A Long Obedience

“Because how we spend our days, of course, is how we spend our lives.” -Annie Dillard

I’ve been chasing a track of thought the last couple of days. I’m not sure if I can quite articulate it, but I’ll try.

Last week, Matthew and I celebrated our tenth wedding anniversary. You know that old joke, on your birthday someone will ask, “Well, do you feel any older?” It’s funny, and depending on my mood I fool around with the answer. But truthfully? No. I never feel older on my birthday. I always feel the same as I did the day before.

The night of my anniversary, however, after all the celebrations – all of them – when I was waiting to fall asleep, I did feel somehow, different. In the days leading up to the date, I had pondered the significance of the occasion and felt and thought a variety of things. Old. Astounded. Excited. Mostly old. (How is that I’m old enough to have been married for ten years?)

But on the Thursday night of August 26, 2010, I lay in my bed and I felt so very different. I felt wise and accomplished. I felt like I always imagined I would feel if I ever graduated university (how I will feel when I do graduate university, that is) only it felt ten times as hugely significant as graduation could feel.

It caught me off guard.

I have never done anything for ten years. Except this. My life has always been constantly changing. Changing location. Changing jobs. Changing religion. Changing friends. Hobbies. Habits. Opinions. The paint on the walls. I don’t feel very much like a person of constancy, reliability. I’ve never felt steady.

And here I’ve been a wife for ten. whole. years. My whole adult life, really.

But it wasn’t just that. It wasn’t just about me (like it usually is). Marriage is a we thing. It simply can not ever be a me thing. We did this. For ten. whole. years. We did it together. How miraculous.

I suppose that could be a post in itself, but I’ve been getting a new perspective all around. I’ve discovered in that last few months that writing isn’t something I want to do. It’s something I do, in one form or another, on a daily basis, and it’s something I have always done. Since I was old enough to hold a pen. I don’t want to be a writer. I am a writer. I don’t need a career path, notoriety and a steady paycheck to prove it. It’s part of who I am. That realization has brought a tremendous wave of relief. Writing is not something I can fail at. It’s simply part of my personal make-up.

I am a mother, and I always will be, from now and forever. My family is my family and I will never have another.

Other things about me that seem to constantly change, are, in reality, part of who I am. Ministry groups and volunteer opportunities in the community and among friends seem to come and go from my schedule. I’m always involved in some new thing. But whether the setting or cause is new or changing, I seem to have a personal service quotient that must be filled in order for me to feel like I’m living my life. It goes way back to when I was a teenager. Even though we weren’t involved in church in any way, my mom used to make sure we spent time volunteering. We canvassed for charities and participated in fundraisers and community service in general. I got used to living life that way. Now I can’t not live that way.

The same with creative endeavors. The same with home decor and improvement. The same with organizing. And reorganizing. Over and over and over again.

The more I’ve been paying attention to these regularities in my life I’ve been beginning to feel more comfortable in my own skin. And even though my schedule is far from the frenzied mass of activity it was a short time ago, I don’t feel like I’m doing nothing, accomplishing nothing. My life feels rich and full. I’m feeling more at ease with this girl God made. No, this woman. And I think I like her. How about that!

I’ve been less frantic with the fear that I will never accomplish anything ‘big’ or ‘worthwhile’ in my lifetime. I am pretty faithful on a day-to-day basis in the small everyday things God has given me. And I realize that if I go along, and am content, as time accumulates each thing will become better and better in its own right. I think I can be very satisfied with that.

“The essential thing in heaven and earth is that there should be a long obedience in the same direction; there results, and has always resulted in the long run, something which has made life worth living.” – Nietzsche.

I’m part of this great marriage and this great family. I am a friend and I have great friends. I’m good at cleaning and organizing stuff. I write! I learn. I learn all the time. I have an abundance of simple pleasures: reading, walking around my town and around nature – taking it all in, the joys of cooking good food, the joys of growing things for beauty and, hopefully soon, for food, hearing laughter resound from the open mouths of my children and my friends. Girlfriends. Yes. Worship. Yes.

Yes.

50 Cheap Dates

My husband is away and I miss him terribly.

I guess I’ve gotten used to having him around. It wasn’t always so. When our kids were toddler-age we were both going to school and working – him full time and me part time. I pretty much handled the kids myself as he went off to the call centre every evening. I got used to going to bed alone every night. When that phase of our life changed it was an adjustment to be sure, but it was a good adjustment.

Last spring, with his university days behind him (I’m not done yet) and settled in at his new dream job, we found ourselves separated on a regular basis yet again because he suddenly had to travel for work. A lot. At one point, he was gone for three weeks out of the month. I got used to holding my own here, even though it was a bit of a juggle organizing childcare for the nights I had to go to work.

But eventually, that was over too. We have settled into a blissful routine with both of us at home a lot more. Not only are we both here for the kids, but we’re both here together on a fairly regular basis. It’s been a nice pace of life.

