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The Litmus Test for Marriage

The Litmus Test for Marriage

The litmus test for my marriage began on Monday when I printed out the first hard copy of my novel and passed it to my husband. He’s read my work before, and I am quite used to his “leave it or cleave it” honesty.

Or, so I thought.
Tuesday night, being sure to keep banging around in the kitchen so Randy’d think I was busy cooking supper, I poked my head into the living room. With his brows furrowed and red Sharpie wielded, my husband sliced and diced through my carefully crafted sentences like Jack the Ripper. Slice! Dice! Circle! Dash! I couldn’t watch my beloved child getting torn to bits, so I went back to making meatloaf and mashed potatoes; and if the meatloaf was baked to a brick and the mashed potatoes tasted a little like cardboard…well, that was just too bad.

Wednesday night I decided to behave. Randy was editing my novel as a favor; I needn’t be childish about it. So, I took one side of the couch and he leaned back against my legs. I revised pages, then passed them to him. It helped I couldn’t see his facial expressions, for I always thought them terribly “Roger Ebert” while he was editing. But I still had a hard time focusing on my own revisions while I was busy seeing which words he was circling or which sentences he was putting a question mark beside.

On Thursday day I decided I’d just mark through all the descriptive scenes and stilted dialogue Randy would, so that night he could just sit back and rave about his wife’s creative genius.

Around 8 p.m., Randy held up the bloodied stump of a page and asked, “Why’d you mark this out?”

“Dunno,” I shrugged. “Thought it was too flowery or something.”

“No–I like it.”

But right when I was about to combust with pride, Randy started shuffling through some pages and held one up. “Now this,” he said, pointing to a scene upon which every subplot hinged, “this I would omit.”

Groaning, I flung myself down on the couch.

“What’s wrong?” he asked, drawing arrows and boxes all over my pristine pages.

“For Pete’s sake, can’t you just put a smile-y face or something!”

With my face burrowed in the throw pillows, I listened to some scratching sounds. Randy touched my back and softly said, “Here, love.”

I looked over. At the top of the page there was a smiley face rivaling the size of Wal-Mart’s.

“That’s not funny!” I said, hitting him with a pillow, but even then I couldn’t resist a (very tiny) smile.

Today was yet another litmus test for our marriage. I only go out to our land once a week since it gets dark so soon, and it’s a 25 minute drive from where we live. Because of this, I haven’t seen the tin Randy’s started putting on the roof, and I was excited to.

That is, until we drove in the lane.

“Welp…that’s sure green,” I drawled. “Maybe it won’t look so bad close up.”

But when we parked and got out, the tin roof looked even worse. Randy had only put tin over the carport, and contrasted with the black paper on the rest of the roof and the white plastic wrapping the house, the green glared out at us like a street sign.

“Ummm, honey?” I asked. “What’re we gonna do about the roof?”

Randy cried, “Whatta you mean, ‘do about the roof’? We already have all the metal!”

“It’s kelly green.” Closing one eye, I looked up at the tin. “No, more like jungle green…George of the Jungle green.”

My husband seemed to be sprouting gray hair while he stood in front of me. I tried another tactic.

“I mean, can’t we take it back or something? Switch it for a different color?”

“That’s the only green they had! You said you wanted green, so I told them to send us green!”

“Did you look at the green before they sent it out?”

He shook his head and looked over at one field. I folded my arms and looked at the other.

During my walk (my personal panacea), I realized I was slicing and dicing Randy’s “baby” just like he’d been doing to my novel. Here he’d been slaving on our home since August — sweating buckets and now freezing his tail off — and I came in once a week to critique or commend him. It wasn’t fair to judge his work when I hadn’t put any into it, and though I had a right to give my opinion (he often asked for it, just as I asked for his on my novel), it always helped to balance the bitter with a taste of sweet.

When I got back, Randy and I got into our Jeep and drove out the lane.

“I’m sorry for freaking out over the roof,” I said. “Maybe we should look at that house on 52 again? The one with the cedar siding? I think it has green tin, too.”

