Getting married? One more piece of advice you didn’t ask for:
Ask yourself, what does your partner expect of you?
Saskatchewan was not one of the places on my bucket
list to visit. Go figure. But here I am in seat 17C on an Air Canada fight from
Toronto bound for Regina. My husband’s nose is buried in some thick legal brief
making it impossible to talk to him, and the dude in the seat in front of mine
has fully reclined his chair and is practically in my lap.
Despite these minor irritants—a Regina (versus a
Paris) destination, a husband absorbed in work, and claustrophobia caused by an
inconsiderate fellow traveller—I am really thrilled to be heading to Regina
this weekend. My friends, Brydie and Simon, are getting married!
My husband has been asked to give a toast at the
celebration tomorrow. He is feeling honoured; I am feeling miffed. Sure, I get
that Brydie and him have shared some pretty intense experiences including half
a dozen trips to Guantanamo for work (now there’s a destination), and cohabiting
for three months while conducting an out-of-town murder trial (drum roll please
for being the coolest wife on the planet for agreeing to their domestic
arrangement). But still.
I think Brydie and Simon are missing a real
opportunity here. Shouldn’t it have been me that was asked to say a few words?
Have these future newlyweds forgotten that I spend hours every week devoted to
research and writing about matters of the heart, and that I’m just so darn
witty and insightful? Not to mention, I have some pretty solid street cred
being married to the same guy for a very long time.
So, I’m going to take matters into my own hands, and
do what I do best—provide unsolicited
advice. Brydie and Simon, here is the one piece of advice I would like to offer
you, with love, on your wedding day.
Let me tell you a story.
An acquaintance once told me about his Aunt Edith. She
would be over 90 now if she were still alive. She was a single career woman
long before it was popular to be one, and had a number of liaisons. She used to
say, “I look for three B’s in a man: Brains, Bed, Bread. Any man I date has
to have at least two out of these three things.”
Why only two?
“Well” Aunt Edith explained, “Is it really fair for me to
expect a man to have all three B’s – intelligence (brains), money (bread), and
be a good lover too (bed)? After all, I ask myself, what is it that I can offer
HIM?”
And therein lays the beauty of Aunt Edith’s
philosophy. She understood that if she expected a man to be perfect by
possessing all 3 B’s, then he had a reasonable expectation for her to be
perfect too. And we know, nobody’s perfect.
It’s hard not to feel disappointed in our spouses from
time to time. Resentment (a sure fire relationship killer) can easily set in
when we feel our partners are not measuring up—maybe they don’t pull as much
weight around the house as we think they should, maybe they spend too much time
with others and not enough with us, or perhaps they have too much ambition or
not enough of it.
I think Aunt Edith’s advice is good advice for every
couple. Bearing in mind not only what we expect of our partner, but also what
our partner expects of us is the foundation for a good relationship deal—and
can remind us that things are not as out of whack as they sometimes might
appear.
I’m excited for tomorrow’s marriage celebration. I
can’t wait to witness the next steps that Brydie and Simon take as a couple, to
toast them with other family and friends who love them, and to assure them
that, well, there’s plenty more advice where this came from!
Originally Published: The Relationship Deal
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