Yesterday, I walked into my bathroom and found a beautiful bowl
of dried flower petals just sitting there on my counter, near my sink. I recognized the black ceramic bowl from my
kitchen, but I couldn’t really understand what on earth this bowl from my
kitchen was doing there on my bathroom sink.
It was filled to the rim with fragrant dried rose petals, leaves, and
other flower parts that I did not recognize.
And lying gently on top, right in the middle of the bowl, was a single fresh,
bright yellow daisy. I later came to
find out that my husband, Adam, had taken the dying bouquet of fresh flowers he
had bought me a week ago for our seven year wedding anniversary, and painstakingly
picked out those flower petals that somehow remained perfectly
preserved and intact. His thought was to
surprise me with homemade potpourri and to extend the life of the bouquet, or
rather the joy that it brought me on the day he first handed it to me. In the process of weeding out the rotting
from the perfectly preserved, he managed to salvage that one fresh yellow daisy
that became the centerpiece for this rare love offering to me.
Why would I, or anyone for that matter, make such a big deal about something
so ordinary, so “done”, such as the act of a husband bringing his wife
flowers? I hear that’s what a lot of
couples do for anniversaries.
You see, the thing is, I wouldn’t know.
Because for the first seven years of my marriage, my husband
never once brought me flowers. Now, you
should know, that I am married to a deeply compassionate, reflective,
brilliant, loving, funny, sarcastic, and witty human being. One who is a feminist, an equal parenting
partner, and one who always, always has my back. But
up until about three months ago, my husband was not capable of buying something
as simple and beautiful as a bouquet of fresh flowers for me. Not because he was thoughtless, or cheap, or
clueless, but because he was not capable of seeing the beauty in flowers…..or
in much else.
I’d like to tell you the story of our seven year itch. Actually, we
(I have my husband’s blessing to write this of course) wanted to tell our story in case it might help
others also going through the itch. Our
seven year itch culminated about four months before our actual seventh wedding anniversary. We just had a houseful of lovely and diverse
dinner guests over, and Adam and I were washing dishes after everyone had
left. I was on cloud nine, doing what
couples typically do after a dinner party – rehashing the highlights of the
evening, commenting on how the bread was just not crusty enough, but how the
coconut ice-cream was divine. And Adam,
was well….silent. So I asked him
questions like: Are you
feeling OK? Did you have too much to
drink? Why don’t you go sit down and let
me take care of these dishes? And much
to my surprise, he did. That’s right,
the man dried his hands, left the kitchen and plopped himself on the couch,
leaving me with mounds and mounds of dirty dishes. What is this?
1952? I looked over expecting him
to be lying down or buried in a book, but I was startled to see him just sitting
there on the couch, staring dead into space. And it was at that precise moment that I knew that something was terribly wrong.
And so our week-long seven year itch conversation commenced.
During this time, I reflected deeply on the past seven years of my marriage. I wasn’t really UNhappy I guess. Adam was
the doting, engaged father to our six-year old son. On various occasions during our marriage,
because of my work schedule, he actually ended up serving in the primary parent
role. He was attentive and took interest
in things that mattered deeply to me. He
was supportive of my personal and professional goals and aspirations. He was my rock when I almost lost my father,
and when I walked out on my job two years ago. I didn’t
really have anything to complain about, did I?
But somehow over the years, life got in the way and I failed to notice
that while Adam was always present and in
the moment for our son and for me, he was no longer present and in the
moment with himself. When we first got together, we developed this crazy
bucket list that most people would certainly mock for its lack of sophistication:
Enter a gingerbread house in the National Gingerbread Competition in
Asheville, North Carolina; Audition for a part in
the Thriller zombie street dance performance for Halloween; Take a photography road trip to capture church signs like “What’s missing in ch_ _ch? UR!” (Get
it?) Somehow, somewhere, Adam completely
forgot about that bucket list……along with countless other things that used to
bring him joy like movies, road trips, tinkering with cars and electronics, video
games, you name it. The only hobby that
he held on to, and almost lost himself in every night for hours at a time – was
reading (Adam’s first and only therapist would later explain to him that it made
perfect sense for someone like him to lose himself in fiction, rather than to confront the
mundane existence of his real life - but
more on that later.) So slowly and
steadily, without even realizing it, I came to expect less and less “living”
from Adam. Sure we still had our family
movie nights and Sunday dinners, but for those parts of me that longed for
deeper fulfillment, I began looking elsewhere.
Slowly and steadily, my dreams and my bucket list became more and more separate from Adam's.
I of course still loved him, but had resigned myself to the possibility
that maybe this was one of the many different ways a marriage could work – two responsible,
loving people coming together to build a responsible, loving life. But I’d have to find that deeper passion for living
through my own work and my own personal interests.
