I Miss my Wife - Time and Circumstances
Songs and melodies all try to say what I want to convey as they may do. However, I have my own thoughts and perspectives to personalize my love and devotion, my respect and appreciation.
I write this now because I miss her. She is away and then I will be away. Slightly more than two weeks apart. It has been since 2023 that so much time passed between us. Or maybe last July? No, I do not think it was that long, last year... We have had these extended times of separation before in the 25 years we have known and grown and loved each other. There were times when I was not as supportive as I needed to be; she bore with me. Some of those times was when I was in the house! She has been an amazing constant friend and love to me. At times I feel like writing or explaining these things and sentiments in order to somehow catch up on any lost times or expressions of love and meaningful interactions, communications, and support.
Perhaps I can write a poem that can be converted to song. (Maybe see end of this post for that.)
Most of us have observed and/or experienced many married couples throughout our years and lifetimes. We see loving and successful cases, and we can see the opposite sides of these relationships. We learn from our own parents, and our grandparents, uncles and aunts, oftentimes siblings and cousins, friends, neighbors, church or worship associates, co-workers and colleagues. We can see and learn about vicariously
Sometimes we are saddened or dismayed by marital problems and disputes among matrimonial pairs, many of them ending in divorce. We know of those who do not stay loyal within the fidelities of their commitments. We know of cases where a member of a heterosexual relationship ends it leaving for someone of their same gender. Others cheat with someone else, someone who offered a want, need, or desire that perhaps was not available in their own marriage. Other couples have irreconcilable differences that end things. There are as many reasons for marriages to end as there are reasons to come together in the first place. Perhaps that is not true.
Most people get married to enjoy a life of love and stability, to have children, to grow and expand as traditional families do. This has occurred for thousands of years. It is how most of the human race has progressed and propagated. Within my faith, the one my parents joined and raised me in, marriage is a vital institution and sacrament that makes us holier, more consecrated, closer to God and His Son Jesus, and become more like them. Men and women come together to achieve more godliness and consecration in partnership and servitude. We are not the only religion that promotes this, but hard to find an organized denomination that emphasizes marriage and having kids as much as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
She and I are life-long believing members; we are invested in this institution and to each other. 25 years have provided ups and downs, trials and challenges, but we usually come through pretty well. I think that we both agree that we have given each other many days, weeks, months, and years of joy and happiness. It is not all roses. There can be weeds that encroach and there can be a few briars and thorns.
But overall? Wonderful bouquets and amazing gardens of delight. Yes.
Yes! Oh, how I love her. We have a strong, great history. There is trust and forbearance, patience and strength. I can do better, and we recognize that. No one is perfect. We realize that.
She knows she is not perfect. But she is to me. Always giving, sharing. Caring. I try. We all know I am far from perfect. After 25 years, I hope to have another 25, if lucky, maybe even 11,000 days. Minus the separation time due to travel. Which absences we can make up for when together again. So it is believed. We can be away from one another, and work together as a couple and a family, and be united.
Is all this so sappy? Corny? Mushy? Trite or superficial? Or is it too private to share with others? No.
I think I need to write these things. Let others see, or know, or feel. Share with me, and anyone, what I know, what I feel. I have heard and believed since the 1980s: write what you know.
Is this what I know? I believe so.
My Life Partner
Before we met,
I had a life.
She had a life.
We had our families
Siblings
Friends - relationships with God
We had romances.
Fleeting, or somewhat serious
We had tried loving others.
But this one
She
Was different.
She ... was mine?
Was I hers?
I met with her
Again, and again
It never got old, never got awkward
Always lovely
Always kind
Fun, motivating, inspirational
We got serious
We were committed to one another
We married
Knowing each other's families
She accepted me
Supported me
I shared with her
and we became one
A summer together
Then fall
A Mediterranean winter
In a small apartment
She was pregnant
We went to my home state for Christmas
Then on to Mexico
We climbed pyramids, among ruins, she with child
There was a couple (maybe one) doubter:
Having a baby so soon! Could this be right?
We thought so. I was thirty, she was twenty-six
We felt it right to bring life and share joy and love
Turns out, despite my older age and starting college at age 17
My wife had started a college course before that year at age 13!
