Wednesday 18 April 2012

Love Unspoken - Margie Parker

Just home from a four-day stay in the hospital, I insist that washing my hair is an immediate necessity. It really isn't. A warm and steamy bathroom seems to be the perfect place for me to hide from the fear twisting around my heart.
I have postponed the inevitable moment all the way through undressing, and I have postponed it through sinking into the warm soapy water. But I can postpone it no longer. So I allow my gaze to slowly and cautiously drift downward. To the empty space where my left breast used to be.
It is bruised... green and yellow and filled with black stitches covered with dried blood. It is such an indignity, so brutally ugly.
Quickly, I concoct exotic mental plans to keep my husband, Jim, from ever again seeing me naked. Mutal passion has been such a strength in our marriage. But now, all of that seems over. How can I entice him with a lopsided and mutilated figure? I am only forty-three years old, and I am so deeply ashamed o my body for this betrayal. I lie back in the bath, waves of sadness washing over me.
The bathroom door swings open and Jim walks straight through my cloud of self-pity. Not saying a word, he leans over to slowly place his lips onto each of my eyelids. He knows this is my favourite of our private 'I love you' traditions. Still silent and without hesitation, he bends further down. I brace myself for the barely hidden revulsion.
Jim looks directly at my wound and gently kisses the prickly stitches. One. Then twice. Three times. He stands up and smiles lovingly at me. Then he blows me a special airmail kiss, my second most favourite tradition, and softly closes the door behind him.
My warm, grateful tears roll down my cheeks and drop gently into the bathwater. The bruise on my chest is still there. But the one on my heart is gone.

Tuesday 17 April 2012

Cancer, the Only World I Can't Say - Sammi Lupher, Aged 11


I remember the day so vividly. It was early fall, and it wasn't too cold yet - the kind of weather when all you need is a spring jacket and you'll be fine. I was in the third grade. When I walked into the kitchen to look for my mom after school, I heard her talking on the phone.
'She's home, I have to go,' she said.
She hung up the phone and gave me a tiny smile. 'Do you want to go for a drive?' she asked me. 'I need to tell you something.'
I nodded my head, feeling that whatever she was going to share with me wouldn't be good, but I knew I had to hear it.
We drove around listening to music. When we reached my school, she drove into the parking lot, stopped the car and looked at me.
'Remember what Grandma had?' she asked.
'Cancer, right?' I replied.
'Yes. Well, when I was in the shower the other day, I noticed an unusual bump on my breast. I went to the doctor's, and he has diagnosed me with cancer,' she said. Then she started to cry.
I wanted to cry too, but I didn't. I felt like I had to comfort her and reassure her that she'd be okay, so I needed to stay strong. As long as I kept telling her it would be all right, I felt like it was.
And she was okay - for a while. SHe had radiation and chemotherapy. It made her throw up everyday, and she lost her hair. But the cancer disappeared. The whole time I was in the fourth grade, she was completely fine.
Then I went into fifth grade. One day when I got home from school, my mom was sitting on her recliner, crying.
I knew it was back. 'It's back ... the cancer, isn't it?' I asked.
She nodded her head, and I began to cry. I ran over to her and gave her the biggest hug I have ever given anyone. She told me that it was still breast cancer, but this cells had moved to her liver.
Again, she lost her hair because of the chemotherapy and radiation. We also sent her to Chicago once a months to get a special treatment.
Then in March, my mom went into the hospital. She was only there for one and a half weeks, but during her stay she got a lot better. The doctors sent her home. She was doing great ... until one day she couldn't move without hurting.
She was at the point where she had to be in bed all the time, and she couldn't even talk without it hurting like 100 stabbing knives. My family got ready to say good-bye because we all knew she wouldn't be around much longer.
One morning, my mom seemed to be in more pain than usual. My brother Josh and I sat by her bed for over three hours, while I held her hand. The she became quiet. Josh called the hospital and asked if someone could come over to check on her.
A short while later, a nurse arrived and checked her heartbeat. 'She's gone. I'm sorry,' he said quietly.
I actually started to laugh because I couldn't believe it. I was eleven! Eleven-year-olds only lose their moms in movies - not in real life. Even though I knew that it was going to happen, it still didn't seem true.
Some days, I am great. Other days, I just can't believe she's gone. On those days, I want her back so badly that no words can do it justice. I'm sure that sometimes you probably think your parents are just out to ruin your life. Believe me; its really hard to go on without them.
Cancer, the only world I can't say without crying or wanting to cry. I just hope my children, or other people I may love in the future, will never have to go through the same pain I have had to. Many people survive cancer. I guess my mom just wasn't lucky enough.

