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Marriage Does Not Mean Seeing Eye To Eye

Marriage Does Not Mean Seeing Eye To Eye

My husband and I often do not see eye to eye, and that is not just because of our twelve inch height difference.

I have a weakness for wrapping babies like little burritos until their scrunched, reddened faces are the only things peeping out. I myself have always been fond of tight spaces; some of my best childhood memories involve my family’s fourteen hour road trips to our relatives in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, where I sat in the backseat of the wood-sided station wagon while piled beneath brightly-wrapped Christmas presents and a Tupperware container heaped with jelly nut cookies and sand tarts (between my brother and me, they never lasted past Virginia). I would think that just having come from the cozy, dark cavern of the womb, an infant would have a similar attachment to cramped quarters, but my husband, Randy, does not agree.

You must understand, my husband cannot wear the beautiful sweaters I keep optimistically purchasing for him because the long sleeves make his burly forearms feel trapped. Whenever we go to sleep, no matter how crisply I have tucked the sheets around the mattress, Randy must kick them out with his feet so that his toes can breathe. I, on the other hand, love to burrow down beneath so many quilts and pillows, Randy will often end up cuddling with our down comforter while thinking it is his wife (considering I am five and a half weeks from giving birth, this is an honest mistake).

Burrito-baby swaddling is not the only area where Randy and I differ. For all of my relentless questions (What if my water breaks in public? What if my pelvis’s fused? What if I don’t dilate? What if I can’t nurse? What if the baby has colic?), I am actually pretty relaxed when it comes right down to the moment I have been dreading as I figure everything’s now out of my hands and must work itself out.

My husband is a wee bit more proactive.

Case in point: Two nights ago Randy and I were getting ready for bed when he whipped out his handy dandy cell phone and began timing my “contractions.” I started laughing until the cell phone’s glow illuminated his furrowed brow and I realized this was no laughing matter. At my standard checkup the week before, the midwife had taken my high blood pressure and the baby’s irregular heartbeat into account and believed I might be having premature contractions. After fifteen agonizing minutes hooked up to a fetal heart rate and contraction monitor, the midwife realized my “contractions” were really just from our feisty baby girl kicking against the contraction band.

When I called my husband upon leaving the birthing center to tell him about my first experience with labor, I did not start out by telling him that all was now well. Oh, no…coming from someone who loves hearing a good story as well as telling it, I had to run down through the blood pressure debacle and the warm goop the midwife had squirted on my stomach; the monitor thing they attached to my stomach that looked like something from The Matrix and sitting there while not knowing if an ambulance was about to be called. By the time five minutes had passed, I could hear Randy’s own blood pressure starting to rise even through the phone.

“So everything’s all right?” he asked.

Deflated that he had rushed my dramatic narrative, I just said, “Yeah.”

I believe this histrionic tendency might have upped my husband’s proactive level as every night he is now practicing timing the duration and frequency of my “contractions,” and every morning making a quart of raspberry leaf tea infused with stevia and honey that I am to drink to prepare my body for labor. For the past few days he has also been instructing me to compile the numbers we need if case I actually do go into labor.

“Eh,” I waved my hand, “I got six weeks to go.”

“So you’re gonna wait ’til you’re giving birth to find out who to call?”

Sighing, I grabbed my cell phone and scrolled down through the numbers for the women’s center. “I have the number already in here,” I said, feeling all high and mighty.

“You’re sure?” Randy folded his arms and raised an eyebrow.

“Sure I’m sure. See–” I hit the green button and pressed the phone against my ear. “Since it’s after hours, they’ll just give me the extension for the midwife on call.”

The phone rang and rang. I listened to the voicemail in English, then in rapid-fire Spanish. Sure enough, it mentioned something about an extension, but I was supposed to have that party’s number on hand.

Turning off the phone, I smiled through tight lips. “Now that I think about it, I think they might’ve given me those numbers a while back, but I lost them when I lost my notebook.”

Randy just looked at me. He didn’t have to say a word.

Another area where my husband and I differ is the way to decorate the nursery. If it were up to Randy, our daughter would be sleeping in a padded white room that looked like she was a candidate for one who flew over the cuckoo nest. Everything would be incredibly sterile and sparse, and she would be sleeping on a white crib with a thin white mattress and a breathable white sheet carefully scrunched up around her calves so her little precious piggies could breathe.

I do not like sterile or sparse; I like texture and color and pizzazz. After pointing out that Randy cannot really see color anyway due to his color blindness, I finally talked him into painting the ceiling the same pale mint as the walls and purchasing the Tiffany-style light fixture that would cast unique stain-glass effects across the room (honestly, once it arrived, the only effect the light gave was a slight nauseous feeling). Randy’s really been a good sport about catering to my decorative whims, but for whatever reason he put his size twelve boot down when I told him I wanted to hang teacups from the ceiling.

“From the ceiling?!” He looked up at the nursery ceiling as if I had already hung the cups there and he had been too distracted by raspberry leaf tea-making and contraction counting to notice.

“Yeah, from the ceiling,” I said. “I saw it done at a coffee shop.”

“Well, the nursery’s not a coffee shop,” Randy said.

“I’ve already got the ribbon and everything. You just hafta trust me.”

“I don’t want to be dodging teacups every time I go in there to change her diaper.”

“Oh, you won’t,” I explained. “They’ll be hanging way, way up and they’ll be over Addie’s crib.”

Randy shook his head. “Nu-huh, you’re not hanging tea cups over my daughter’s crib. They’ll fall down and hit her in the head.”

I bit my lip and stared at the ceiling. “I have thought of that,” I admitted. “Do you think command strips would work?”