But now he’s gone again. He’s gone surfing for a week with his buds. He will be home for a day and then off again for another week for work. I’m only on day three of his absence and I miss him. Yes, it’s partially because I’m not used to being alone with the kids 24/7 (usually they’re in school during the day and I work a few evenings a week). I had to take them to work with me (at the church) on Monday for two hours. They, of course, chose those two hours to continually pick at each other and get into screaming matches and Adora pulled a disappearing act by going outside to climb a tree and not answering when we were calling and looking for her (arg!). It was embarrassing and frustrating and of course they were getting along like peaches and cream as soon as we left the church building. Sigh. So I miss being able to hand them off, but more than that, I miss his company.

I watched three episodes of 30 Rock by myself on Monday night.

(Last night I invited myself to dinner at the Jenkins’ house, put the kids to bed there under Mike’s care and went to the movie theatre with Shannon, so yay for impromptu girls nights out!)

And now I’m sitting here missing him again. Two and a half more days of this, and then another week. Come home to me baby!

In the meantime I’ve been devising a plan. Mwah ha ha ha ha ha. I came across a cutsie little article – a list of 50 Cheap Dates. Matthew and I are notoriously bad for not making time together – alone (other than watching 30 Rock or Dexter or Lost or whatever TV series has our attention at the moment) and I keep saying “we need to go on dates more often.” I say it to my friends, I say it to myself, I occasionally even say it to Matthew. But I don’t really act on that desire. But this little article inspired me to grab the bull by the horns. I’ve saved the list. I’m going to drag him out and do the list.

Right now he’s surfing, happily ignorant of the plans I’m making.

A Good Wife

I’ve been reflecting lately on what it means to be a good wife.

Oh here we go. I think if you asked a room of twenty women what it means to be a good wife you would get twenty different answers. Nevermind what the men think. Nevermind God.

I’m on the lifelong learning plan.

I hope that when I’m eighty or so, the last puzzle piece of how to be married will fall into place for me. Until then, I keep plodding forward. And sometimes it does feel like plodding. But any movement forward is better than none. Right?

My friend Angella at Dutch Blitz keeps reminding me about marriage. She writes a regular thing called Committed: The Ties That Bond. Without her keeping the topic at  the forefront of my mind, I think I would be content to let the time slide by, moving from one family dinner to the next, waking from one deep slumber just to survive the day and settle into bed for the next, without stopping to examine what is really going on here. Her writing always gets me thinking. Sometimes it is encouraging and makes me feel like I’m doing something right. Other times, not so much.

Books get me thinking too. I was flipping through a book just a few days ago and the author (who was a Christian wife of an atheist man) mentioned that despite her deep loneliness she was happy to be able to serve her husband for Christ. She was thankful that she found God and she was thankful that God loved her husband so much that he included her as part of His plan for her husbands life. That she was able, as the closest person to him in this life, to love him with God’s love and minister to his needs. She wanted to model God’s love to her husband and hope that one day, he would catch on and fall in love with God himself. She admitted that she occasionally fell into pits of worry about her husband ever seeing heaven, but she tried not to focus on that.

That humbled me. Because I, for the most part, have had the opposite point of view. I remember as a young lady I would see a few older women around the church who were married to men who didn’t believe in God and who refused to have anything to do with the church. The ladies would sit together. They attended church faithfully ever week, alone, but with each other to fill the empty spaces next to them in the pew. They would come to Bible studies and small groups on their own. I remember gripping Matthew’s hand in church as we sat side by side, watching them with pity and a deep sadness. I couldn’t imagine how they did it. I thanked God I would never be like them. That was probably my first mistake.

When Matthew began to pull away from the church I didn’t understand it. A former professing atheist myself, He was one of the people who talked me into coming in the first place. I didn’t understand why he suddenly didn’t want to come and I put a lot of pressure on him. Oh yeah, I tried the guilt trip thing. I tried anger and accusation. A real winning strategy to be sure (hangs head in shame – sorry Matthew! Thanks for putting up with me!).

Lately though, I have changed my tune, because truly? I hate hypocrisy, and I don’t want him to have to stoop to that for my benefit. I don’t want him to put on a show. Not coming to church at all is better than showing up with a fake smile on his face and hating it on the inside. Whatever he is wrestling with in regards to church involvement, he needs to sort out with God.

That’s my current position. But I still have become one of those ladies who I previously pitied who comes to church alone. And you know, it’s not as bad as I thought. I still get to worship God with other people who love him too. I still am growing into and along with my church family who I love, building relationships and serving God and the community together. I still get to serve and participate. I still get to learn. But I have to admit, I have been feeling a little bit ripped off. And I’m starting to get the feeling that my attitude has been all wrong all along. Because it’s been all about me. And what I want.

Have I been praying for him? Occasionally.  But a lot of the time, I feel at a real loss as to just what to what to pray for. If I examine some of the things I’ve been asking, I have to admit, they’re pretty selfish requests wrapped up in some flashy packaging that looks like real concern for my man. Have I been serving him? Sometimes, but grudgingly so and on my own terms. That’s not real love, people.