Monday 16 April 2012

Suffocating - Marion Distante, Aged 13


I am suffocating
And I just need to breathe
I'm smothered under pressure
I must be relieved.

Nothing I do is right,
Nothing they say is fair
I cry and scream and throw a fit,
But no one seems to case.

Nobody will listen,
To what I have to say.
My life is not important,
Yet I'm living every day.

I can't do what I want
I cannot stay out late
Here I sit and write this poem
To release my pain and hate.

I'm confused and I'm alone
I'm lost inside my mind.
No one will search beyond my looks
To see what they might find.

So many thoughts confuse me,
Feeling I can't perceive,
In this time of adolescence
And I just need to leave.

None of it makes sense
None of this seems real.
And noone understands
The emotions that I feel.

I'm still suffocating
And I still need to breathe
I'm smothered under feelings
Let me be relieved.

Saturday 14 April 2012

Kiss Quote


For it was not into my ear you whispered, but into my heart. It was not my lips you kissed, but my soul.

-Judy Garland

Friday 13 April 2012

Room at the Table - James DiBello

My wife, Marie and I recently celebrated our fortieth wedding anniversary. We raised three children all of whole have been real joys in our lives. They've gone on to have families of their own, so we now have six grandchildren here on earth and one already waiting for us in heaven. And I don't think any of the blessings I have known would have happened if my guardian angel hadn't saved my marriage one strange and awful night.
I grew up in the Midwest in an intensely Catholic family, one of six children. In our house we believed in angels; I mean, we really believed. In school the nuns taught us about them. At Mass, we let our guardian angels into the pew first. One of the first prayers I ever learned to say after the Our Father, was 'Angel of God, my guardian dear, to whom God's love entrusts me here, ever this day be at my side, to lead and guard, to light and guide, Amen.'
Otherwise, my childhood was ordinary until I was fourteen. That year, my favourite brother, Frank, who was eight, became ill. I didn't know it at the time, but Frank had leukaemia, an acute type that often strikes children. To cheer him up, I taught him how to ride my bike, but before long he couldn't even push the pedal.
One day my parents came home from the hospital crying. The priest from our parish was with them. We all gathered together,with much solemnity while the pastor told us that Frank's angel had taken him to heaven to be with Jesus. I was so sick at heart I just cried.
As soon as I had dried my ears for the moment, a slow and seething kind of anger began to grow in me, like a piece of metal turning gradually red, orange, yellow and finally white hot. I felt as if I would explode. Why didn't my parents tell me Frank was going to Die? I never got a chance to say good-bye to him! I screwed silently. How could the God I believed in have allowed it? Where was his angel? I hated Frank's angel. What a stupid thing to believe in.
My anger didn't go away. My father got me a punching bag, which I demolished in a week. I lasted out at everyone and even lost my best friend after beating him up.
When my grandmother died to tell me about angels, I turned away. When my birthday came later that fall, and I was supposed to set the table for my guardian angel, I threw the plate at the kitchen window, breaking both with a loud crash.
Frank's death triggered an uncontrollable rage in me against anything that failed to reach perfection. I became obsessed with achieving all that I could as fast as possible. I went out for football and wrestling, and I blew off so much aggression in both sports that I became the best athlete on both teams out of sheer energy.
I had always been a good student, with something like a photographic memory and an especially keen ear for languages. I read as compulsively as I practiced wrestling falls, and when I finally graduated high school, I was third in a class of nearly five hundred. I had twelve letters in sports and the school awards for excellence in Latin and German. I also had a scholarship to the state university.
I got a summer sales job and worked seven days a week from morning to night. I still had my anger, although I was no longer throwing dished through windows. It was towards the end of that summer I met Marie. She came to the door to hear my passionate spiel about the tools and gadgets I was selling, as soon as I looked up into her pretty round face with her big brown eyes and freckles, I was in love. I never did anything in a half-way fashion. I proposed to her on the spot. Marie laughed, but I knew she wasn't laughing at me, just at the situation. We were married two years later.
With my marriage and the distractions of school and a job, my pent-up energy found a positive outlet. After college my anger continued to burn. I worked for an import-export business and literally lived in my office for days on end. When I was at home, I was too tired to notice either my children or my wife. I had no friends, no social life, no outside interests. I lived and breathed the office, and at the time I truly believed I loved it. All that mattered to me were my own ambitions. I never even noticed that Marie and I were forced apart by my obsession over work.
Over the Easter weekend in 1969, Marie came into the den, where I was working on some totally forgettable proposal, and said, with preamble, 'Jack, I'm leaving you. I think I want a divorce.'