My husband nodded and said, “I’m not mad, you know. Just frustrated trying to figure it all out.”

“I know,” I whispered.

“Good.” He looked over and smiled.

Twenty minutes later we were driving the switchbacks of 52. The sun (a rare commodity these days) was dappling everything in gold and the wind swept through our lowered windows. It was absolutely lovely. Then we came upon the cedar sided home.

“It’s caught fire!” Randy said, pulling into the lane.

“What? No, it’s not.”

But, looking closer, I saw the hole that had been eaten out of the side of the house. How the back of the green tin roof was caved in. The wood around it charred black as cinder.

From the front you could never tell that anything was so drastically wrong. One of those yellow toddler swings still hung from the maple in the yard. A fake tree and a scooter was on the porch. The bushes were intact. The shutters still green; the cedar an orangey-red.

That tiny cedar sided home spoke to me how marriages get destroyed. Pride steps in the way of our apology, or our spouse’s lack of an apology reinforces our pride. This dance can go on for years — decades even — and all the while that fire’s quietly getting kindled and will soon burst into flame, destroying everything and everyone in its path.

Although I have no right to write this — for I’ve allowed my pride to get in the way of an apology many times — I feel this week’s litmus test of marriage has been passed with flying color (kelly green, to be exact), so I pass this warning on to you: Don’t let a few scribbled-out sentences or color schemes cause the sun to go down on your wrath, for those you love are also those who make it rise in the morning.

(Picture can be found here.)

Comments

  • What a wonderful & wise post!!!
    My degree is in family sciences and I had a professor who was very happily married with SEVEN children. He told me once that his biggest piece of advice for married couples was always be the first to apologize. He said, “Nothing is worth the rift in the relationship!”
    Btw, congrats on passing your “test”
    The thing about marriage is there are tests around every corner and we have to be diligent about trying to pass them all! 🙂 However, I've noticed just about all good things in life take diligence…and marriage is SO worth it!

    February 14, 2011
  • Lauren Lockhart

    Jo, you've come to realize the most important aspect of marriage early in your journey…forgiveness:-) After nearly 11 years with my hubbie I can honestly say that the struggles we weathered were mostly of our own making because we “let the sun go down on our wrath”. As time has gone by, we've learned that when one learns to squelch his pride and say “I'm sorry” it gets easier and the rewards get better:-) Thank you for posting! I was hoping you would today! I love reading what you write as it so reminds me of being “newly” married again and all that comes with that…it only gets better!!!

    February 14, 2011
  • Hi, Carey,
    Your professor sounds like a very wise man, and it seems you have taken his sage advice to heart. There's this one picture of you and your hubby on Facebook (dancing at a wedding, I think?) that took my breath away. In that snapshot it was so obvious to see the depth of your love for each other that no drought of life's crop could diminish. So congrats to you, too! Let's pray that we continue to pass these litmus tests with flying colors! 🙂

    February 14, 2011
  • Thank you, Lauren, for your kind words. Forgiveness is so essentiel in marriage, yet it is also one of the hardest things to do. Even something as simple as the color of a roof can be blown out of proportion when our pride steps in the way. I hope one day to tame that beast of mine (pride and tongue, too). Thanks also, Lauren, for using your 11-year-old marriage to set an example for us newlyweds. I am so excited to see what these years have in store.

    February 14, 2011
  • Am I being a turkey when I point out to you that you might want to include some space for your feelings in your marriage. Why, when you could understand how your husband felt when you critiqued his work, were you not able to apply the same degree of compassion to yourself when he critiqued your work? Or did I miss something?

    February 14, 2011
  • No, alterwomanwrites, you aren't being a turkey, and I understand your point. The thing is, I ASKED my husband to critique my work. Right now he is building our house, overseeing two businesses, then I added the editing of my novel. He is doing it out of kindness to me, and if I can't take his suggestions when it comes to my WIP, I have no right to be in the writing business; for the publishing world is a far harsher critic than my husband could ever be.

    Thanks for reading and commenting.

    February 14, 2011
  • Sounds like you have a great marriage. That's awesome.

