I won’t
complain too much, however, because as I am momentarily married to my bed, I have all the time in the world- or until Tuesday- to write. Joy.
I have a
whole other blog post I wrote during a lunch break last week on the burnt-out-career- housewife, but that takes
too much thought, and in my current delicate condition, I’m feeling much more
sentimental and emotional. That could be the cough medicine, steroids, and
antibiotics talking, but I’m sure that being sick always makes me feel mushy.
Why
would being sick make me feel mushy? Because being sick takes one to a very
vulnerable place. I don’t know what it is. When we’re healthy, we: go to work,
eat lunch, have a coffee break, work, work, work, go home, clean or do dishes,
make dinner, Facebook, check e-mail, neglect twitter altogether if you’re me, do whatever things we do normally, and then go
to bed.
I forget how much I need other people when I'm feeling well. Oh, but when I'm sick, I'm reminded of how much I long to be taken care of, to have someone make me soup, for someone to rub my achy, tired back, and push my kind of gross sick day hair from my face, and laugh with ( or at) me when I get weird from taking a good ole trail mix of medicines...which leads to incidents of knocking over CVS Christmas decorations, and then proceeding to be very ungraceful and clumsy in my effort to cleaning them up...(this flaw of trail mix medicine is also it's strength is that you really don't care about the people watching or your purse hanging over your head, or the awkward position it takes to gather sparkly Santa wands...)
All I want on sick days is to be taken care of. I care very little for anything else. All I want
is company, and to snuggle up, and to know that someone cares. Someone really
cares; because only the people who really love you would cuddle next to a sick,
coughing person, or not laugh at you when you’re being overly emotional…because
it happens (I've cried three times today. Once over getting a shot in the bottom, once sitting in the waiting room after the shot in the bottom, and once in the car because shot in the bottom added a new achy place). And so you know, I'm one of those people who shudders at the thought of crying in public, so you can only imagine my attempt to use my long hair as a wall between me and everyone else in the waiting room as I tried not to cry. Fail.
Anyway, I am always convinced that I just need someone to be there. The shot in the bottom and crying in the waiting room would have been significantly better, and I even suspect funny. And how I love funny.
Anyway, I am always convinced that I just need someone to be there. The shot in the bottom and crying in the waiting room would have been significantly better, and I even suspect funny. And how I love funny.
I’ve
never thought too much about, “in sickness and in health,” at weddings, but I
was thinking about it today. I was thinking, “dag gummit, I’m going to be sick
in the future, and I’m going to want to be taken care of.” And I feel so sorry
for the people who were promised “in sickness and in health,” but the person
promising it didn’t really mean it. They kind of meant it, but not really. I
also feel bad for the people who are loved less as they get older, and wrinkly,
and their hair turns gray, because the truth is, that isn’t love at all. They are loved less because the people who promised to love them, in fact, loved themselves more.
I think
we spend too much time romanticizing the idea of love. We associate it with
dancing, and laughing, and roses, and youtube proposals (as a blog I read
earlier mentioned), and youth, and health. I think we forget that we’re people
who have tiring jobs and schedules, and who age with time, and who get old…really
old, and sick. I think we associate romantic gestures like face held kisses,
and dates with candles, and walks late at night, and being completely
uncomplicated altogether as being the epitome of love moments. Right? Those are
the moments that we assume will make us feel the most warm, and lovey…because
maybe we’re taught to think that happiness revolves around everything being
good, and in order, and just as it is "supposed to be."
I’m
realizing that it is in the messy moments that you love the most. When someone is
hurting, or has had a bad day, or is sick, that very vulnerable part of their heart is
exposed. The door is cracked for you to walk in and to love them…and I think
we feel it more then. I think taking care of someone removes the selfish
thought that you did a good job of doing your hair, or setting up the perfect
date, or any kind of you at all; there is only the person you are caring for,
the unselfish want to love them and care for them better. And this is, dear reader, is what love is all about. If you can't promise to sacrifice the "you" for "us", you shouldn't promise love at all.
In the quiet of the bathroom, on a cold floor, or in a tissue ladened bed, or when you need help changing out of third-day clothes, you realize that that familiar face loves you, not because you are all put together, or you look very attractive that day, but because they love you.
In the quiet of the bathroom, on a cold floor, or in a tissue ladened bed, or when you need help changing out of third-day clothes, you realize that that familiar face loves you, not because you are all put together, or you look very attractive that day, but because they love you.
I’m sure
that couples who have special dates, and “perfect” long walks, and a great
story altogether love one another, but I’m recently convinced that the ones who
get up at 4:00 in the morning to take care of the other, and who clean dirty
soup dishes, and who know how to be unselfish in caring for the
other, love each other much.
So here’s
to sick days, and being reminded that we should all learn how to love each
other much. Because what’s a great love story without stuffy noses, achy backs,
and sick day hair? What's a great love story with selflessness?
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