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National Blog Posting Month

Long, long ago (well, sometime in mid-summer) Meno had gotten to pondering and wondered if anyone at all knew the secret to a lasting relationship. I was still raw from ending a non-lasting relationship, which poked at the scar from the end of the supposedly lasting relationship, and at first I made some off-hand comment (not a joke, mind you, because at the time, I wondered, too, and it was no laughing matter).
Then, because the shower is a place that incites deep thinking because there's not much else to do than lather/rinse/repeat, I started thinking about my experiences and those of friends, of marriages that lasted and those that failed, of the stuff that seems to go wrong and maybe what might keep it from going wrong. (Though the raw materials also matter; if two people aren't mean to be, then they ought to part ways honorably and get on with life.) Underneath the actions and awareness about the relationship is a foundation made up of pre-existing damage, training/experience, and willingness to bother with any of it in order to actually have/keep a lasting relationship. (There is a commercial on tv now that laments our disposable society, from noses to relationships.)
Since divorce, I ponder words like "committed" and "lasting." I wonder what they mean, really. In the face of evidence from some who are devoted and committed and adore their spouses and families I cannot make any sweeping claim that such relationships are impossible – because there they are lasting! (In my mind, I somehow link them to a beautiful teacup someone gave me – the gold is worn off it from a lot of wear, but it is lovely to look at, special to use and because it is delicate, I take great care in protecting it.)
But here I sit, in the strange world of not really single but certainly not half of a set, and I speak with others who wear the same label (though once your kids move out, maybe you reclaim the mantle of "singlehood") and we wonder: What's around that bend? What's in the crystal ball for years from now?
I watched my grandparents remind each other to take their pills and my grandmother bend over to give big smoochie kisses to her husband of silver and golden anniversaries. Even in her dementia, she wondered where he was and it must have broken his heart when she didn't seem to know who he was and that he was right there next to her.
If you break the bond you started out with, is it ever possible to form another long-lasting one? Are we too afraid? Are we fundamentally flawed? Are too many of us lacking the skills? Is it, in fact, just not a natural state of being for humans and those lasting relationships are the exception rather than the rule? Is a series of monogamous committals (or, for those long dateless periods, solo hobbies of interest…) a more natural mode of existence?
Oh, don't listen to me. This is just the grown-up version of the Dangerous B00k "Advice on Girls" post (see previous) coming to you live from Splitsville. It's me wondering, because I wonder. And perhaps I wonder especially at Thanksgiving when everyone else seems delighted to dive into their dysfunctional family brouhahas and – while I choose it for myself – I too often am attacked by at least a few hours of gee, why am I all alone.
Back to Meno's question then. Lasting relationships. If you've got one, how do you keep it going? If you wish for one, what do you need to be prepared to do? In the shower that day, my brain went into women's magazine advice column mode and this is what I came up with:
That's me in my advice columnist guise. Anyone else want to take a crack at it? We've got time before Valentine's Day. If we really manage to nail them all down, we can make them into a deck of cards, add sex positions and make it a party game for two!
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Eden Marriott Kennedy
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