Another thing that got me thinking was the interview with Matthew that I posted on this blog recently. None of it was new to me, but hearing it, then writing it down and then typing it out and reading it really seared this idea into me: we have almost nothing in common. I’ve been mulling that over. We’re not blind to this reality and we never have been. Right from day one we have recognized our differences and tried to celebrate them. Even when there’s not enough understanding to be enthusiastic about the other person’s difference, at the very least we have tried to give the other enough freedom and space to enjoy the things they love that we don’t understand. We don’t fight. Ever. I think that’s a good thing, because I hate to fight, but I know there are those who would disagree. Some people think battling it out over the issues is healthy. They might be right. I don’t know. But I happen to like not fighting.

Likewise, we have recognized the importance of intentionally creating commonalities between us. When it became clear that we don’t enjoy a single hobby together, we decided golf would be it. We both like golf. So we invested in this idea, and we both bought clubs. But the idea is far from reality. We golf together approximately once each year. Because it is expensive and requires having the same day off and organizing a babysitter. We just haven’t put in the effort to make it a reality I guess. And that’s it. Our failed golf experiment has been pretty much our only attempt to have a common hobby. Well, that and the kids.

We get a lot of enjoyment out of our children. And we work hard together to raise them well. They’re pretty stellar kids and I think we’re doing a good job. I’m proud of us. But sometimes I worry about what is going to happen when they grow up and go off into their own adult lives. I’ve seen what can happen. I know that relying solely on the job of raising kids as something to keep us bonded is just a plain old bad idea. But here we are.

I read a description of marriage in some church document. It said something…marriage…ta da ta da ta da… a man and a woman… ta da ta da… united as one, physically, emotionally, spiritually and in common purpose… something, ta da ta da. It sounded like a good ideal and it sounded very, very difficult.

I got to thinking. Matthew and I have that first part down pretty well. The baggage we both have forced us to focus on developing a healthy sex life. I think it’s getting there. Yay for healthy sex lives! Wooooo! And other aspects of our ‘physical’ union are very good too. We have kids – healthy and happy ones. That is a feat in itself. We do a good job of sharing a physical world, time and space, a house, chores. We don’t trip over each other. We share all our earthly belongings. We don’t fight over money. We get along. Everything that is visible and tangible is good stuff around here.

But emotionally? Matthew prides himself on not being an emotional person at all, and I seem to have enough of the stuff for ten people. It’s very unbalanced and is not a union of any sort. Common purpose? Aside from raising the kids, we’ve got nothing. I don’t think.

It’s like, on the outside, we do it all right. It’s all good. It flows. It works. On the inside, we’re separated by a giant chasm and nobody is willing to make a move in the direction of the other. I can’t speak for him, but I feel like if I try and move close to where he is, I am going to lose myself. And in the process of that, I might fail on my mission and then I will have neither a marriage-oneness or a self. I’ll fall into that pit and crash, alone, to the bottom.

The Bible talks about love and about dying to self. Every day. Can I do it? I don’t know. Certainly not on my own strength. These are the times that Bible verses like I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me come in handy. It’s funny. In our individualistic western culture, I have seen that verse applied to situations where a person is trying to achieve some great feat of worldly success. Money! Power! Fame and Fortune! Prestige! Self-sufficiency! It seems to me, and I suppose I could be wrong, that considering what Christ’s own great feat actually consisted of – torturous death on the behalf of the people he loves but who turned their backs on him anyway – the verse is more accurately a promise to the powerless who are grasping tightly the last string of a quickly fraying cord of self-reliance.

I stand at the edge of this giant chasm and I look across to my husband on the other side. If I stay where I am, where I’m comfortable, where I feel somewhat safe and even dull, I know things will be… okay. We’ll just live in our little comfort zone of a shared physical space, and be our individual selves. I consider the alternative. Making a move. Abandoning comfort. What move will it be? Where will I end up? These things are unknowns. Most of the marriages I witnessed growing up ended up in divorce. I feel like I have no model. I read lots. I listen to my Nana talk about her life because she is growing old beside the man she loved from the start. How did you do that? I wonder. What’s the secret key?

The only real clue I have is Christ. After all, the Bible calls the church his Bride. At  the end of all time there will be a wedding! Christ died for his Bride. It’s a theme in love. Will you die for me? Christ died for his love. Can I die for my husband? Can I say goodbye to this Self that I have worked so hard to construct?

I don’t know I don’t know I don’t know.

I’m afraid.

I’ve been thinking about women who I know who inspire me because of how they act in their role as wives. After some thinking, it dawned on me that most of the women I was thinking of are directly involved in their man’s work. That made me laugh a little because it made me think of when the Bible says the woman was made to help the man. I have always rolled my eyes at that verse. Yes. I love reading my Bible a lot. And yes, I roll my eyes at parts of it. Like I said, I’m a lifelong learner.

A few of the ladies that I thought of are pastor’s wives. I could write a whole post about what I think about pastor’s wives. Of the few I’ve known, it seems to go like this: They each have passions and hobbies of their own. They have families and manage households. Some of them even have jobs. But they’d drop it all in a minute if they’re needed – what comes first is helping their husband in the work that he is doing. They work in the church and for the church and they work hard. And they don’t often get recognized. They certainly don’t get paid. I have often observed that when a church body hires a married pastor, they get two workers for the price of one.

