Category Archives: marriage

Who’s Writing for Blissfully Wed?

Oh, I am, thanks for asking.

If you’re not familiar with Blissfully Wed (also called Wedded Bliss), it’s part of the online magazine Blissfully Domestic, founded by Allison Worthington.  There are great channels on anything  you can think of:  spending money, saving money, having kids, being stylish, cooking healthy food, and the list goes on.  There are lots of terrific bloggers.  Allison Worthington also has a personal blog, where you can see her funny side-or some days her more serious side.  You can check it out at Mrs. Fussypants.
Now click on over to Blissfully Wed to see what I have to say about applying the Golden Rule to marriage.  Yep, you heard me:  to marriage!

40 is the New 30, Right?!

As you have all heard, 40 is the new 30, right?

Right?

And this week, two people near and dear to me are rapidly approaching the new 30. So, in honor of both of them, I give you some thoughts about friendship and love.

No, really, I’m not gonna get that sappy. Instead, how about some photos of when they weren’t even the real 30 yet? Now we’re talkin’!

(That’s all of us, pre-kids, enjoying the sunshine at Half Moon Bay.)

Happy birthday to Missy, one of my oldest friends (and by oldest I mean that I’ve known her a long time, not that she’s getting really, really, old).

(Oh, the sweaters, the hair!  It’s almost painful.)

(But what a beautiful bride!)

And to Greg, my oldest husband.

(As handsome as ever, in Sausalito.)

(Waaaaayyyy back when…fraternity bid day!)
And the best news about getting older:  look what we have to show for it!
(There’s actually one more, now, but I didn’t think it was right to photoshop him in!)
Happy Birthday you two.  I love ya!

The Power of Lust


Last April, at a writers’ conference in NYC, I met Ruth Houston, author of this book. She wore a button with the title, which made me laugh. “Creative”, I thought, “What a catchy, clever title.” A little later while we were chatting during a break, I asked the author how she came up with the idea. You guessed it: personal experience.

I didn’t envy her creativity so much then, although I certainly admired her gumption. Her ability to turn such a personal tragedy into meaningful work for herself and counsel for others kept me thinking. “What must it be like,” I wondered, “to end everything you’ve known to be true?” It must be absolutely horrible. I’d never even met her ex-husband, but already I didn’t like him.
More recently, a girlfriend and I were having one of those lovely heart-to-heart discussions, and the topic turned to extra-marital affairs. We got started down this conversational path because of a talk our pastor gave at church about self-control. He made the very real point that behavior prior to marriage matters–in part–because saying “I do” doesn’t flip some magical behavior-modification switch. In other words, if you practiced “free-love” before marriage, you may be in for a bit of a rough marital road the next time that particular carrot is dangled. At any rate, we both agreed that, for us–and I am not suggesting this feeling is universal–a switch did, indeed, flip when we married. Not that either of us were out there promoting free love beforehand, but let’s just say we certainly weren’t Amish. However, neither of us has ever even considered anything nearly as sleazy as the soon-to-be former Governor of NY.
As a wife, I can’t help but empathize with his. As a daughter I am horrified for the Spitzer girls. I look at Silda Wall Spitzer and wonder, “Eliot, what were you thinking?” All the perks of privilege were his: a swanky apartment in NYC, private school for his girls, a talented, beautiful wife and a boatload of money. It’s never enough, is it guys?
On some level, he must have known it would come to this. How could he do it, I wonder, and I am not alone in my wondering. Wives across the country, and probably the world, are peering into this egregious betrayal and asking themselves, “How could he so completely disregard and disrespect this woman he’s called wife for 21 years?”

And what about us? What about the rest of the wives out here, doing our best to make marriage work, to parent well, and to fulfill our purpose in life? When we peek into the life of this privileged couple, we’re often prompted to reflect back on our own—and sometimes we sheepishly wonder if this could ever happen to us. I want to say, “No, of course not. This will never happen to you or to me.” But it does. In almost sixteen years of marriage I’ve watched it happen to friend after friend after friend and it breaks my heart every time.

When I met Ruth Houston at that writers’ conference last year, I laughed at the title of her book. But I’m not really laughing now. I’m sad, I’m incredibly, sorrowfully sad, that women across the world look at Silda Wall Spitzer – as we looked at Hillary Rodham Clinton only a few years ago – and wonder if our marriage will be next.
-Kirsetin