    And I really enjoyed your writing style.

    February 14, 2011
  • Thank you, Usedearplugs, but may I ask–Where in the world did you get your name? 😉

    February 14, 2011
  • Another gem, Jolina. Loved this post. So insightful for your young age (though I must admit that my husband would NEVER be granted a red Sharpie to use on my novel. Perhaps a blessing that he's NOT a reader).

    The house thing and colors, though … Oh can I relate! So astute of you to recognize the similarities in both of your critiques. I bet once the Tyvek is covered up, the green will NOT be so bright. Plus, a little dust on the roof, which is inevitable, is going to dull it down quite a bit. I bet it will look just fine when it's all said and done!

    February 14, 2011
  • Used Earplugs is the title of a song I wrote years ago when I was fighting my own insecurities and jealousies (specifically with my girlfriend… who is now my wife).

    The idea was for her not to listen to me when I started letting those feelings take over my words.

    February 15, 2011
  • Thank you, Melissa, but I don't know if it's insight so much as seeing marriages crumble around me, and I vowed when I said my vows that I would do everything I could to keep the walls of our marriage strong.

    Perhaps it is a lil' dangerous to pass my novel off to my husband, but he is such a good reader, I have to take that chance (but next time I WILL use a “happy color” Sharpie!).

    I also know that the tin won't look so bad once the shine has worn off and the mountain has turned back to green. Everything's so drab right now that any color just pops, and it caused me to panic. Oh, well. Randy said I could always wear a blindfold every time we go in our lane! 😉

    Thanks for reading and commenting, Melissa.

    February 15, 2011
  • Hey, Used Earplugs, thanks for sharing your story. Your song must've worked, since the girlfriend you were pining over is now your wife! Congrats to you both! May your heart be full of music every time you look at her! 🙂

    February 15, 2011
  • My wife and I are a few weeks shy of our twentieth anniversary. We have six kids and a home that (a little more than 75% of the time) is full of love, harmony and laughter.

    But if there is a question, there will be a test. The question, during the other 25% of the time, is: Can we overcome personal pettiness to not cause offense, and (often more importantly) to not take offense?

    That, plus not going anywhere, not even to the mailbox, without professing our undying love for each other has worked pretty well so far.

    The big test in our marriage? She doesn't like it when I revise something I am creating (writing, music) that she's already fallen in love with, and I don't like it when… uh, actually, I can't remember anything I don't like at the moment. *grin*

    February 18, 2011
  • From a guy who calls himself the “negative vacuum,” I steeled myself for a negative response. Yours is so unlike that. It sounds like you and your wife have found a blend of honesty and compromise in your twenty-year marriage, and from your not being able to pinpoint something you do not like about her, it is obvious that this blend is the perfect balance of both. Congratulations to you and your eight-member househould; having a home filled with love, harmony and laughter is not an easy feat in these days or any day. It is always such a joy to hear when a marriage has survived the test of time, but not only that–has THRIVED!

    February 18, 2011
  • Just discovered your blog and I love this post! It's so important in a marriage to be mindful of each other's feelings, but also to be honest about your own. It's such a delicate balance sometimes. But, by being involved in each other's projects, you'll both take a little more pride in them (& each other) when they're done. Thanks for sharing your story and the lesson you learned from it!

    March 8, 2011
  • Hi, Kimberly,

    Yes, it's been quite the journey trying to build a home and write a novel at the same time. I think children'll be a breeze after this! 😉 Seriously, though, marriage requires SUCH a delicate balance of giving one's honest opinion while still respecting your partner's feelings. I certainly haven't always found this fine balance, but at least I have many years in which to learn!

    Thanks for finding me! I look forward to chatting some more!

    Best,
    Jolina

    March 8, 2011
  • Frankly, I'm just impressed your husband read the whole book!?!?!?! I can hardly get mine through a short story!

    October 18, 2011
  • I know I'm ridiculously spoiled, Nina, but he's actually a very honest editor, which can be difficult when he's also your husband!

    October 19, 2011

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