ENGAGE - ENERGIZE - EMPOWER

Friday, January 9, 2015

Real love stories...



 

Ten years ago, John & I were taken by surprise when the mother of a friend left us a bequest.  Much as I admired & looked up to Bruna & her husband, Marvin – who lived life well – and always enjoyed connecting when they visited from Glenview, it never dawned on me that John & I were anything more than nice blips on their friendship radar.



Apparently, I was wrong.



When Louise called to tell me that Pete’s mother had left us something, was intrigued.  Us?  What?  We nipped right over.



As we settled in on their so-familiar couch, Louise came in from the kitchen with glasses of wine, while Pete came in from his office with a not-small but not-big package.  John took the wine while I reached out for the bag.   

John put his arm around my shoulders as I lifted out our legacy from Bruna – a pillow, about 16” x 12”, with a tapestry cover of deep maroon with creamy lettering proclaiming, Real love stories never have endings.



John looked at me & I looked at John, while Pete & Louise beamed at the two of us.  I don’t think I burst into tears, but I certainly felt like it.  This precious treasure, for us, from Bruna?  To this day, am amazed moved astonished.



Am looking at it as I tip tap this posting, snugged next to my computer instead of in its usual place of honor in the living room.  When Bruna looked at this, she thought of us.  That still leaves me breathless. 



John & I became friends with Pete’s parents after our marriage.  Even though Pete was a classmate of my oldest brother and he & Louise were neighbors of my family for many years and I was a long-time friend of Louise through teaching, they were 14 years older than moi.  It took John to bring us together as friend friends.  So much so, we asked Pete to announce our engagement & he was one of John’s ushers.  Which is my long prelude to saying that Marvin & Bruna got to know us as a couple.  Although we both always thought of them as a great pair, it never dawned on either of us that they might feel the same about us.  Until we held that pillow in our hands.



I cut my teeth on a great love stories.  Not from the Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Anderson or Walt Disney.  From the time my eyes could focus, I got to watch one of the great love stories of all time – my parents’.



Mom & Dad were true partners.  If ever a couple was destined for eternal love, it was the two of them.  They were not always in agreement, but I cannot remember ever seeing either ever be disagreeable with the other.  Both had experienced great heartbreak in their teens, Dad losing his beloved mother & Mom her adored father, and both had challenging relationships with their surviving parent.



According to Mom, "Aunt" Norma shared how happy she was that her step-son had found such a special woman - “He’s starved for love & you’re clearly the one to give it.”  Mom would get this big smile on her face as she said, with great pride, “It whar my pleasure!”



Neither of my sister-in-laws put much faith in Mom & Dad’s love story.  After Dad died at the far-too-young age of 63, both of them felt perfectly free to set Mom right about the marriage, that she’d rewritten reality to fit her preferred fairy tale.  Apparently, Kerry was especially brutal, particularly when Mom visited her & Mike on extended trips Down Under. 


Well, no one knows better than I that Mom was perfectly capable of choosing the far rosier picture to the bleaker reality.  But, sorry Pam & especially Kerry – when it came to their relationship, Mom & Dad really did have something very special. 



Although, by the time I hit my mid-30s, even Mom was beginning to have niggling doubts that what she’d remembered about their relationship was real.  Pam & Kerry presented very convincing arguments that such an even-handed, open-hearted relationship just wasn’t possible.  They didn’t experience such loving generosity in their marriages, therefore it didn’t exist in any.



And then I married John.  That changed everything.  Bruna’s bequest gives me the green light to say that our marriage reflected much of what Mom remembered enjoying with Dad. 



To begin with, John & I are friends as much as we are lovers.  That is VERY important – the lover in me might feel cut to the quick, might thirst for diabolical revenge against my heart’s betrayer, but then the friend in me steps forward to say, “Now, let’s just take a few deep breaths…”  That inner friend doesn’t just care for John; it cares for that sweet quality known as US. 



Unlike my parents, John & I do have heated words.  Well, I do.  John is the very soul of kindness & generous spirit.  When I first let loose with a volley of distress & frustration, he looked at me in surprise, but with compassion rather than matching fury, and asked, “What is the problem?”  Asked it like he meant it.  I just looked at him, jaw dropped & not sure what I’d just heard.  No one had ever asked me that before.  Again, he asked, even more gently this time, “What is the problem?”  That set the bar for our relationship.  In that, we are like my parents, neither of whom ever intentionally set out to hurt the other.



Mom didn’t see her relationship with Dad in my relationship with John, but we did confirm for her that two people could genuinely put the other first, could put US first.  And that, it seems to me, is the gist of a real love story.  In loving each other in the way we did, in respecting & loving our relationship as key to our partnership, we gave her back 100% faith that what she remembered was no airy fairy tale, but very real.



Real love stories never have endingsMarvin & Bruna are gone, it’s been over 13 years since Mom was reunited with her O! Best Beloved.  Pete & Louise are still setting us a great example of strong, loving partners.  And John & I keep doing what we do best – love each other.  As he says, it’s not always easy, but it’s always worth it.



Last night, looking at the pillow, tucked into its place of honor, I got to thinking about the epic role models we’ve had & have on our marriage journey.  Older ones like Marvin & Bruna, Mom & Dad.  Closer-to-our-age couples like Peggy & Jack, Pete & Louise.  Contemporaries like Gretchen & Andrew, Hilary & Michael.  Younger ones like John & Lori, Shannon & Jason.  And mere babies like Solomon & Tirah, Mike & Stella.  No two relationships alike, none possible to fully understand & fully appreciate (not even to the twosome).  

Been pondering, looking at the pillow & thinking about how both sister-in-laws seemed to find it impossible to accept that Mom & Dad really did have a genuinely healthy, whole, mutually supportive marriage relationship.  My parents didn't delve into & pick apart the inner workings of their marriage.  They came from a generation that soldiered on during the tough times, that didn't parse what each other said, didn't look for hidden agendas & cloaked meanings.  I remember Pam once saying, "Mama, no one says what they really mean."  She couldn't grasp that Mom & Dad did, that they expected that what YOU said was what YOU meant.  

Can remember telling Ken Stroh - a long-time family friend who was not far from Mom & Dad in age but an even closer friend, with his wife, Janina, to myself & John - how my sister-in-laws agreed that Dad dominated Mom.  Ken burst out laughing.  Best response!

John & I are grateful that we've had excellent role models of strong marriages in our lives.  Marvin & Bruna are never far from our thoughts, as close by as their beloved bequest.  We are both grateful to have parents who were - like Marvin & Bruna - part of the Greatest Generation.  From them, and others, we learned to focus on the basics of community & family, friends & faith.  That we are best served by a life of service.  To shoulder a sense of personal responsibility and live with honor.  Be true to your principles & leave the party with the one you came with. Pretty fine qualities to pass along.   


 

Pondering Marvin & Bruna, Mom & Dad, Emilie & Carl, Norman & Maud, Mick & Geneva and so many more great role models of loving partnership.  Maybe real love stories never have endings because they keep on enriching all that come after.   
  

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