She explained that our marriage was a disaster, with a husband who shut her out of his life entirely. 'I've already taken the kids to Mother's, and I'm leaving to join them. It's up to you whether we come back.' And she left, just like that.
I was so shocked I couldn't speak. It was like my brother dying all over again, and once again I had no warning. I went to the kitchen and began smashing everything in sight. Glasses, plates, utensils all went flying, while I raged. How dare she leave me. How could she do this to me? I thought as I looked for more things to break.
I reached the last cabinet in the kitchen. It held some old dishes my mother had given us years before. They were the ones we had used when I was a child, and they brought back memories of my brother that made me want to cry. I brought out the stack of plates, set them on the kitchen table, and threw them forceful at the sink. But when I came to the last dish, I couldn't pick it up. I tried with both hands to pry it up but I couldn't.
And then, while I stood there like a buffalo at bay, panting, swearing, my hands and face cut from flying glass and crockery, I heard a voice, a kind and compassionate voice that echoed all around me. It said, 'Jack, make room for me at the table. Jack, make room for me at the table.' It was the most beautiful voice, like an operatic soprano singing softly.
'Who are you?' I gasped.
'You know me, Jack, make room for me at your table.'
And the voice faded.
Numb as I was, I knew the voice. Without even thinking, I got up and brushed off the table. This time I picked up the plate without any problem., and set it at the end, where I usually sat. I retrieved a knife, fork, and spoon, and placed them around the plate, adding a napkin and an aluminium drinking glass that had survived my anger. Then I brushed off a chair and set it in place. I think I was saying, 'Angel, please sit down; here, I'm making room for you.'
As I sat back looking at the place setting, I felt the most incredible peace I had ever known. Then I bowed my head and prayed the prayer I had learned as a child: 'Angel of God, my guardian dear...'
When I had finished, I just started talking aloud to my angel about all the things that had been going on in my life, and most of all about Marie's leaving and taking the kids with her. I talked for a good hour without stopping. And I had the most extraordinary feeling that my guardian angel was right there, sitting across the table from me, even though I couldn't see her. and I felt that she was telling me, not just that I needed to change - I knew that - but that I could change, that the anger was gone that had skewed so much of my life.
The sky was just beginning to turn gray when I heard the sound of a key in the lock. It was my Marie. She pushed the door open, and as it opened, the sound of broken glass grated across the kitchen floor. She looked at me and at the kitchen, horrified; then she came across the room and threw her arms round me, and we both cried.
'I couldn't sleep,' she said. 'Finally, it was like I herd a voice saying, 'Jack needs you, Marie'.' It just kept repeating softly, over and over again. So I came'.
I was so drained I felt like a little child again, needing to be led rather than to lead. Marie took me out of the kitchen and into the bathroom, where she washed my hands and bandaged the one that was badly cut. She put me to bed without saying another word, I slept like a baby until nearly noon.
After I woke, I felt disorientated, as thought I had had the worst nightmare of my life. Then I saw my hands, all cut up, and everything that had happened came back in a rush. I jumped up and went to look at the war zone that had been my kitchen. It was neat as a pin, except for all the scratches and dents and broken windows. Marie, looking tired but at peace, smile. 'I would never have believed this mess if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes. It took me hours to clean it up. It filled bags and bags of trash.'
I started to apologise, but she shook her head. 'We'll talk later Jack. Just tell me one thing - why did you break everything in the kitchen and then go the trouble of setting the table?'
She pointed, and I saw the old plate and the aluminum glass were still where I had left them after my guardian angel had asked me to let her into my life again.
'Marie, I have to tell you what happened,' I said.
When I had finished telling her, she looked thoughtful.
'You do seem different somehow, Jack. The tension is gone; you seem relaxed in a way I've never seen.'
'Marie, I hope this doesn't seem silly, but I want to keep that place setting on the table forever. I don't ever want to take it off. If my angel hadn't come to me last night, I don't know what I would have done. I want to thank her and keep reminding myself of something I knew when I was a kid and then forgot.'
'I think we can arrange that,' she smiled.
That strange night was more than twenty years ago, but its effects have stayed with me ever since. Marie and I took our first vacation we had had together since our honeymoon and begun to rebuild our marriage. We talked and talked, and I found all my old priorities changing for the better. I left my job to start my own business and found pleasure, instead of compulsion, in work again.
And each night, I still set out the old plate and dented aluminum cup, the silverware and the napkin. They're my pledge to my guardian angel, and to God who sent her, that I will always welcome them at my table.