Likewise my friend S is fully invested in her husband’s business. It’s his lifelong dream, and God has blessed him immeasurably. In return, the man, M, pours out all kids of blessing and love into the community through his business. Everybody knows his name around here. What people see less often is S who works diligently to run the office, and do the books and who sacrifices nights with her husband when he has to go back to the shop and work overtime. Most people don’t know that God blessed her with specific skills from her past before she even met M (she managed a restaurant giving her managerial skills and she even took some mechanic courses at the college) that equipped her to work hard alongside her future husband in the dream God gave him.

My other friend E is a teacher and so is her husband J. They both work, of course, and have different specializations. E is currently taking a “break” from teaching to be home with their third baby and get the kids off to a good start. But she is still an educator – a mover and a shaker in our community, coming alongside other parents showing them what to do and how to do it better, together, all the while continuing to earn an income to help with household bills. Additionally, she understands exactly what is going on with her husband’s work. She knows what’s going on with the system on a professional level, and also what is going on in his classroom(s) and with his students. She participates – helping him as much as she can and praying for him all the time. Like S, she also sacrifices time while he has to be elsewhere – right now he’s working on his Masters. I’ve seen it with my own eyes – E is a superb wife.

And there are other women too who for one reason or another, just can’t be involved with her husband’s work. But they do other things. My friend Sarah (the world’s finest esthetician) always presents herself and her husband to the public as a unit. She calls herself Mrs. W and she calls him Mr. W and presents their blog as a dual deal, although she does most of the maintaining of it. She talks in “we” language a lot, not “I.” Stuff like that. It’s cute and I love it. And there are other wives who do other things. And I feel like I really don’t fall into any of those categories.

When Matthew first decided that he wanted a job at BCLC, I thought it was a horrible idea. Because of my personal ideals and political leanings and all that stuff, I had BCLC marked in my mind as a “Big Evil Corporation.” Capitals with quotes. I know. It was that serious. They were a crown corporation no less, meaning their evilness was at least doubled. And one that is all about gambling and lotteries and tricking poor people into losing all the little money they had, which pretty much pushed the whole thing over the edge of “Danica’s Good Ideas.” “Danica’s Good Ideas,” as a category, falls into the same bracket of seriousness as “Big Evil Corporation” and therefore also gets capitals and quotation marks. Seriously.

At first, I prayed and prayed and prayed that God would find him a different job. God did give him another job. In a company owned by a Christian couple (Score one point for “Danica’s Good Ideas”).  A company going nowhere fast, in a job title that didn’t utilize his skills and where he had no room to grow and nowhere to go. And, when push came to shove, where the ultimate goal was no nobler than the one at BCLC – to make money. As much money as possible. It was not a good place for my husband, and it was not a good time for our family.

So, after applying for the job eleven times over the course of a year and a half, my husband finally landed the job he was dreaming of at BCLC. I, feeling that my lesson had been learned, gave up the campaign and said okay guys (Guys being both God and my husband) I trusting you both on this one, and I’m going to move on with my life.

But I didn’t personally invest in this decision. This falls into the category, the category that rules over most of our marriage, that says you go your way and I’ll go mine and we’ll come home at the end of the night and sleep in the same bed.

Matthew’s been at the job for a while now and this is where I am, currently, with the whole situation: He is thriving and I’m glad to see it. He is growing and learning and becoming more of a leader (something I’ve known from the beginning of us that he is cut out to do) every single day. And in terms of where he is going in his career, the sky is the limit. That’s so awesome. This has great practical repercussions for our entire family as well. The pressure to ‘arrive’ at a career is off, relieving a great amount of stress. We are moving towards financial security for the first time in our entire lives. The bills are paid every month. We still don’t have all the extras we’d like – we’ve never been on vacation for instance – but those things suddenly seem like realistic future possibilities. I no longer leave the bank after looking at the account balance, feeling sick to my stomach contemplating all the outstanding bills and the empty fridge. As Matthew joked a few weeks ago: There are certain benefits to workin’ for the man.

Even the corporation itself has been demoted, in my mind, from its “Big and Evil” status. All the people Matt works with – real flesh and blood people – are good people. We’re making good friends with some of them. Speaking business, if they’re after earning some money, you know what? So is every other business out there. They do give back. Genuinely and not for show. They are concerned for people out there with gambling issues – again, genuinely and not for show – and they spend a lot of money to ensure there are checks and balances and a system for helping problem gamblers. “Danica’s Good Ideas,” when it comes to my husband’s employment have dissipated into the air. He does what he wants. It seems alright, and I’m good with it.

But it still isn’t something I can really invest in. Even if I wanted to. And I don’t.

