From the category archives:

marriage

Out For A Night

by beth on August 31, 2010

in marriage

TCH_1234

We actu­ally got out, with other adults, with­out our kids.  I know shock­ing!  We were cel­e­brat­ing our friends upcom­ing wed­ding at the rehearsal din­ner, the wed­ding hap­pened this past week­end & was spec­tac­u­lar.  I think we should do this “get­ting out” thing more often.  AND thanks to my beau­ti­ful Ital­ian friend Susie who took this pic­ture we now have proof.

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And We Move Again

by beth on August 25, 2010

in marriage

1999

We had decided it was time to move.  Again.

Third time’s the apart­ment charm.

And so we began to look around.  This time we were look­ing to move out­side the City.  We were leav­ing Detroit.

It was bit­ter­sweet.  I was excited to move. I was tired of the lack of gro­cery stores & strange men on our porch.  I was ready for a change & after the whole Alex sit­u­a­tion I no longer felt com­fort­able at my old work.  Turns out Sarah wasn’t fond of me, go fig­ure. Mike was also ready for a change.  He wanted to be able to go for evening walks & not think of where we should or shouldn’t walk.

But at the same time in our excite­ment and readi­ness for some­thing dif­fer­ent we were going to miss the City we met each other in.  The City we shared our first apart­ment in.  The City we started a home in.

After look­ing at about 100 apart­ments I got a call at my new work.  I was work­ing as an opti­cian & it was almost 9.   He told me that he had seen a small apart­ment with two bed­rooms, a base­ment space with laun­dry in it that we’d have free access to.  Plus, it was just over a $100 more than our cur­rent rent, some­thing we could actu­ally afford.

It sounded like a dream.

Espe­cially since all the other places we’d seen had been 1 bed­rooms, with no stor­age, laun­dry was an arm & a leg (first-born for using the dryer) at twice the cost of our cur­rent place.  I think if we had each sold a kid­ney we’d have been golden for those places.

I could go & see it on my way home.  He gave me the num­ber & after I fin­ished talk­ing to him I called.  I was on my way to see the apart­ment within the next 15 minutes.

It was one of two apart­ments on the back of a build­ing being used for the landlord’s real estate busi­ness.  The neigh­bor­hood was quiet but near every­thing.  I walked up the stairs into the apart­ment.  It was small in its lay­out, not as much space as the cur­rent Detroit place but the base­ment area & laun­dry made up for that.  I mean a washer AND a dryer!  And we didn’t have to pay extra for it.  It was included.

It was per­fect.  I told her that I loved it.  Within a month we were moved in.  Lit­tle did we know this was the apart­ment that we’d change & grow in ways that we could only dream of.

[this is part of my “how I met your father” series]

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1999

Fri­day came and went.  Sat­ur­day came and went.  I thought that after telling Mike about what Alex said that maybe it was for noth­ing.  I had opened up this big hole in our life by telling him. But I couldn’t NOT tell him, what hap­pened if Alex showed up?  I’d have to explain that & I had noth­ing to keep secret.

So I told him.  He was uncom­fort­able, but not upset.  He knew where I stood.

Then Sun­day arrived.

The day was almost over, it was late.  I was wait­ing for Mike to come home & the phone rang.  I thought it was him, he was call­ing on his way home.  I answered it.

It wasn’t Mike.

I’m out­side.”

Alex said it so plainly, so mat­ter of fact.  How do chal­lenge a fact when you don’t know what it really means?

I didn’t know what to say.

I’m inside. Guess you know that, since you called me. How come you’re call­ing me?”

Duh, I knew the answer.  Why, why, why do I ask ques­tions that I don’t want to know the answer too.  Hadn’t I learned ANYTHING?!

I’m leav­ing tonight.  Have you thought more about what I said?

I was so quiet, I didn’t want to answer that ques­tion.  My voice felt like it had been sucked from my body.  Why was he wait­ing?  Then for some rea­son I had Richard Marx in my head.  Why does my mind always cre­ate a sound­track to every event.  Seri­ously, this is an ill­ness of some sort. It must be.  I couldn’t focus on what was hap­pen­ing, but there was Casey Kasem play­ing Richard Marx of all peo­ple in my head.  Trust me, Casey even did an intro. Seri­ously, it’s gotta be an ill­ness WHO THINKS LIKE THIS?

Finally I real­ized I had to answer. I mean the song is only so long. And I found my voice.

I am stay­ing here. I’m where I want to be, I love him. I’m happy, I don’t want to leave. I’m sorry Alex, I don’t know what else to really say. I feel bad because you are a really great guy, but I’m not the one.”

He was quiet, then laughed a little.

I guess you know where you want to be then. I hope we could be friends still, maybe catch up when I’m vis­it­ing or whatever.”

Yeah, sure.”

I hope he knows what he has with you.”

I think he does, have a safe trip Alex.”

With that, we both knew that even if we talked again, it wasn’t going to be the same.  Some­times that’s the risk of putting your­self out there, you never know the out­come, but there’s no turn­ing back.

As I got off the phone, I heard Mike’s key in the door.  He was home.  And I was more cer­tain than ever before that my home was with him.

[this is part of my  “how I met your father” series]

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A Cat Has Nine Lives

by beth July 29, 2010

1999 As I sank deeper into my chair, eyes wide but unable to see any­thing clearly I felt like the wind had been knocked out of me.  How could he say the words “feel” & “about you” in the same sen­tence?  I couldn’t find words, I just stared at Alex. Seri­ously, when did it get […]

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Curiosity Killed the Cat

by beth July 21, 2010

1999 After my shifts at the restau­rant I’d sit around with the other servers & bar­tenders chat­ting. I didn’t like leav­ing & going home to an empty apart­ment.  Mike often worked later than my shift ended & I wanted to wait with peo­ple ver­sus wait­ing home alone.  Plus, if I waited then I wouldn’t have […]

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