Thursday 12 April 2012

Every Day is Special Quote

Each day comes bearing its own gifts. Untie the ribbons.

-Ruth Ann Scabacker

Wednesday 11 April 2012

Reverse Roles - The Best of Bits & Pieces


Mary was married to a male chauvinist. They both worked full time, but he never did anything around the house and certainly not any housework. That, he declared was woman's work.
But one evening Mary arrived home from work to find the children bathe, a load of washing in the washing machine and another in the dryer, dinner on the stove and a beautifully set table, complete with flowers.
She was astonished, and she immediately wanted to know what was going on. It turned out that Charley, her husband, had read a magazine article that suggested working wives would be more romantically inclined if they weren't so tired from having to do all the housework in addition to holding down a full-time job.
The next day, she couldn't wait to tell her friends in the office. 'How did it work out?' they asked.
'Well, it was a great dinner,' Mary said. 'Charley even cleaned up, helped the kids with their homework, folded the laundry and put everything away.'
'But what about afterward?' her friends wanted to know.
'It didn't work out,' Mary said. 'Charley was too tired.'

Tuesday 10 April 2012

Understanding Each Other Quote


There is nothing you can do, achieve or buy that will outshine the peace, joy and happiness of being in communion with the partner you love.

-Drs. Evelyn and Paul Moschetta

Monday 9 April 2012

You're Still You - Christopher Reeve


Five days after the accident on Memorial Day weekend 1995, I became fully conscious and able to make sense. Dr. Scott Henson and Dr. John Jane, chief of neurosurgery at University of Virginia Hospital, explained my situation. They told me in detail about the extent of my injury and sad that after the pneumonia cleared from my lungs they would operate to reconnect my skulls to the top of my spine. They didn't know if the operation would be successful, or even if I could survive it. They had a plan, but it was extremely risky and they needed my consent. Dana had insisted (over the objections of some of the family) that the doctors discuss everything with me and that nothing be done without my permission.
I answered somewhat vaguely, 'Okay whatever you have to do.' Ever since childhood I'd been used to solving my problems. Whatever scrape I would get myself into, I was always sure of a way out. So at first I thought this was just another temporary problem. I needed surgery, but I'd be up and around before long. It was only after the doctors left that I began to absorb what they had told me: This is a paralysing injury.
Dana came into the room. We made eye contact. I mouthed my first lucid worths to her: 'Maybe we should let me go.' She said 'I am only going to say this once: I will support whatever you want to do, because this is your life and your decision. But I want you to know that I'll be with you for the long haul, no matter what.' Then she added the words that saved my life: 'You're still you. And I love you.'
If she had looked away or paused or hesitated even slightly, or if I had felt there was a sense of her being noble, or fulfilling some obligation to me, I don't know if I could have pulled through. Because it had dawned on me that I had ruined my life and everybody else's. But what Dana said make living seem possible, because I felt the depth of her love and commitment. I was even able to make a little joke. I mouthed, 'This is way beyond the married vows - in sickness and in health.' And she said 'I know.' I knew then that she was going to be with me forever.

Sunday 8 April 2012

Baby, you are... - David L. Weatherford

Baby, you are...
my sunny sky,
my favourite high,
my bed so warm,
my port in a storm,
my sweetest gift,
my emotional lift,
my best friend,
until the end,
my inspiration,
my destination,
my shining light,
my day and night,
my heart healer,
my anger chiller,
my pain reliever,
my spring fever,
my gem so rare,
my answered prayer,
my heart and soul,
my life made whole,
my merry-go 'round,
my 'up' when I'm down,
my best chance,
my last dance,
my best shot,
my sweet kumquat,
my energizer,
my appetizer,
my morning sun,
my evening fun,
my dancing partner,
my heart's gardener,
my source of laughter,
my everafter,
from who I'm meant,
my burning fire,
my greatest desire,
my soul mate,
my sweet fate,
my dream lover,
my 'before all others',
my confidence,
my common sense,
my reason why,
until I die.

Just in case you didn't know.

