It’s Not Easy Being
Married to Alex
It’s not
easy being married to Alex. At the same time, I wouldn’t trade places with
anyone. He’s mine. I won’t let him
go, and I won’t let anyone try to take him away. And I hope by the time I end
this piece, you’ll all understand how I can say all those things and mean them.
First, Alex is a Brit. More precisely, he is a Geordie, from the extreme north-east of England, near Newcastle, 60 miles south of Scottland. And that means he speaks with a funny accent. It’s not
a posh Oxbridge upper class accent – he speaks Geordie. It goes something like
this, “Eeeh, it was narf pissin down last night.” And if I have to ask him more
than once to repeat what he said, he says, “Aw, forgerrit.”
He
uses expressions that don’t mean what I think they mean. "Wa George" means his uncle George. And "our kid" means his younger brother Wayne, not our son Simon. I nearly fell out of my
chair the day he started telling me about when he “served his time.” He meant when he served his engineering apprenticeship, not a jail or prison sentence. When I ask him a question, like, “Do
you think I should call my Dad?” He’ll respond, “I think you should do.” “Do
what?” says I.
He
uses strange weights and measures. It’s difficult enough to keep track of my
progress maintaining (ha, ha) my weight, but for him to understand me, I have
to track my numbers in both pounds and something called stones. 140 pounds – my
target weight – is 10 stone. That number is so small I can’t figure out how
anyone can weigh so little.
Second, Alex is an extreme extrovert.
He’ll talk to anyone. If there is
someone in the elevator when we get in, Alex will strike up a conversation.
He’ll talk to anyone about anything. The weather, religion, politics. I mean it
– about anything. And he’ll talk to anyone about anyone else he knows. When he travels to England I cringe when I think of the number of people he has had
access to there – people who then know my deepest darkest
secrets.
I
had to learn to behave like an extrovert in order not to be invisible next to him. I discovered this when a friend of a
friend called to invite Alex and me to a party. Alex was working in Abu Dhabi
at the time, so I told her I would be happy to come, but Alex was out of the
country. She could barely disguise her disappointment.
A
few years back, one of my Toastmasters clubs held a holiday party at the
Fort Meyer Officers’ Club. I had weeks to prepare a toast for the event. But on
the night, once Alex had introduced himself to everyone, one of the club
officers invited Alex to give a toast, too. He did. His was better than mine.
Third, Alex is, well, Alex.
He
doesn’t have even a nodding acquaintance with antecedents. While we are driving
down the road, Alex will turn to me and tell me something out of the blue like,
“That was pretty stupid of him.” I don’t know what “that” or who “him” refers
to. I’m just supposed to know. He expects me to be able to read his mind.
He
loves an argument. His favorite topic is the American Revolution which he
always claims was really just a tax write-off to get rid of the colonials.
He
constantly asks me if I have my keys, my badge, my green bag, my lunch, you
name it before we leave the house – as though I were his child, not his wife. But when he is in England I often discover I have run out of clean underwear – because he wasn't around to pay attention and remind me.
The
bottom line – it is not easy being married to Alex. I don’t always understand
him, even when I understand his words. But if I don’t pay attention to what he
says, I may learn from strangers that they know what I didn’t understand. Then,
because he loves an argument, I can’t even let him know when I’m upset because
that just gives him another opportunity for his favorite activity.