She can lead so often, I must learn to follow or support
Be along for the adventures and plans
Always ahead of her time, usually on the forward line
We had good days and good nights
She became accustomed to me
Easier for me to her, but we were together and thrived
She, with child
Surviving, with nausea
Her roundness, her energy, more beautiful than ever
Moving forward
We applied to graduate schools
She always motivating, assisting
I made it, we made it
For the following fall
Our amazing first child was born late that spring
Giving us that summer together
Preparing, nursing, getting ready for the next thing
Knowing each other as friends and lovers
On to the big city
Where we lived idyllically
Our lives with the new one
Growing and learning
We graduated from the school
Trying for the next big thing
Although it was not that big, but we made do
Growing closer to her family
Spending time with the mom,
And the sister,
Creating another life,
Welcoming another little child into the world
Me working as I could, not landing the next big thing
But getting by
Saving for the future
Which we did in South America
For a short season
To places and people I had known years prior
And some new ones
New outcomes.
Life was coming and we got another little one
conceived
Who would become our third
We returned north and moved to the East Coast
We loved our lives, with struggles
Work was not easy, we could battle to pay bills
And thus, our lives turn out to be...
I decided, we decided, I should join up
And this has been us.
Part One.
Was this enough?
Was it good enough?
We loved our lives for the first six years,
Seven years, eight years.
A uniform became an essence of our partnership.
Duties bigger than me or us, at times.
And, it did not end.
It grew from there.
More children came!
We managed to work and prosper.
But this part one, belonging to us, of she and I,
I will write of and savor for now.
Can you smell it?
Can we taste it?
Countless memories
While parts of us were still not started
The full throng of our family
Still not complete
We were in it, and winning it
But I am sure we had not yet arrived
We had things to do.
There were and are more parts pending.
So, that is a story of me and her
That has been us,
In a few times, a few pairs of thousand days.
The uniform brought money, and some security
Some separation and apartness
She was always there with the babies
The children, our priority
Could I, did I, always prioritize her?
Could I, did I put God first, with my family?
Did I have other concerns, other cares?
I admit my slips, my distractions, my imperfections
We could not always be together, nor I being there
She took it, withstood it, had the family to be the constant
I tried, but could be distant, even when present
Was I one more mouth to feed, one more being to placate?
I have some regrets, I could be better
Therefore, my wife? She was the real soldier
Always.
Always there, never fail. This was our team.
Always, forever, present and caring
Loving, lovely, and tired.
I only could do so much
Or would do so much
I had some warn me: do not lose her!
This could awake me for moment
Yet, I could be selfish, and still aloof
Poof
Far from the gallant hero, I would have wished of me
Or she.
Yet she stayed true.
Forgiving, moving, plowing on.
This is Part One, and next Part Two, and now Part Three...
Where were we?
What was this poem called?
My life partner.
My wife. My love. My companion.
How much more could I love her?
So many ways! I have been less than,
And I feel it. I recognize.
That all the parts are not guaranteed.
There are no warranties in life. Perhaps death has some, we hope.
We make covenants with God, and each other
We can be woefully off, terribly amiss,
Sadly mistaken, easily lead astray.
All we, like sheep.
Yet the Master finds us and makes us whole.
Redeemed.
Beloved, forgiven.
And again, she loves me, she supports me,
She keeps the family strong
Meanwhile me, I am still living,
Fortunate that I have survived,
We have survived! We, together. With the kids.
Past Part One, and on to the others.
Or... is this still part one?
Is the separation and time, distance, from 2008
till now, 2025, one large part, an ever-connected
Link. From then till now.
We change, I have changed, she has changed
We have grown, we have moved along
We are new, but old, the same, but different.
We are paradoxes.
But beyond all the struggles, all the mistakes, all the challenges
We are still us! We are one!
Together! With some tears, some laughs, some pains.
Regrets, as Sinatra sang
But I regret nothing of her
I know her, with abundant mysteries
She knows me, with predictable trajectories
She still loves me, and I her superbly
It is not a perfect romance,
But she is a perfect friend.
I am far from stellar, as a mate
Yet we can make it to the stars together.
She told me not to worry, I am hers.
I believe her!
I believe in her. I love her, I cannot but do that.
I simply need to act and do all that I can
I will love her forever
I wish to be hers, as she wishes to be mine.
I desire nothing more.
My life partner. In death may we dream far off,
Greater and better things still.
I will take this life for what has been, and what remains
Cherish her, cherish us
And give all I can to be hers and her hero.
My life partner.