I'll See You in My Dreams - Paul Reiser

Every night, by the time you climb into bed, the day has generally taken such a bite out of both of you that the chances of feeling loving and affectionate can be pretty remote. To combat this, my wife and I have a rule:
No discussing 'Things We Have to Do' or 'Unpleasant Business' once we get into bed. Unless it's really important. Or you meant to say it before and didn't get a chance. Or you just feel like saying it for no real reason. (We're nothing if not flexible.)
Originally the plan was, no discussion of unpleasantries while getting ready for bed, but that's too hard. There's something about putting a toothbrush in your mouth that makes people want to talk.
Consequently, even the most important exchanges take place between rinsing and spitting.
'I saw that doctor today...' Spit
'Yeah?' Swish, swish, spit.
'Yeah.' Little spit. 'He said it's nothing.' Bit spit.
'Well, I say' -little dribble- 'we get a second opinion.'
Gargle, garlge, cchhwip pttooey.
Every night, you brush and talk and spit and catch up, racing to beat that Conversation Curfew.
See, you don't want to drag the world into bed with you, because there's enough going on there, already. Beds are complex, multipurpose areas, and it's important that the two parties specify which activity they're undertaking.
'Are we talking, or are we reading?'
'Are we sleeping, or are we fooling around?'
You have to clarify.
'Are we not talking because we're mad, or because we both just don't feel like talking?'
'Are we thinking ambitious fooling around, or let's just do what we've got to do, and not kill ourselves?'
The good thing is, when you're together forever, there's less pressure to make any given night magical. You always know you have another shot tomorrow. And the next night.
That's the whole beauty of Forever - nothing but tomorrows.
Of course, if you cash in the Tomorrow Chip too often, you break the bank. One day you roll over, notice each other, and say, 'Hey, we used to do something here, involving rubbing and touching - any idea what it was? No recollection at all? Hmm ... I know I enjoyed it, I remember that.'
So you negotiate, you clarify, and settle in. You find your position, you fix your pillows, and arrange your mutual blanket.
That blanket, essentially, is your relationship: one big cover concealing the fact that two people are inside, squirming around each other trying to get comfortable.
How you handle the blanket is crucial.
Sometimes I wake up and I have no blanket. There's nothing to handle. The woman of my dreams, who is sleeping very cozily has somehow accumulated the bulk of what's at least half mine.
I tug at it gingerly. She stirs, and seemingly unaware, she tightens her grasp and rolls farther away, taking with her another good foot and a half of blanket. I watch her and calculate my options. I decide it's not worth waking her up and being spiteful, so I try to make do without.
I stare at the ceiling and count the little paint bumps, hoping I can bore myself back to sleep. Within seconds, my brain comes up with five different parts of the house that need painting and fixing, and then I think about how the guy at the hardware store who was so helpful doesn't work there anymore and how the new guy is really unctuous, and I should probably find someplace else. It's 3:25 in the morning and I'm looking for new hardware stores.
Now I'm more irritated and much more awake. I over and see my bride dreaming blissfully, secure, cradled and warm by what is not over 90 percent of the blanket. Despite my affection, I resent her deeply.
I sit up. I look at her. I watch her sleep. I think to myself, 'How can this be? After all the negotiating and manoeuvring and tap dancing we've done, how is it that this person, who, by my own initiative, will be placing her head twelve inches away from my head for the rest of my life, is getting such a better end of the bargain? It just doesn't seem right. Will we never get better at this? Must one of us always be less content than the other?'
I pull up the pathetically small segment of blanket left available to me and scoot up next to the woman of my dreams, partly because I hope that her sleep will rub off on me, and partly because I figure she's got to be warmer than I am.
And as I hold her close against me, it dawns on me: Now I remember. This is why we go through all of that. Because holding The One Who Fits in your arms simply feels this good, and nothing else really does. And to earn this, you must sway away all that stands in its way.
At this point, my wife senses I'm staring at her and opens one eye.
'What,' she says.
I say, 'What do you mean 'what'?'
'What are you doing?'
'Nothing.'
'What are you looking at me for?'
'I wasn't looking...I was just thinking...are you really going to be right there every night?'
'Yes.'
'Forever?'
'Mm hmm.'
'You're saying, that of all the people in the world, the one to whom you will donate your Naked Self, night after night, is me?'
'Uh-huh.'
If I let it go there, it would have been a nice moment.
'And the reason would be what - because I'm that appealing?'
Now she opens both eyes, props herself up on her elbow, and before she can say anything, I say, 'I went too far, I see that now. You just go back to sleep, and I'll say nothing.'
She slides towards me, and we find homes for our arms and legs. Before long, we're sleeping.
And in the morning, the dance continues.

