Marriage: real and imagined
A “real” marriage is an insanely difficult thing to try to explain to someone who has not experienced it. I was reminded of that last week as I worked my way through one of the books in the Outlander series currently being serialized on television. Late in the fourth book, one of the characters describes the difference between a real marriage and one based on obligation. The difference isn’t pretty.
It is left to me to make them real.
But the character misses the point. She sees a real marriage as involving only a romantic kind of love. Her mother points out that real love creates obligations–and that obligations are just as important to a sound marriage as romance is. But even she does not entirely get what marriage is about–or at least she doesn’t manage to explain it very clearly. In some respects, I don’t think we can truly understand marriage until one member of the bonded pair has died.
Marriage after death
Jane and I had a good marriage. We were each other’s other half. We understood romance. We understood partnership. We understood love and the obligations to each other love creates. Then Jane got sick and we faced that the way we faced everything else in our lives–together.
The difference isn’t pretty.
And then she died and I discovered an entire piece of marriage I had not conceived of before–and that I don’t think she had either. Love does not die when one of the partners ceases to be. Rather, at least for the one who still lives, it continues. It shapes who we are and who we become. It colors our perception of every subsequent experience. And it makes us a special kind of crazy. Marriage, it turns out, may not entirely end with death.
Remembering the last anniversary
Today is our 26th anniversary–the fifth since Jane’s death in December of 2010. Intellectually, five years is a long time ago. But emotionally, it feels like mere minutes. We both knew there was a good chance that day would be the last anniversary we would truly celebrate together. Seven days later we would make our first trip to Boston to see an oncologist specializing in Jane’s unique form of cancer. We knew we were in trouble.
It shapes who we are and who we become.
But we tried to pretend for each other that day that nothing was different–that we still had years ahead of us. We both failed badly in those attempts. We went out for lunch. Jane tried to eat–and couldn’t. We tried to walk more than the distance to the car, and Jane couldn’t. Every failure hurt her. Every failure hurt us both. But we kept smiling and kept trying.
Trying for normal
We had neither of us slept well for a long time. I have not slept well for a long time. Her slow decline into death haunts my dreams. Her rasping voice in the last days of her time in the hospital haunts my waking hours. It is the only version of her voice I can still hear–and I suspect I will hear it until I die. And perhaps I will hear it even then.
Today is our 26th anniversary…
We made that last anniversary as normal as we could. We exchanged gifts and cards when we woke up. She read my anniversary poem. I fixed us our traditional anniversary breakfast of chocolate croissants and tea. We talked about our hopes and dreams for the year ahead.
The present
Jane never asked me for a particular present for our anniversary until the last one. She had seen a sterling silver bracelet on a leather band. The bracelet framed a single word: “Believe.” It was a message to us both.
I have not slept well for a long time.
It is the one piece of her jewelry I have never put away. It sits on a mirror on a bookcase in the living room, amid our own glass menagerie. It sits between Jane’s Pegasus and my dragon–the symbols we had adopted for ourselves long before we met. Behind it stand three glass unicorns, pawing the air as they prepare to gallop. To the right is a tiny glass beaker, to the left, a small royal swan. Every piece held meaning for us–every piece still has meaning for me.
Moving forward, not on
Every day, I remind myself, I yet have work to do in the world. And every day, I miss her. I miss the shared goals, the shared dreams, the shared aspirations–shared in a way they cannot be shared now. And some days, it is all just too much. I want to stay in bed and stare at the ceiling. But I can’t. And I won’t. Jane won’t let me–and neither will I.
It was a message to us both.
That’s not to say I don’t take time to cry when I need to, take a day to sit by the ocean and watch the waves come in or climb to the top of some hill or mountain and sit and watch the sky. But Jane told me I could not stop doing the work just because she was no longer there to do it with me. We both had dreams. It is left to me to make them real.