So I reflect on this ‘helper’ idea some more. Do I have any sort of a role as a helper? After much grasping, all I can arrive at is a little comfort to think of all the people my husband would have to hire to keep things running smoothly around here if I were to up and die tomorrow. A nanny. A housekeeper. A cook. But I don’t think he’d have much of a problem filling those roles. I feel entirely and easily replaceable. I don’t contribute anything of value to his purposes on Earth. Not any that I can think of. I’m sure he could even find someone else to golf with him. Even, to have sex with, if he needed that.

Last week I decided enough was enough. I asked our pastor’s wife for a counselling recommendation. I feel like I’ve been living to avoid marital death – divorce. But avoiding death and living life are entirely different balls of wax. Likewise, I figure, with marital life. I want to stop living in a way that simply avoids divorce. I want to do my part to invest in this marriage. To build it and grow it. Only, I don’t know what to do, and I still have some heart issues to work out. And I’d like a little help with that.

When I was going through our garage last week organizing a garage sale I found an old journal and I flipped it open. Most of it was interesting and funny and charmingly naive (I can’t wait to see how fifty year old me looks back on thirty year old me). But then I came to another page where the writing was different. Jagged. Sparse. Short. Young Danica was expressing some hurt and fear. And with shock I read the exact same frustration about a particular same issue I had been wrestling with just a few days ago. I looked at the date of the entry. Six years. Whenever I feel like that, I feel like I’m just on the edge of overcoming it. I just have to push through. It was a shock to look down on the page and see that six years ago I was in the same place. I considered that I might still feel the same pain on the same issue ten years down the road from today and my legs almost gave out right in the garage.

The issue in particular was something small and surfacey, but I looked at the old wound-words in ink, looking so physically different than the normal writing in most of the journal, and I got to thinking about what that girl back then wanted. What is the bigger issue for her? What does her heart crave? What does my heart still crave?

What do I want?

The answer didn’t come. But this is what I think. I think she wants to be married. What do I want? I want to be married.

I know I’ve told you in the past that growing up, I never wanted to get married and then I went and fell in love with Matthew so I married him. Sometimes, in the hard times, I look back on that decision and wonder if I didn’t make a mistake. If I was deluding myself to think I was capable. Marriage is not for wussies, and maybe I’m just too much of a wussie. But no. Too much good has come of it to regret it. And I do love the man after all, and I want to hang out with him forever. In the yard. In the bed. On the golf course. Whatever.

But you know what? When I consider the idea of not being married – whether it’s an idea I had when I was eighteen, or twenty-four, or an idea I have now, I think, oh, how to explain what I think…

This is what I think:

Now – I do want to be married. I want it so badly it hurts. I feel that for all appearances I am married, that we, in the physical realm of the world, are married. But I don’t feel married on the inside. And I want to be. Oh how I want to be.

The young mother in the journal wanted to be married too. But she was clinging to her Self and wasn’t willing to make sacrifices to tie that spiritual bond.

And I even think back to that young girl who never wanted to get married in the first place. I stop considering what she didn’t want, and I start to think of what she did want. I have to laugh. She totally wanted to be married, only she didn’t know what that was because she had never seen it. She had only seen failure and selfishness and death paraded around and called marriage. And she ran hard in the other direction.

Right into the arms of love.

If I learn how to be a wife by the time I’m eighty I’ll be glad. I’ve got fifty years to get there, and so I keep plodding forward, looking ahead of me at the couples who lead the way and show me where to go. And I look over at the man walking along side me but too many paces over. And I reach out my hand to him across the empty distance between us and side-step a little to start closing that gap.

The Husband Interview

I’ve been blogging for almost six years. If you’ve been reading for a while, you might feel you know me a little bit. But if you know me, that doesn’t necessarily mean you know my husband. Finally, he speaks for himself.

Without further delay, here is my interview with Matthew. The kids were hanging around while we conducted our discussion, and sometimes chimed in. I made note.

D: I never know what or how much to say about your job. So I just don’t. Tell the people what you do.

M: There are 11,000 slot machines in the province of British Columbia among 33 gaming centers. Each machine keeps a record of all the transactions that have occurred on it, like money in and out, jackpots and the like. Every day, money is taken out of the machines and has to be reconciled against what the machine expects to be there. Each machine is connected to a network of servers within the casino. Each casino is connected through a large network to even more servers at BCLC (the British Columbia Lottery Corporation). This system not only collects the information from the machines, but also controls the behavior of the machines. We can do security checks, special jackpots, turn the machine on and off, things like that, all from BCLC in Kamloops. I am responsible for the system that does all of that.

Adora: How much do you like your work?

M: There are a couple of different things that contribute to my job satisfaction. Who I work for and the job that I do. BCLC is a fantastic employer. I have access to a great cafeteria with delicious cheap meals. I have the most flexible schedule I’ve ever heard of (ed note: he can pretty much determine his own schedule as long as he gets in his 40 hours). I get a month and a half of pain vacation and a pension. I have a relaxed work environment and any electronic gizmos I want. As for the job that I do, I am responsible for the highest profile customer facing system in the province. It has 20 billion transactions per year. There are huge repercussions if something goes wrong. I have to foresee problems and fix them before they occur. If they do occur, I need to fix them fast. I like it because it challenges me and I enjoy the respect and recognition I get from carrying so much responsibility. BCLC is a very forward thinking, modern, employee-focused company and I am privileged to work there. I have no stress from work when I come home at the end of the day. The job has nothing to do with physics (ed. note: his education is in physics) but I enjoy what I do and see myself retiring there.