Saturday 7 April 2012

What Does It Mean To Be a Lover - Barbara De Angelis


What does it mean to be a lover? It is more than just being married to or making love to someone. Millions of people are married, millions of people have sex - but few are real lovers. To be a real lover, you must commit to and participate in a perpetual dance of intimacy with your partner.
You are a lover when you appreciate the gift that your partner is, and celebrate that gift everyday.
You are a lover when you remember that your partner does not belong to you - he or she is on loan from the universe.
You are a lover when you realise that nothing that happens between you will be insignificant, that everything you say in the relationship has the potential to cause your beloved joy or sorrow, and everything you do will either strengthen your connection, or weaken it.
You are a lover when you understand all this, and thus wake up each morning filled with gratitude that you have another day in which to love and enjoy your partner.
When you have a lover in your life, you are richly blessed. You have been given the gift of another person who has chosen to walk beside you. He or she will share your days and your nights, your bed and your burdens. Your lover will see secret parts of you that no one else sees. He or she will touch places on your body that no one else touches. Your lover will seek you out where you have been hiding, and create a haven for you within safe, loving arms.
Your lover offers you an abundance of miracles every day. He has the power to delight you with his smile, his voice, the scent of his neck, the way he moves. She has the power to banish your loneliness. He has the power to turn ordinary into the sublime. She is your doorway to heaven here on earth.

The Scorecard - Marguerite Murer

As the move came to an end the room filed with chatter. The warm fire, twinkling Christmas lights and laughter from family brought a contented smile to my face. The minute Mom said, 'Who wants...' the room emptied quicker than the stands at a losing football game.
My boyfriend Todd and I were the only ones left. With a bewildered look on his face he asked me what just happened. Catching the laughter on my mom's face. I said to Todd, 'We are going to go put gas in my mom's card.'
He quickly replied, 'It's freezing out there, and it's almost 11:30 PM'
Smiling, I said, 'Then you had better put on your coat and gloves.'
After hurriedly chipping the front off the windshield, we bundled into the card. On the way to the gas station Todd asked me to explain why in the world we were going to get my mom gas so late at night. Chuckling I said, 'When my siblings and I come home for the holidays, we help my dad get gas for my mom. It has turned into a gall with all of us. We can tell when my mom is going to ask and the last one in the room has to go.'
'You have go to be kidding me!' Todd responded.
'There is no getting out of it,' I said.
While pumping the gas, we clapped out hands and jumped around to stay warm. 'I still don't get it. Why doesn't your mom put the gas in the car herself?' Todd asked.
With mirth in my eyes, I said, 'I know it sounds insane, but let me explain. My mom has not pumped bass in over two decades. My dad always pumps gas for her.' With a confused look, Todd asked if my dad was ever annoyed with having to pump gas for his wife all the time. Shaking my head, I simply said, 'No he has never complained.' 'That's crazy,' Todd quickly replied.
'No, not really,' I explained patiently. 'When I came home for the holidays my sophomore year of college, I thought I knew everything. I was on this big female independence kick. One evening, my mom and I were wrapping presents, and I told her that when I got married, my husband was going to help clean, do laundry, cook, the whole bit. Then I asked her if she ever got tired of doing the laundry and dishes. She calmly told me it did not bother her. This was difficult for me to believe. I began to give her a lecture about this being the '90s, and equality between the sexes.
'Mom listened patiently. Then after setting the ribbon aside, she looked me square in the eyes. 'Someday, dear, you will understand.'
'This only irritated me more. I didn't understand one bit. And so I demanded more of an explantation. Mom smiled, and began to explain:
'In a marriage, there are some things you like to do and some things you don't. So, together, you figure out what little things you are willing to do for each other. You share the responsibilities. I really don't mind doing the laundry. Sure, it takes some time, but it is something I do for your dad. On the other hand, I do not like to pump gas. The smell of the fumes bothers me. And I don't like to stand out in the freezing cold. So, your dad always puts gas in my car. Your dad grocery shops, and I cook. Your dad moves the grass, and I clean. I could go on and on.'
'You see,' my mother continued, 'in marriage, there is no scorecard. You do little things for each other to make the other's life easier. If you think of it as helping the person you love, you don't become annoyed with doing the laundry or cooking, or any task, because you're doing it out of love.'
'Over the years, I have often reflected on what my mom said. She has a great perspective on marriage. I like how my mom and dad take care of each other. And you know what? One day, when I'm married, I don't want to have a scorecard either.'
Todd was unusually quiet the rest of the way home. After he shut off the engine, he turned to me and took my hands in his with a warm smile and a twinkle in his eye.
'Anytime you want,' he said in a soft voice. 'I'll pump gas for you.

