When I look back at all we didn't know when Geoff and I started dating, including whether we would be able to have children, whether we would remain in New Hampshire's mountains where we met, whether we would develop a shared approach to marriage and the responsibility of home ownership, all that really mattered then is that marrying Geoff would be about love and adventure and problem solving.
We were not high school or college sweethearts when we fell in love, nor were we “babies” at 32 and 36 roughly. We had been in love before, and we knew what we wanted from a partner. So when we connected, we didn't need a lot of time to figure out we wanted to spend the rest of our lives together. However, one misconception about caregiving in marriage is that the caregiver always wants to help their spouse simply because one loves the other. But the reality is not so clear. Just because I love my husband with my whole heart, sometimes his decisions piss me off. This is no different in a marriage where both partners are able bodied, work full time, and experience stressors like finances or teenagers or one thing after another breaking down and needing fixing.
Another misconception relates to how outsiders view looking in. I remember this one time being at dinner with our kids when they were little, and an older couple nearby had zero patience or understanding for my situation until Geoff wheeled up to the table to join us. Being an exhausted mother with little ones wasn't enough to earn their empathy -- until my disabled husband joined us; then they were all smiles. I remember wanting to punch them in the face and realizing how irrational that sounded. Another time a man grunted, “Real nice making the wife pump gas” towards Geoff sitting in the driver's seat while his windows were down and I was, in fact, pumping gas. I turned, smiling at him, purposely wanting him to feel like an ass, "My husband would pump his own gas, but his legs are paralyzed."
Happy belated Mothers' Day and Fathers' Day and all the days in between. Happy Anniversary on June 23 to my husband, Geoff. There was a lot we didn't know or be able to predict back on that cool, very buggy day in 2007 when we said our vows in front of our people. But love stands strong even if there is a hole beneath the house.