“No,” Randy said. “How can I even explain that to her? Sorry about that gigantic bruise on your forehead, honey, Mommy’s ‘artistic’.”

“Fine. I’ll take the ribbon and command strips back.” I looked at that ugly stain-glass light fixture I had insisted on and smiled. “Hey!” I cried. “What if I turned this light upside down and used it like a lamp instead?”

My husband just groaned.

Comments

  • This post hit very close to home. My husband and I just moved into a new house, and we are not seeing eye to eye on a lot of things in way of new decor. It seems he rejects every idea I come up with. I do admit, he has good taste, but he is so picky the last time we tried to buy lamps it took us six months to find a pair he liked. (I liked them too, but I found others I liked as well, five months earlier!)

    And so, your post was a wonderful lift to the spirit. I am not the only one with decor issues at the moment. My husband isn't groaning. He has run off to his den and closed the door. End of the current discussion.

    May you and your husband finally work out your issues, as I know my husband and I will, after a little time to cool, and some rest.

    January 16, 2012
  • You two have such fun times ahead!! And, just for the record, my daughter was three weeks early: normal weight, amazingly healthy — I'm just sayin' could be sooner than you think! 🙂 (p.s. that pic of you too is the cutest!)

    January 16, 2012
  • Men! They just get in the way sometimes.
    Sounds like you're having fun.
    I would, however, get that phone number and put it somewhere reliable, like maybe on your husband's cell phone, and possible on notecards taped to the walls and doors of your house. 🙂

    So excited for you. I had a lot of false labor. I went to the hospital with our fourth child three times before I got it right. (You'd think I'd know after the first three.)

    Our daughter was born four weeks early.

    Be a good girlscout. Be prepared. You'll thank yourself later.

    January 16, 2012
  • Haha! It's those differences that make love grander!

    January 16, 2012
  • Decorating is hard with a husband who cares what goes in his house and what doesn't, Cecilia. My dad could've cared less how my mom decorated our house, and so — even after three years of marriage — I am still learning to get Randy's opinion before I purchase a painting or curtains because he will sure share that opinion once I have! It makes for some lively discussions, though, and I enjoy our playful scrapping. Well, most of the time! 😉

    January 16, 2012
  • I know I need to get myself prepared, Julia, for an early or a late birth; I am truly thankful that Randy keeps me on my swollen little toes! :)Thanks for the compliment about the picture. My sister-in-law took it around Christmas.

    January 16, 2012
  • Thanks for the tip, Christine. I believe you are right. I actually called the Women's Center the day after Randy asked me to get the number and compiled a step by step procress that I placed in the notebook where I keep my appointments. Randy seems more relaxed too since I did this. Tonight he did hang up pictures in the nursery and measure her closet for organizers. I cleaned baseboards and washed the kitchen windows. It seems we are equally nesting!

    January 17, 2012
  • This is an adorable “episode” of Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, a la` Jolina-style. Cute post! And from one wife of a color blind husband to another, I say you call the shots on all paint colors. 🙂 But the thing that really stood out to me about your post was this quote from your husband:

    “I don’t want to be dodging teacups every time *I* go in there to change her diaper.”

    I'd have taken that promise over seeing eye-to-eye in a prenatal heartbeat! 😉

    January 17, 2012
  • I remember your talk of the hanging tea cups a while back. I think you should do it! I can't believe you are so close to meeting your little one. Crazy that I've been reading about you before you were even pregnant. I've loved keeping up with you. Oh, and I could NEVER get the hang of the baby burrito wrap. My husband was the expert. But every time I did it, Sophie escaped within minutes. I finally just gave up as my husband was not about to wake up to do the burrito every time my attempt failed.

    January 17, 2012
  • Hey there, Barb, I know I am so blessed to have a.) a color blind husband like yours because that means he cannot see when I get a little “artistic” with paint swatches and b.) to have a husband who is willing to dodge teacups in order to change our daughter's diaper. I'm telling ya, it helps if your spouse was raised on a farm!

    January 17, 2012
  • You two are adorable! Had to laugh at your description of your story-telling theatrics. Ha ha. I guess all us writers are like that! Not long now, sweet girl!

    January 17, 2012
  • We'll have to see if Addie likes being wrapped up like a burrito or not, Leah. I guess we're back to who she takes after. Personally, I think that burrito-wrapping sounds wonderful and would love one for myself. Randy…not so much. He would probably think it was Mexican torture.

    January 18, 2012
  • I think men and women are truly from different planets. My husband and I go through the same things. He loves things to be cold, the indoor temp of our house, the bed sheets, etc. while I am loaded down with layer after layer.

    However, I believe that we are meant to balance each out and it sounds like you guys are a good match!

    Your picture is adorable!

    January 18, 2012
  • You two are adorable and you'll be wonderful parents. Best wishes! (PS: I love the teacups.)

    January 18, 2012
  • Hey, Leah, well, the feeling's the same here, too; I have so enjoyed watching/reading about your joy as a mommy! You sure make a good'un!

    Yes, I do have some story-telling theatrics, Melissa, but at least Randy knew what he was getting himself into when he married me! 😉

    I love how different Randy and I are, Hallie; it keeps things interesting. I know I would be bored if we were both so dramatic (Randy IS dramatic, though, just in a quiet way), or if we were both caaaaalm. Hopefully this wee one will have a mixture of both of us. And I feel your pain when it comes to the thermostat. Sometimes I think Baby Girl is an ice cube while Daddy sits there wiping sweat from his forearms.

    Thanks, Erika! Perhaps I will do the teacups after all, just maybe not from the ceiling….I told Randy he needs to build a tall metal tree that I could hang the teacups from along with a vintage bird cage and a bird house. Hey, that's a compromise, right?

    January 18, 2012

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