Shmily - Laura Jeanna Allen


My grandparents were married for over half a century, and played their own special game from the time they had met each other. The goal of their game was to write the word 'shmily' in a surprise place for the other to find. They took turns leaving 'shmily' around the house, and as soon as one of them discovered it, it was their turn to hide it once more.
They dragged 'shmily' with their fingers through the sugar and flour containers to await whoever was preparing the next meal. They smeared it in the dew on the windows overlooking the patio where my grandma always fed us warm, homemade pudding with blue food colour. 'Shmily' was written in the steam left on the mirror after a hot shower, my grandmother even unrolled an entire roll of toilet paper to leave 'shmily' on the very last sheet.
There was no end to the places 'shmily' would pop up. Little notes with 'shmily' scribbled were found on dashboards and car seats, or tapped to steering wheels. The notes were stuffed inside shoes and left under pillows. 'Shmily' was written in the dust upon the mantel and traced in the ashes of the fireplace. This mysterious word was as much a part of my grandparents' house as the furniture.
It took me a long time before I was able to fully appreciate my grandparents' game. Skepticism has kept me from believing in true love - one that is pure and enduring. However, I never doubted my grandparents' relationship. They had love down pat. It was more than their flirtatious little games; it was a way of life. Their relationship was  based on a devotion and passionate affection which not everyone is lucky enough to experience.
Grandma and Grandpa held hands every change they could. They stole kisses as they bumped into each other in their tiny kitchen. They finished each other's sentences and shared the daily crossword puzzle and world jumble. My grandma whispered to me about how cute my grandpa was, how handsome an old man he had grown to be. She claimed that she really knew 'how to pick 'em'. Before every meal they bowed heads and gave thanks, marvelling at their blessings: a wonderful family, a good fortune, and each other.
But there was a dark cloud in my grandparents' life: my grandmother had breast cancer. The disease had first appeared ten years earlier. As always, Grandpa was with her every step of the way. He comforted her in their yellow room, painted that colour so she could always be surrounded by sunshine, even when she was too sick to go outside.
Now the cancer was once again attacking her body. With the help of a cane and my grandfather's steady hand, they still went to church every morning. But my grandmother grew steadily weaker, until finally she could not leave the house anymore. For a while, Grandpa would go to church alone, praying to God to watch over his wife. Then one day, what we all dreaded finally happened. Grandma was gone.
'Shmily'. It was scrawled in yellow on the pink ribbons of my grandmother's final bouquet. As the crowed thinned and the last mourners turned to leave, my aunts, uncles, cousins and other family members came forward and gathered around Grandma one last time. Grandpa stepped up to my grandmother's casket and, taking a shaky breath, he began to sing to her. Through his tears and grief, the song came, a deep and throaty lullaby.
Shaking with m own sorrow, I will never forget that moment. For I knew then that, although I couldn't begin to fathom the depth of their love, I had been privileged to witness its unmatched beauty.
S-h-m-i-l-y: See How Much I Love You.
Thank you, Grandma and Grandpa, for letting me see.

Friday 6 April 2012

Learning How To Move On Quote


I wanted a perfect ending. Now I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it without knowing what's going to happen next.

-Gilda Radner

Love and Intimacy Quote


Love is a force more formidable than any other.
It is invisible - it cannot be seen or measured - yet is powerful enough to transform you in a moment, and offer you more joy than any material possession every could.

-Barbara De Angelis

Do You Remember When? - Mina Radman, Aged 11


Do you remember back when we were little kids
Laughing as our hair flew wildly in the wind?
Playing all day long, talking through the night
Those were the time when everything was right.

Do you remember our very first day of school?
You were the one friends who helped me make it through.
That tough first year you were there to ease my fears
And you've always been there for me through all the years.

Do you remember I told you that you're my best friend?
We promised we'd be there for the other, until the very end?
People always used to say that they never saw us apart.
Do you know that you have a special place in my heart?

Do you remember when our bond began to break?
Fights became frequent and our hearts started to ache.
 Suddenly our forever friendship come to an abrupt end
When we realised it was something we couldn't mend.

Remember when we decided to go our separate paths?
To be on our own and make friends who can't last?
Did the loss of our friendship ever make you cry?
Feel empty or sad - or have you ever wondered why?

We've grown older and we realise that things often change.
They don't need to end, but they cannot stay the same.
Still, in the back of my mind the question won't end...
Do you remember, or even think about... when we were best friends?

Positivity Quote

The world always looks brighter from behind a smile.