Adora: And you do a good job Daddy.

M: Thank-you.

D: The people know what I do on the weekends because I whine about it all the time (work work work). Tell the people about your weekend.

M: Because Danica works, the girls (Adora and Grace) and I hang out. I use this time to do a lot of renovations and yardwork. Standard weekend stuff. Depending on the time of year, we go swimming or hiking or to the park. We see friends sometimes. This past weekend was very busy. I took Friday afternoon off to go golf 18 holes and have some beers with a work-friend. We had other friends over for dinner – steak and martinis. We played Wii and looked at old photos. On Saturday while Danica was working I took the girls to see the Fem-sport challenge to watch how strong girls can be…

Adora: Very impressive.

M:…I did the dishes for about three hours (ed. note: my husband’s spiritual gift is the gift of exaggeration) and then we went to the Winsor’s house warming party. That was fun. Sunday, we finally took the kid’s training wheels off their bikes (ed: my kids haven’t previously had a ton of regular exposure to bike riding prior to this spring, since we lived in townhouses and apartments and had no street. They could only ride at their grandparent’s house) took all the yard waste to the city compost and emptied the rest of our belongings from the storage unit. (ed: phew. I thought my weekends were busy…).

D: What’s it like to have a blogger for a wife?

M: It’s stressful and, and, and….well sometimes I’m proud. I like to show off your writing to people and photos and stuff. But sometimes I get nervous about how personal you get.

D: I know.

M: I worry that you’ll just whine about me to all your girlfriends if we’re going through something.

D: Don’t worry. I do. Kidding. Kind of. :-)

M: :-)

D: Okay. Rapid fire session. One word answers only. Ready? Go. What’s your favorite drink?

M: Spiced rum.

D: ummmmm (thinking)

M: You on top. It doesn’t matter what the next question is, that’s the answer.

D: I’m not writing that.

M: Do it.

D: No.

M: Come on you wuss.

D: Have it your way. Favorite age so far?

M: Current.

D: If you had a million dollars…

Grace: Awesome!

M: Investment!

D: Hero?

M: None.

D: Life aspiration?

M: Father.

D: Awwwwww. Season?

M: Summer.

D: Dinner?

M: Steak!

D: Holiday?

M: Christmas.

D: I meant vacation.

M: What’s a vacation?

D: How long do you think we’ll stay married?

M: Until I die of congestive heart failure. (ed. note: I constantly harangue him about his diet of meat, meat, cheese and more meat.) I’ll be with you forever unless you leave me.

D: Favorite movie?

M: Predator.

D: I didn’t even have to ask. I could have just told the people. Hobby?

M: What hobby?

D: If you could have a hobby?

M: Golfing, weightlifting, dirt-biking/motorcycle-riding, fly-fishing, scuba diving.

D: Favorite thing about me?

M: Outside – your smile – not just your mouth, your whole face. Inside – your mind.

D: Really? I often wonder about that.

M: It would be boring having someone like-minded for a wife. (ed. note: we agree to disagree on 99% of topics)

D: We (the girls) sort of tricked you into getting Neutron (the cat). What do you think of him now?

M: I still find myself letting him out in the middle of the night, cuddling him, feeding him, washing guts off our doorstep. And for that, I resent all of you (eyes roaming all three of our giggling faces around the table).

D: Wanna get a chocolate lab puppy?

M: The idea of a puppy, yes. The reality of a puppy, no. I hate crap on my lawn (ed: me too, yay we agree!) I have a soft spot for animals. I hate seeing them stuck out in the yard by themselves. Even fish – I hate seeing them in a tank. People have pets for selfish reasons. Animals belong in the wild.

D: Did you want to get married your while life?

M: Yes. I think I wanted to get married the minute I learned how to take my clothes off.

D: Shut up the kids are listening!

M: You know I’ve always loved kids and wanted a family. I always thought I could do a better job of being a father than the fathers I knew. I’m not specifically talking about my Dad here, but fathers in general in the same generation as him. I thought men were always very removed from the parenting. Aside from making and enforcing rules, I didn’t see Dads involved with school and school work, or teaching life lessons, building snow-forts, that kind of stuff. Again, I’m not specifically talking about my Dad. Just all the fathers out there I encountered growing up. I’ve noticed a big shift in our generation. Before, Dads worked and Moms stayed at home. It was a very role based existence. And their parents were, even more so. With all the shifts in the economy, both parents are often in the work-force and more of the home stuff is shared too. Everything from play-time to discipline.

D: Is it better this way or have we lost something, do you think?

