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February 18, 2007

Things My Boyfriend and I have Argued About (Part one)

John and I have argued about a few things over the last few years. Surprisingly, (for some of you, anyway), we're not big arguers.

Stop laughing. Really. I swear it.

Anyway, we argue so seldom that it makes the few small skirmishes we do have stand out a bit more. Luckily, they're almost entirely silly fights. For example:

The Holy Land Experience:
For those of you who don't know, Orlando has many, many, many theme parks and tourist attractions. The Holy Land Experience (or HoLE as we shall call it henceforth) is one of them. Essentially it's a Christian theme park, with exhibits featuring events from the bible, a few small attractions, and several stage shows, including the story of the Crucifixion.

Personally, I'm agnostic, and even I'm mildly embarrassed by the place. I mean, we're willing to stoop fairly low in Orlando, to earn a few bucks off the tourists, but this is sinking to previously unplumbed depths.

John, however, is fascinated by the HoLE, in much the same fashion as my cat when she sees a lizard. There's something unholy in the way his eyes light up at the mere mention of the HoLE. He's wanted to go from the moment I first mentioned it.

I'm wise enough not to take him. I can just picture him, snapping photos during the Crucifixion and commenting that there's not enough flagellating or something. It would be bad. Very bad. Tempting fate Bad. I love my fiancé. I'd rather he wasn't a crater in the earth.

So, our first argument was about the HoLE. I didn't want to take him. He kept pestering me about going. This went on for a long time until, unable to stand it any longer, I lied.

There, I admit it. I lied.

I said "Yes, John, we'll go, the next time you come down to visit, we'll go."

What else was I to do? He wouldn't let it go, and I was tired of saying no. So I lied.

The next time he came down, I did not take him to the HoLE. I took him to Universal instead. And when he called me on it later, I admitted that I had lied.

He has not, to this day, let me forget this.

Today I drove past the HoLE, and from a great height, I looked down at that grandiose testament to man's ability to milk money from a stone and thought how peaceful it seemed, sitting there in the sunlight. I thought about all the lovely workers, and their sheep (there are sheep) and their donkeys (there are donkeys) and their matinée showing of the Crucifixion (and vaguely wondered if in the winter they let Jesus wear something warmer than his diaper when he's hanging from the cross, like they do for the characters at Disney), and I vowed once more, that while I may love John enough to do almost anything for him...

there are still some things that must remain sacred in this world.

July 17, 2007

Marriage Mythology

Two months and a couple of weeks until the wedding. I've been silent for a long time, I admit, but there's been a bad combination of stress and stress and more stress making me tired and unable to do much more than come home and paint and pretend that it'll all go away.

Today, for the first time in months, instead of looking at the pile of crap I'm wading through, I'm looking ahead to where it thins out, and the road opens up, and there's fresh air. I'm finding that, for the moment, the stench is tolerable, I just need to keep moving forward and stop standing in it and sulking.

We sabotage ourselves in so many ways.

Semi-obligatory wedding updates: My dress arrived on Thursday last, I go to pick it up on Friday. No I'm not showing you. Yes it's pretty. We've mostly sorted out what the attendants are wearing--although sadly we decided we needed to cut back the number of them. Five each seemed a little bit of an overkill for a simple backyard ceremony, and besides, some of our friends just couldn't afford it. Now they can sit and enjoy the ceremony and not worry about how they look in their dresses/suits, etc--which I think, were I in their shoes, I'd certainly prefer. I'm finishing up the invitation designs, will probably print them sometime in the next week or so, and start sending them out by the end of the month. Tables and tents have been rented. Need to talk to the catering company, order the cake, etc.

It's coming along.

There are a lot of myths revolving around weddings: what colors to wear or not, what time to get married or not, what to carry, what to put in your shoe, who stands on which side, what everyone throws, etc.

There's one myth I want to talk about right now though, one that bothers me a bit. Some person John knows keeps telling him that as soon as we're married I'm going to clamp down on him, change him, and make him stop looking at other women.

She's utterly convinced that I'm going to start picking out his clothes for him. She thinks I'm going to stop him from doing things he likes. She tells him almost every day that once he's married, he's never going to be allowed to look at another woman again.

Now, while I may not always like what John wears (c'mon, he's male and utterly straight, which makes his fashion sense somewhat questionable at times), I'm not his mother. If he's wearing something embarrassing in public, it's his ego, not mine. I might get the itch to hide his checkered Vans, or toss out those tapered leg jeans that I loathe, but I probably won't do so. Why? Because as I said: I'm not his mother. He's an adult. If he chooses to walk around looking like the poster child for "What Not to Wear" that's his business, not mine. I might make suggestions, but I'm not going to toss half of his wardrobe. Mine, however, is another story.

I'm also not going to force him to give up the things he likes. That's just asinine. I love John: for who he is. And part of who he is, is what he enjoys doing. That includes martial arts (even though I have visions of him loping off bits with pointy objects with scary regularity), drinking more coffee than seems humanly possible, playing video games, and arguing with his son. Okay... maybe I'm gonna work on that last one. There's only so much bickering a woman can take.

As to the last... On what planet do you snap your fingers and all of a sudden every other female turns invisible to your mate? He's human. He's male. He's gonna look--and nothing I can say or do is going to change that. In fact, I think I'd start worrying if he STOPPED appreciating pretty women.

The key word here, is "look." I have no problem whatsoever with him looking. When it crosses into touching, then we're dealing with another problem altogether. But looking? Hell, I look at other men all the time. I'm an artist. I spend more time than most women looking at photos of hot guys with rippling abs and bulging muscles wearing jeans that look like they've been painted on (and in some cases, have been). I look. I appreciate. I enjoy. I'm not gonna touch, though.

Why? Because in the end, those muscular Adonis's aren't John. They're not the warm, sleepy, slightly sweaty man with questionable fashion sense who tucks me against him at night and pets my hair like I'm something precious to him. They're not going to wake up and leave their coffee mug sitting on my counter half full until midafternoon when they reheat it in the microwave. They're not the man who reaches out and wraps his big hand around mine and argues with me, patiently, about the existence of ninjas.

And I know, that he knows, that all of those busty, slutty, bimbo babes out there aren't me--and they wouldn't let him wear those checkered Vans in public at all.

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