Portrait of a Long Marriage
I met my to-be husband, Jim, when I was 23. He was moving into a house I was moving out of, so I stayed. In essence, he took up residence on Sunday, April 1st, 1978 during a soggy snowstorm, started giving me driving lessons on Wednesday, took me on a "date" Thursday, then we slept together Friday. We've been together ever since.
We got
married May 3, 1980 at the Unitarian Church in Madison, Wisconsin.
After we announced our engagement, my father painted this portrait of us as an engagement present.
SECRET TO A LONG MARRIAGE
Leaving Home Depot
with a light fixture
for our kitchen
he cracks what he calls
one of my stupid jokes
and even after we cross
the parking lot
I still cannot stop laughing
----This poem will be on the back of our headstone
You know how your spouse tells you all about their wild adventures as a teenager before you knew them?
Let me thank Vincent Hahn
for not holding the wheel
at a diagonal
that night he drank six shots of Tequila
and took my fiancée-to-be
down County Trunk Q
because when he clipped the stop sign
at Rory Road
and the dang thing soared
three inches above his Mustang convertible
I got to hear how it flew perfectly parallel
over the pancakes
of a married morning
from What the Postcard Didn’t Say
ASKED OUT ON A SECOND DATE
IS THRILLING PROOF THAT YOU’RE LOVED
it’s nothing like when
after your sixteen-thousand-four-
hundred and eighty-seventh night
together in the same bed
your husband invites you
to go on a morning walk with him
would you have left
the window painted shut
had it been clear it would matter
that my mother could
buy a house because it’s purple so-what-the-ceiling’s-caving-in
Believe life imitates art and not the other way around
Let the wind rake the lawn while she paints the trees
In this same way
had I been familiar with
your father’s scorn for what has no practical function
His reflex to shear whatever’s frayed
His conviction that hard work is all we’re here for
would I have shoved my boat from shore?
ours is a marriage between
your father
my mother
A sister penned a plea
you not promote me to bride,
did not wager this would happen
regardless, that I’d never manage
to forget the color of that ink.
Another sister banked on odds
we’d succumb to one of The Three D’s:
Depression --- Desertion --- Divorce,
get throttled from domestic bliss
like a jockey at the track where
Romance is saddled by Mortgage
Mountain, overtaken by Baby Blues,
trumped by Adultery. Children now
raised, properties paid off, we continue,
despite some stutters and stalls,
sailing full gallop at the clubhouse
turn, our calloused hands not raw
from rope-burn; our ragged sleep
not soured by revenge; we are not
exhausted ex-spouses riddled
with regret, holiday-tortured.
Notes of discord, what can’t be
shared pales in importance to gentle
harmony, something cultivated three
decades in the running partly due
to betting on the right horse
the right time, so call this relief
that kindles our laughter:
Countless ways to lose outright
and we outran them all.
Some great lines in these poems--like "Notes of discord, what can’t be
ReplyDeleteshared pales in importance to gentle
harmony, "
Very sweet, love the idea of the headstone with the poem, love your dad's painting and as a long married can identify with many of these poems. Been a fan of yours for yeas, Shoshauna. I think we judged some poetry together once.
ReplyDeleteShoshauna, these are among your very best. I am proud to know you, and continue to be stunned by your moving poems.
ReplyDelete