I
married young. Not young if you consider
the age of everyone who has ever been married – if you do, I was probably
married quite a bit older than average.
I was twenty.
It’s
been a year and a half. A year and a
half doesn’t make you wise. All it does
is make you wiser. In twenty years I
will be wiser still. As my father has
told me, the more you learn, the less you know.
The more I learn, the more I realize I have yet to learn. It’s true for more than marriage.
I
consulted with my friend Agatha Christie on the subject of being married. She left this world before I entered it, but
I read her autobiography and we became friends despite
the difference in our ages. In life
Agatha Christie was a wise woman. This
is what she said about marriage.
If
you can’t face your man’s way of life, don’t take that job – in other words,
don’t marry that man. Here, say, is a
wholesale draper; he is a Roman Catholic; he prefers to live in a suburb; he
plays golf and he likes to go for holidays to the seaside. That is what you are marrying. Make up your mind to it and like it. It won’t be so difficult.
This
is the sum of my wisdom after sixteen months of marriage. When you marry, you marry a person, not the
idea of a person. My husband is not a
wholesale draper or a golf player or any of those things, but he is equally as
specific, which is exactly the point.
You don’t marry the way a person looks or the way that person makes you
feel. You marry who they are, what they
do, what they think.
I
married this man, my husband, and all of who he is. I love who he is. He is funny and annoying and sweet and loud
and helpful and he drives me crazy. And
he makes me happy. I have made up my
mind to like all of him. As Agatha
Christie said, it hasn’t been so difficult.
It has been very good.
This is a lovely post. Agatha Christie was indeed a wise woman.
ReplyDeleteWell said:)
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