobody gets a free pass based on their gender.  This includes everything from not dating outside the marriage to pitching in with the dishes.  Being a man is an excuse for nothing.  Men and women are equally capable of good behavior.
  6. Be free and easy with the compliments.  Another thing that my husband does better than I do.  But men need to hear that they look good just as much as women.  Tell him you love him often and tell him why often.  My rule of thumb is every time I think something nice about him, I make a point of saying it out loud.
  7. Trust, honesty and respect.  There is no relationship without these things.  Like I tell my 5-year-old, if you have to be sneaky, it means that you’re doing the wrong thing.
  8. Work it out.  Your marriage can’t last forever unless you truly believe that it will.  Willis and I agreed early on to not even think about divorce, let along suggest it unless something truly cataclysmic happens, like infidelity, violence, substance abuse, criminal activity, etc. (I’m happy to say that we struggle with none of these things).   Aside from these deal breakers, hang on tight and get through the hard times.
  9. Make him your priority.  My marriage is the foundation for my life and for my children’s lives.  So even though it would be very easy to lose each other in the shuffle of our lives, it benefits everyone to put our relationship first.
  10. Have fun!  Laughter is important.  If you enjoy each others company, you’re more motivated to keep the spark alive.

What else?  What other tips do you have for keeping your relationships healthy?

Tall Time

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Since I’ve had my second child, I’m reminded of the necessity of dating my husband. With diapers and night feedings and work and laundry and the other 4 million things that demand our attention each day, it would be the easiest thing in the world for Willis and I to lose track of each other. We used to take time out to be a couple regularly, but we’ve fallen out of the habit.

For example, when G turned four, Willis and I went to Disney Land to celebrate – without him.   Lots of cocktails and spa treatments to go with roller coasters and fireworks.  Very romantic.  Probably why we got pregnant again.

(Side note:  Beware of Cirque du Soleil!  I know of four different couples who got pregnant immediately after seeing a show.  Something about all those bendy people…)

But with our daily juggles in addition to the birth of our daughter, we’ve become complacent about keeping our marriage vibrant.  One recent Saturday evening after we spent the day together driving to swimming lessons, buying groceries, pulling some weeds and cleaning the house, I looked at him and said, “I miss you.”

So, we have officially reinstated “Tall Time”.   On our next date, we will toast to us, to enjoying each other, and to not being responsible for anyone else’s pee for a few hours.  Cheers!

Unlocking the Door

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Marriage is such a funny thing.  Each one is different and every couple finds their own unique equilibrium.  Making a home and a life with someone means discovering each other’s habits and hang-ups.  For example, I won’t set the alarm clock for an even number.  No real reason for this neurotic behavior, but I’m adamant about it.  Willis, on the other hand, has some sort of mental block that won’t allow him to talk on the phone to order take out.  He’s a highly educated man, but he finds it somehow difficult to call in an order for Chinese food.  The challenge is to figure out which little bits of weirdness are cute or funny, which are tolerable and which ones are deal breakers.

Our front door, like yours most likely, has two key holes, one for the regular latch and one for the dead bolt.  A few months back, at the end of a long, trying work day, I staggered up the front steps carrying a car seat, a pack of diapers, a diaper bag, a laptop bag and my purse.  I wanted nothing more than to get inside, put all this junk down and hug my husband.  I fumbled for my keys, praying that I wouldn’t drop them.  I lifted the arm with the baby hanging on it and pushed the key into the hole.  Sweet rest was just moments away.  I turned the key and pushed.  The door didn’t move.  The dead bolt was locked.

I muttered obscenities like Yosemite Sam as I unlocked the top lock and dragged myself and all my crap inside.  “Hi babe,” he said innocently.  Through gritted teeth, I said as calmly as I could muster, “Will you please not lock me out?”  “Oh.  Sorry about that.”  Deep breath.  No harm done.  Move on.

The next day was an exact replay.  He did it again.  And the next day – same thing!  Stop locking me out!  Off and on for the next several weeks, we replayed this ridiculous scene with me getting more and more annoyed each time.  Until one afternoon, I sat on the side of the bed, closed my eyes and decided that I had lost touch with my true priorities.  The happiness of coming home to him was getting screwed up because of the stupid lock.

I don’t want to be his shrew wife who walks through the door bitching at him.  I want him to be happy when he hears me pull into the driveway.  And simple as that, I acknowledged that he is hard wired to protect us by locking the door.  There isn’t an ounce of malice in this act.  In fact, when he comes home with G each afternoon, he’s dealing with his own whirlwind.

So, I still haul Pinky and ten tons of stuff from the car each afternoon.  But now, I automatically put the key in the top lock first.  Sometimes it’s locked, sometimes it’s not, but it no longer matters.  What matters is that he comes to meet me at the door, gives me a kiss and says, “Hi sweets.  How was your day?”  Harmony restored.

How to Please a Husband

Monday, November 30th, 2009

I have this book in my collection.  The title made me pick it up – “1000 Ways to Please a Husband” published near the turn of the last century. (There is no year in the book.)  When I saw it, I expected something bawdy, or at least something in the self-help genre.  To my delight, it is full of recipes!  It makes me smile every time I look at it.

Is it really that easy?

Is it really that easy?