I have been married (to the same man) for 40+ years. No, I actually do not know the exact number give or take a year and I am not going to look it up and my husband is now asleep, so sue me. I do know that we have had a pretty good run. As most people who are past middle age realize, marriage is rarely about romance. Oh yes, romance is nice, but it is not the normal state of affairs. Actually, too much romance in a marriage would make me suspicious. We have had our bad times, but there was only one year, two decades ago, when we came close to drifting apart completely. He did a very bad thing and I decided, with time, it wasn't all that bad and with some marriage counseling we came through to the other side and I am so glad we are where we are today.
Ours is not a perfect marriage, but perfect marriages are undefinable to me anyway. There are days when I have polished the kitchen to an unnatural shine and in his minute of fixing a snack it has been returned to an elementary school lunchroom. There are days when I remind of him of something important or ask him to do something important that only he can do, and he still forgets because it is not his priority causing me frustration. There are events where he talks too much about his interests, reveals too much personal stuff to strangers, or makes me wait alone for an hour while he finishes up something. There are days when he says he wants to cook dinner, but doesn't even enter the kitchen until almost 7:00 P.M. There are days when the time spent on this "business project" of his seems like eons.
But these are all in contrast to his telling and showing me he loves me (on occasion), helping me with my projects, going with me on my errands, watching some film noir with me (which he hates), letting me have control of the remote, putting up with my blogging (which to him is like reading cartoons), loving our children totally, and living peacefully with my anal retentive sense of organization. The above is also balanced with his love of the outdoors, his efforts to be active and healthy and to encourage me to do the same, and his intelligent sense of humor.
But a blogger posted this link which oddly brought tears to my eyes, because the woman in the video is my husband. That is how he feels about the world. He feels responsible. His philosophy is that every big change begins with that first step and there is no need for recognition. He does this when he is all alone in the woods and no one is watching!