-Author Unknown

Fifty Ways to Love Your Partner - Mark and Chrissy Donnelly

1) Love yourself first.
2) Start each day with a hug.
3) Serve breakfast in bed.
4) Say ‘I love you.’ every time you part ways.
5) Compliment freely and often.
6) Appreciate - and celebrate - your differences.
7) Live each day as if it’s your last.
8) Write unexpected love letters.
9) Plant a seed together and nurture it to maturity.
10) Go on a date once every week.
11) Send flowers for no reason.
12) Accept and love each others’ family and friends.
13) Make little signs that say ‘I love you’ and post them all over the house.
14) Stop and smell the roses.
15) Kiss unexpectedly.
16) Seek out beautiful sunsets together.
17) Apologize sincerely.
18) Be forgiving.
19) Remember the day you fell in love - and recreate it.
20) Hold hands.
21) Say ‘I love you’ with your eyes.
22) Let her cry in your arms.
23) Tell him you understand.
24) Drink toasts of love and commitment.
25) Do something arousing.
26) Let her give you directions when you’re lost.
27) Laugh at his jokes.
28) Appreciate her inner beauty.
29) Do the other person’s chores for a day.
30) Encourage wonderful dreams.
31) Commit a public display of affection.
32) Give loving massages with no string attached.
33) Start a love journal and record your special moments.
34) Calm each others’ fears.
35) Walk barefoot on the beach together.
36) Ask her to marry you again.
37) Say yes.
38) Respect each other.
39) Be your partner’s biggest fan.
40) Give the love your partner wants to receive.
41) Give the love you want to receive.
42) Show interest in the other’s work.
43) Work on a project together.
44) Build a fort with blankets.
45) Swing as high as you can on a swingset by moonlight.
46) Have a picnic indoors on a rainy day.
47) Never go to bed mad.
48) Put your partner first in your prayers.
49) Kiss each other goodnight.
50) Sleep like spoons.

Just Dial 911 - Cynthia C Muchnick


Marie and Michael had been for some time, and felt fortunate that even though they had different jobs, they were able to talk with each other through their work almost every day - Michael is a police officer, and Marie is a “911” dispatcher, both working for the same police department.
One day, Marie received a call from Michael who said he was out on the road in his patrol car.
“Marie, would you do me a favour?”
“Sure,” Marie answered, happy to have an excuse to talk to him.
“Could you check a license plate for me? I need to see if this guy has any outstanding warrants,” Michael explained.
“Okay, spell it for me.”
“Michael phonetically spelled out the license plate, using code names, as all police officers do, so Marie would be sure to get the right letters:
Will
Ida
Lincoln
Lincoln
Young
Ocean
Union
Mary
Adam
Robert
Robert
Young
Mary
Edward
As she did hundreds of times a day, Marie wrote down the letters on a piece of paper, typed them into her computer, started to run the license check. At first, she was puzzled - this license plate number was too long, even for a personalised plate. Her coworkers, who were in on Michael’s ‘plan’ finally had to say, “Marie, what do those letters spell?”
This time, Marie read just the first letters of each word out loud: W-I-L-L-Y-O-U-M-A-R-R-Y-M-E?
With a car of joy, Marie was all smiles as she got back n the phone to Michael, who was obviously not following any fictitious ‘driver’ with the fictitious plates, but was anxiously waiting in his patrol car for her response.
“Michael, are you there?” Marie began. “Yes Marie?” he responded, his voice cracking a bit with nervousness.
“My answer is: Affirmative!”
There was no ‘copping out’ on this proposal.

A Prayer for Couples - Marianne Williamson


Dear God,
Please make of our relationship a great and holiday adventure.
May our joining be a sacred space.
May the two of us find rest here,
a haven for our souls.

Remove from us any temptation to judge one another
or to direct one another.
We surrender to You our conflicts and our burdens.
We know You are our Answer and our rock.
Help us to not forget.

Bring us together in heart and mind as well as body.
Remond from us the temptation to criticise or be cruel.
May we not be tempted by fantasies and projections,
but guide us in the ways of holiness.
Save us from darkness.

May this relationship be a burst of light.
May it be a fount of love and wisdom for us,
for our family, for our community, for our world.

May this bond be a channel for Your love and healing,
a vehicle of Your grace and power.
As lessons come and challenges grow,
let us not be tempted to forsake each other.
Let us always remember, that in each other we have
the most beautiful woman, the most beautiful man,
the strongest one, the sacred one in whose arms we are repaired.

May we remain young in this relationship.
May we grow wise in this relationship.
Bring us what You desire for us,
and show us how You would have us be.

Thank you, dear God,
You who are the cement between us.
Thank You for this love.

Amen