Many times over the years I’ve been asked how I get away
with some of the comments I make about marriage in general and my marriage in
particular. I usually answered with a smart-ass comment normally insinuating
that my wife hasn’t listened to me in years so why would she read anything I
write…or something way more clever than that.
The fact is I always felt free to make those comments
because I write very much the way I talk…incoherently but with heavy sarcasm, so
I never really wrote anything that she hadn’t heard or would be surprised to
hear me say. So I thought.
The fact is that most of my attempts at humor are either
self-depreciating or aimed at a public figure who is not likely to sue me. When
I picked on Sandra or our marriage, I always tried to do it in a way that made
me look like the moron, which has never required a lot of creativity, and I’ve
always gone out of my way to never be cruel when teasing her about her
conspiracy theories, driving habits or her seemingly inexhaustible patience
with me.
About that inexhaustible patience….it seems that I may have
overestimated that just a bit.
The trouble with communication within relationships is that
like trying to see the forest while standing in the trees, repelling pirates
with a saber or dancing with fat people; it’s difficult to be effective when
you’re too close.
Too often I have used this forum to lament about the
tortures of having to endure “relationship” discussions with Sandra. Not long
ago I suggested that men should attempt to remember the names of their eighth
grade football team to provide the illusion of rapt attention during such
discussions…for the record, that’s a really bad idea.
Somebody once said
that if you repeat a lie often enough it becomes the truth. I don’t believe
that for a minute; the truth might be hard and it might be ugly sometimes but
it’s always the truth. Likewise BS is BS even if you serve it on a plate with
fries and a coke. I do believe that nonsense
repeated can alter perception and that perception can become reality.
That’s either real deep or a bunch of gibberish but either
way, don’t stop me now because I’m on a roll!
The hard and ugly truth is that sometimes guys like me, that
is to say shallow emotional dwarfs, don’t have the best emotional communication
skills…no really…it’s true! It turns out that publicly declaring that the key
to a good marriage is lowered expectations and feigned sincerity then mocking
your wife’s attempts to have serious conversations with you across the internet
is not conducive to healthy marital communications.
Who knew?
The hard ugly truth is that any grown-up should have known and
if I had paid attention, even I would have known…not to say that I’m an
adult…my audacity only goes so far.
So I was wrong, lowered expectations and feigned sincerity
are not the secret to a good marriage. The fact is that I have no idea what the
secret to a good marriage is…those of you who are regular readers of this blog
can’t be surprised by that. Sandra sure as hell wasn’t.
I suspect that there is no real secret to a happy marriage;
I suspect it has more to do with commitment, honesty and trust than secrets…but
like I said, I really don’t know. Taking marital advice from me is kind of like
taking political advice from Anthony Weiner...a very bad idea.
Marriage remains a mystery to me, as I’m sure it is to all
shallow emotional dwarfs. I can’t think of anything else I have done for so
long and still have no idea how to do it, though Sandra might suggest other
things that fall into that category.
I’ve been married twice for a combined total of 32 years and
I was only in the Navy for a little over 21 years and I was a much better
sailor than I am a husband. I wonder why that is? I suspect it’s because I’m
much better at drinking beer and telling sea stories than I am at expressing
emotions.
Then again…it could just be that shallow emotional dwarfs
make lousy husbands.
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