M: That is a good question. I want to look at it from a Father / Son perspective. I used to think that Family structure mirrored some sort of biblical truth so that we would understand it. With the Father / Son paradigm (or Parent – Child) there is both an understanding and misunderstanding of the roles. Over time, God has transformed from an authority figure, blood sacrifice demanded for sin, helping armies win wars etc, and now we have this other figure, Jesus our friend, who speaks on our behalf. Each one has it’s place. With my role as the girls’ father, I can’t be buddy buddy with them all day long and then expect them to take me seriously when I suddenly try to enforce a rule. It’s a delicate balance. I think parents have to use their children’s behavior as a litmus test for your own parenting. You might need to change your hat for a little while. (And then he took a minute to give our listening children kudos for being such great kids. They are. They beamed.) Today, parents have settled too much into the Jesus role, and have gone too far away from the God-the-Father role. I’m more authoritative than most fathers in our generation. But I feel I’m way less strict than the fathers in the previous generation.

D: What about male and female roles?

M: I feel that you and I are exceptionally good at sharing responsibility. We divide things up according to our talents and interests. Sometimes those talents and interests fall inside traditional gender roles and sometimes they don’t. We have discovered what works for us by trial and error. While I don’t think life should automatically be divided along some blind bias, I do think that it is silly to say “we share everything down the middle.” Things should be divided up into roles, specific roles, depending on interest and skill, not stereotypes. No company does that. Companies hire specific people to do specific jobs. We work better as a household when each person is focusing on their responsibilities within the family. Each marriage has to figure out on their own what that looks like for them.

D: What is the best thing about being married in general, and what is the best thing about you and me, specifically, as a couple?

M: Generally speaking, the best thing about being married is discovering the joy in doing things for others. It takes the focus off the self. I am a naturally self-serving, conceited individual. Marriage and fatherhood are the best things that ever happened to me. I’ve learned to do things for good, other-focused reasons instead of doing them for selfish ones. As for you and me, I think it’s our like-mindedness.

D: Seriously? I’m not sure ‘like-minded’ describes us very well.

M: That’s not what I mean. I mean, we sync. I’ve never met someone I can relate to and get along with as effortlessly as you. Spending time with you is relaxing versus taxing. I get you. I understand you. You understand me. You understand what I’m talking about, what my motivations are, all that.

D: What do you think the biggest challenge is being married, in general, and what do you think is our biggest challenge, specifically, as a couple?

M: Especially in today’s culture, there is a huge focus on “me.” People are getting together later in life, when the individual is more firmly established. I’m not surprised at the divorce rate because people learn to live for themselves and then they get married and try to continue living for themselves. The best and most beneficial shift in my own thinking as a parent was the moment I stopped trying to incorporate my children into my life and instead rediscovered my life as a parent. Likewise with my marriage. Unfortunately, that shift in my attitude toward my marriage didn’t come until the last couple of years and for that I’m very sorry. I think people should get married, or have children, or even join a charitable organization when they have something to give, not when they’re trying to receive something.

D: What, specifically, is the challenge for us, do you think?

M: That’s different because your challenge is different than mine. I think your challenge is to figure out who you are – your piece of the puzzle, and what you’re contributing to this life. It’s like you’re still trying to figure out what brings you joy. If you are not happy and doing what you were built to do, then you won’t get joy from anything else. In the past, you were trying to get fulfillment from marriage, parenthood, being a sister and all those other relationships. I think you weren’t getting it. You need to establish who you are, figure out your talents and use them. Then you will find joy in all the other things too. I am speaking from personal experience. For myself, I think the big challenge is to continue to “chill the hell out.” In the last couple of years I have been less judgmental, less controlling, and I’ve let go of a lot of my expectations. I’ve been giving you more space and freedom. It wasn’t like that for a long time. I have been doing that more. I need to continue doing that more. I want to have more fun with you. That is my priority for the next year. To have more fun with you and to have more fun with the kids. I want more meaningful relationships with friends and family as well. I want less focus on my career now that I’ve got that under control.

D: For the people who know us, it is no secret that you don’t like church. Want to talk about why?

M: First off – I believe in God. Period. Without question. (Sighs.) I refuse to turn my brain off when I go into church. I don’t like the manipulation of the emotions. Manipulate is the wrong word. It’s well-intentioned mood setting. It’s like they are trying to invoke a religious experience. I’m just not emotional. I’ve never really connected with God in that way. It’s not who I am. Regardless of how legitimate it is, it’s just uncomfortable for me. It’s not who I am.

D: As far as “religious experiences” go, I’ve had genuine experiences, inside of church and outside. I know you have too. Are you worried, then, that they can create a false one?

M: Yes. So much of what I experienced growing up (attending the Christian school) was a result of forced, orchestrated religious experience. And in order to justify, for me, to believe what I believe, I cannot simply say “because of how it makes me feel” because that would be the same as any religion out there in the world. At the end of the day I need to know that I believe what I believe because I know that it is right, not because of the way I was raised. And I have serious problems with parts of the Bible. It’s very convenient to tell people to take parts of it literally and parts of it figuratively to try and make it line up with what we know today. Religion’s rejection of the scientific community and the scientific method is both regrettable and dangerous.

