Tuesday, November 08, 2005

One of my co-workers remarked that in every marriage there are terrible problems that are caused by silly things, and that all marriages have to survive those to flourish.

I realized that in my own life, the terrible, real, things had somewhat overshadowed the other problems. The long string of deaths and attempted recovery and death and attempt and death ... that all blended in together to usurp many of the normal problems.

After all, I was a typical undomesticated man, married for the first and only time at age 29. My wife was a marvelous creature from another planet (or so it seemed to me in so many ways).

A friend of mine blogged about her own life, where she truly felt like someone from another planet.

Ah, youth..... and culture shock

My brief life as an extraterrestrial, part 1
part 2
part 3
The husband question.....

In any situation of severe trauma, change or grief there are things to live through, times where we find ourselves strangers in a land that seems familiar. One of the most common experiences for those who have lost a child is to feel alone, strange and no longer a part of the culture of their birth, divided by the experience, dealing with people who can not understand, in spite of good will (or the lack of same).

I think that Suzette's experiences provide some perspective, a different way to look at things, a way to understand that somehow helps to fit and hold and sound and see through the fog. I would note that while she doesn't mention it in these posts, she has also buried a child and a husband.

Not much else to say, except I love my wife all the more now.

2 comments:

annegb said...

That is a problem in my marriage because my children are from my first marriage. My husband simply cannot relate. He's a very good man, but he didn't understand the depth of my grief.

I don't think he understands that I will never fully recover.

Although I'm sure if our daughter died or one of his children died, he would not be able to go on.

We've been married 24 years and I expect it will last :). These types of struggles are part of life. A part I don't like.

Anonymous said...

Since Elgin is big on weight issues, though not diets, she may find this interesting:

http://calorielab.com/news/2005/09/21/seth-roberts-shangri-la-diet-in-detail/