Eight Things I
Used to Hate About You
Six months before my wedding day an older man tapped my shoulder in the post
office and offered some free advice. “Ramona’s a lovely girl who deserves a
good husband,” he said. “Marry her before she finds one.”
Before Ramona agreed to marry me, she sat me down after church, placed my hands on a Bible and asked me the usual questions: “You are pretty good at basketball, Phil, but have you ever tried hitting a laundry hamper? “Will you refrain from using phrases like ‘I told you so,’ and ‘is there anything to eat around here?’” I kissed her deeply and agreed to work on these things.
Before long we stood at an altar
(picture: Aug. 28, 1982) as my ordained father peppered me
with more questions: “Wilt thou take this woman to be thy lawfully wedded
wife, Phil? Wilt thou rinse the sink when thou shavest and make the bed when
thou are the last one out of it? Wilt thou affirm, admire, and accept her—and
quit eating chicken wings with a fork, so long as you both shall live?” I
kissed her deeply and agreed to work on these things.
In the receiving line, the same man from the post office
whispered some more advice: “You want a happy marriage? When the things that
attracted you to her start to drive you apart, find a way to reverse the
process.”
I’ve been thinking about the old man’s advice for 24 years
now, and it’s finally starting to make sense. Allow me to explain.
When Ramona and I were dating I was attracted to her many
attributes, including the way she took life slowly. I was constantly running.
She taught me to stop and taste the strawberries. Three weeks after our
honeymoon, the lack of speed with which she approached life made my adrenaline
race.
During our first year of marriage, I wanted to follow Martin
Luther’s example and nail a list of irritations to the bathroom door. I
couldn’t quite come up with ninety-five theses, but eight came to mind:
1. Your sense of humor is warped, my dear. The funniest
thing I did this week was hit my head on a cupboard door. You laughed as if I
were Peter Sellers. This was not funny. Please do not laugh when you read this.
2. A vow of silence is fine for a monk. Our late-night
“fights” are as one-sided as a Chicago Cubs game. You grow quiet during
arguments. Silence can be a virtue, but it can also be maddening.
3. You are kind to telemarketers. On our first
anniversary a phone call interrupted a candlelight dinner I had prepared. You
talked for upwards of two minutes with a complete stranger because you were too
polite to hang up.
4. Generosity isn’t always a virtue. Last week you made
four pies and gave away three. You gave ten dollars to the Girl Scouts and the
cookies weren’t that great.
5. What’s next, pickled ice cream? On Wednesday you
made banana meatloaf. What other recipes do you have? Can we go through them
together?
6. You throw
things away. I love to hang onto things, but last week my wool sweater went
missing.
The one I got for my seventh birthday.
7. Necking won’t fit on the calendar. I love to do
things we haven’t planned. Like quick trips to the city, surprise purchases,
or necking on a back road to nowhere. You like the necking, but you like to plan
for it.
8. I am from Switzerland; you are from Zimbabwe. I love
to be on time. You do not. Is this a cultural difference? Meet me in the living
room at 8 p.m.
sharp and we’ll talk about it.
Thankfully I refrained from nailing the list to our bathroom
door. Twenty-four years in the University of Diversity have taught me that if we
were the same we’d be in trouble. If we were both spenders, we’d be
bankrupt. If we were both spontaneous, we’d never get anything done. If we
kept all my wool sweaters we’d need 13 U-Hauls each time we moved.
The Bible describes marriage as two becoming one. Ideally it
is a partnership of two distinctly different individuals who are stronger
together than apart. But this won’t happen until we swallow our pride, praise
each other’s uniqueness, and encourage each other’s strengths. Though
Ramona’s silence caused me grief at first, I’m learning to wait until
she’s ready to talk and to remind myself that those who say the most do not
always have the most to say. When book sales brought in unexpected abundance, it
was her generosity that helped us respond as Christ would, giving away what we
didn’t need. Her kindness to phone salesmen was the same kindness that first
drew me to her. Thankfully it has tempered with time. She now offers a polite
“No thanks,” followed by a click. Or she says, “My husband would love to
talk to you,” and hands the phone to me.
I’ve asked her to meet me in the living room at 8 p.m. sharp
to talk about this.
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