D: Like Galileo.

M: Absolutely. But let me add: It’s easy for me to say these things but I don’t read my Bible very often. I don’t pray very often. I don’t give Christianity the attention I give other things in my life. I’m not claiming to be an expert. If I was single, I would not go to church.

D: You don’t anyway.

M: I mean I wouldn’t go, ever. It is simply not interesting to me and it has not changed to meet the world where it’s at.

D: How about a hard question?

M: Shoot.

D: If you believe in God, why not sacrifice your interest and go to church to worship the God you believe in, or conversely, use the gifts of the intellect you have to serve in the church and make it more interesting and appealing to other people who are likeminded to yourself?

M: There’s the problem. I believe in God. I don’t believe in Christianity. There are so many other faiths. There are people in the world with beliefs far different than ours and yet they will even put more effort into it than you or I do. They are willing to die for it. I can’t just turn my mind off and follow blindly. How can I look at Christianity, some of the empty things there, and say “this is right?”

D: So you would choose non-involvement over possible wrong involvement?

M: My relationship with my family, friends, how I treat my environment, how I do my job, how I pray, all of these things stem from my belief. That is my worship.

D: Well, I think you hit the nail on the head with that one. Soooooo…… sports?

M: No.

D: Uhhhhhhhh. Okay, questions from friends. These are questions that fellow bloggers have left for you in the comments section. Sonya: inquiring minds want to know where he stands on the whole men-wearing-socks-with-sandals debate.

M: Man or woman, that’s a NO.

D: Amanda: What is your stance on peeing while your wife is in the bathroom fixing her hair/make-up/brushing her teeth?..and vice versa?

M: For one thing, I’m a sitter. And I never was until I got married. I sit for my wife. She doesn’t have to hear it. There’s no splashing. That’s how deep my love is for my wife. And besides, it is more relaxing to sit. I’m not for peeing while there are other people in the room. Either way. Close the door.

D: Aneta: What would you say is THE KEY to having a successful 10 year long marriage? What’s the biggest challenge?

M: I think we’ve covered that. It’s truly living for your spouse. Not trying to get something or take something out of your marriage. The rest is details. The main thing is the mindset, like with anything. The times of most trouble have been when I strayed from that. The best times are when both of us look out for the other.

D: Well, that’s it.

M: I love you Danica Grunert.

D: Right back at ‘ya. Thanks for reading, people. If you have any other questions for the man, just leave them in the comments section of this post and I’m sure he’ll be glad to answer.

Filled Up

I love discovering new things from the past. It’s always a surprise discovery, which makes it all that much more enjoyable because I love surprises. But really, the magic of rediscovering a truth I missed the first time? Love it.

Today I decided to take advantage of nothing being scheduled in my daybook calendar to begin sorting through the crap in the garage. You know, the last 20% of stuff that doesn’t seem to get unpacked after a move. Truth be told, what I really wanted was by bag of potting soil so I could plant some windowsill herbs. The bin with the soil was at the back, on the bottom, so I have been looking forward to an opportunity to sort through a pile of bin and boxes all at once to get at it. Well the opportunity arrived and I’ve been hard at work since I dropped the kids at school.

Everything is coated in a nice thick layer of drywall dust and sawdust from the suite renovation. So I began emptying bins and washing them out, sorting stuff as I went. I came across a bin labeled ‘keepsakes’ and opened it up. I couldn’t help but smile as I surveyed the contents. The kids’ first tiny dresses and pairs of baby jeans. An aqua green sweater and bonnet combo my Mom knit for Adora. The white silk purse basket she dropped petals from at Luke and Ashley’s wedding. The silver pipe-cleaner crown from her first ballet recital. (Note to self, put some of Grace’s stuff in there!!!) And other, non child related things, like a hand-woven silk shawl my grandma weaved for me. I shook it out and put it on the dining table for a table-runner. Old school awards I earned for writing (I could write a whole post about my ‘discovery’ of those last year). Collectible magazines from “the millennium” that Matt and I decided was a good idea to purchase for posterity.

The tiny leather box from my engagement ring.

The guestbook from our wedding. I opened it up. It’s marriage week here after-all. I scanned the handwritten names and notes. I love you guys! I love you! Have fun tonight! Lots of luck kids! Congratulations!

I love the way one particular note stands out. In the midst of handwritten scrawls and loops, a single message in clear, neat and tidy capitals. BE GOOD TO EACH OTHER. A dear note from an uncle who I’m not close to. His own anniversary is on Valentines day. Sweet.

And then, my surprise lesson for the day. Growing up, birthday cards and things were often signed ‘Love Papa and Nana’ in my Nana’s handwriting. I knew Papa sent his love too, but it was my Nana who always took care of the written sentiment. It is a common thing for one spouse to sign on behalf of both. Matthew and I do it sometimes. Everybody does. It’s cute. But in the guestbook there is a line with Papa’s name written singularly, in his own handwriting. And his little note.

Ernie Sommerfeldt. Keep the cookie jar full.

I immediately put the guestbook down and went to the fridge for the butter.