I guess it is fitting that we spent seven entire days
scratching our seven-year-itch. And boy,
those days sure were wretched. We’d wait
for our son to go to bed and we’d suddenly start diving into
impossible questions, with answers that we feared hearing like “Are you even happy
anymore?” It is during this time that Adam confessed to
me that since he can remember, as early as his teenage years, he often felt
hopeless and overwhelmed. There’s this picture that hangs over our bed
of a rope bridge set over a pond in a thick, dense fog. Adam explained to me that for some time, he
would get up every day and get lost in
that picture for several minutes. But
then when he snapped out of it, he would find himself still stuck in that fog,
on that bridge, and the bridge just kept getting longer and longer, with no ending in
sight. He shared with me that he would
often feel guilty for feeling this way, because he had everything he ever wanted in life – a stable home, a son and wife he was crazy about, a job that occasionally challenged him.
All he ever wanted was to see the beauty in all of this, for he knew it was there. But try as he might, he
just couldn’t feel the beauty.
And so by the end of the week, Adam had an appointment with
a therapist. A few weeks later, he also made an appointment with his family physician, who prescribed him a selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitor – more commonly known as an anti-depressant. And over the next three months, Adam learned
to become acutely aware of his emotions and how they have come to define his
personality. He learned to anticipate
triggers that might set him back like work stress, interpersonal conflicts, and
unplanned life events. And he has, to the best of his ability, structured his
life in a way that minimizes these situations.
He has come to terms with the impact that chemistry and family history has had on him. Over the next three months, Adam also had the best Christmas ever, checked off multiple unfinished projects like fixing the front
burner of my mother’s stove, finally watched the first two seasons of The Walking Dead, and
bought a djembe drum. And over those same three months, I learned what it
is like to be pushed to the depths of your marriage vows. I’ve learned to care enough to keep asking
questions. I learned that a person is
not always the sum of his emotions. And probably the most important lesson I learned is
that it’s not always about me. It still
terrifies me to think that if we hadn’t scratched this itch, if we just slowly
let things decline and decay, we would have never faced or treated Adam’s depression.
It is very likely, that I would have
grown increasingly resentful of him, and he of me, for my inability to
understand him. We would have likely grown
further and further apart and ended up like those dried flower
petals, with no life sustenance, perfectly preserved, but really already dead
inside.
And that brings us to January 20, 2014, our 7th
wedding anniversary: a.k.a. the day I walked
into the house to find a beautiful vase full of flowers that had absolutely no
rhyme or reason. There were yellow daisies,
and pink roses, and purple lilies and they were wild and extraordinary. And there were baby’s breath, and random
other green leafy stems tucked neatly thoughout the bouquet. Adam
had talked the florist into letting him inside the huge walk-in cooler so that
he could personally pick every single flower himself. He just couldn’t choose, so he got one of
each. Because for the first time, in a
long time, he saw the beauty in all of them. And
for the first time, in a long time, I was reminded of that glorious day seven years ago when the universe brought together two imperfect, ridiculously flawed, but forever evolving individuals. And that is the story of
how we survived our seven year itch.
Note: The National Institute of Mental Health reports that approximately 18.8 million American adults have a depressive disorder. The disease is not discriminating, seeping into all age, race, gender, and socioeconomic groups. Depression can stall careers, strain relationships, and sometimes even end lives. If you know someone suffering from depression, or if you'd like to help break the silence and lift the stigma around this devastating and common disorder, visit http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/depression/index.shtml. I know I've blogged about this before, but the single most impactful piece that has helped me truly understand depression has been this brilliant comic strip: http://hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com/2013/05/depression-part-two.html.
Note: The National Institute of Mental Health reports that approximately 18.8 million American adults have a depressive disorder. The disease is not discriminating, seeping into all age, race, gender, and socioeconomic groups. Depression can stall careers, strain relationships, and sometimes even end lives. If you know someone suffering from depression, or if you'd like to help break the silence and lift the stigma around this devastating and common disorder, visit http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/depression/index.shtml. I know I've blogged about this before, but the single most impactful piece that has helped me truly understand depression has been this brilliant comic strip: http://hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com/2013/05/depression-part-two.html.
Photo: "In My Shadow" Copyright Sharon Cummings
Thank you, Mae - to you and Adam - for sharing this story. It was a beautiful reminder of the importance of being brave...brave enough to ask the difficult (or as you call them, impossible) questions and brave enough to hear - really hear - the answers.
ReplyDelete<3 Colleen!
DeleteCan you please give credit for the artwork. "In My Shadow" Copyright Sharon Cummings. Right now it is in violation of Copyright Law. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteHello Sharon! Thank you for this and I just took care of it. Thank you also for sharing your beautiful gifts and talents with the rest of us.
Delete