Secrets of a Jewish Mother: Real Advice, Real Family, Real Love (24 page)

BOOK: Secrets of a Jewish Mother: Real Advice, Real Family, Real Love
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Jill’s View
Does everyone need to be married or want to be married ? I know I did. It is in my DNA. Since I was a little girl, I was set on a life path—get good grades in school (I might have ignored that one), go to college, have a career and get married. Getting divorced was not part of the plan. I thought my first marriage would last forever, but if I had not married Steven I would not have had Allyson, so I will never call it a mistake. I knew Bobby a few years before we got married. Is our relationship exactly the same now as it was then? No. I admit it was more sexual in the beginning. All relationships are and should be. Then you should settle into a comfortable relationship that always involves great sex but also has layers of friendship, love and, most important, trust. Bobby has taught me that a marriage is like a book. You have different chapters in your marriage. If you are in a rut, like anyone who’s been married long enough has been at times, you need to turn the page and get to another chapter. Embrace the “life is a book” concept and work together to turn the page. ■
The Jewish Wedding
Have you been to a Jewish wedding? Did you ever wonder why the groom smashes a glass with his foot at the end of the ceremony? The reason? Jews want you to remember that even in the midst of a wedding, the happiest ceremony of life, our Second Temple was destroyed. The smashing of glass is a symbol of that destruction. Wherever there is joy, there is also sadness. You see? We Jews can’t be unconditionally happy for even one moment. No wonder we are always laughing and crying at the same time.
Keeping a Man ... Happy?
If anyone who has been married a long time tells you her marriage is and always has been perfect, she is lying. If she is not lying to you, she is lying to herself, but she is surely lying. Relationships take work. The Jewish mother understands that very well.
gloria’s Story
I’m no starry-eyed romantic on the subject of marriage, even though I love Sol deeply. Disappointment is often a part of life. You keep expecting and hoping for one thing, and then you get shocked or surprised or dismayed by another. For example, Sol and I had a rather large interest in a silver mine many years ago. We flew to Arizona to inspect the mine and thought it looked great. For one evening, we were “paper millionaires.” The next week we found out the ore was practically worthless and so was the stock. But during that brief time when the stock was sky-high, Sol seemed to change before my eyes. He became quite arrogant and not very nice. When the stock fell, he turned back into the nice guy I married. Maybe that episode was a blessing in disguise; perhaps our marriage would not have been strong enough to handle sudden great wealth at that age. Too bad we never did have the chance to find out. ■
From Jill and Lisa: Gloria’s story about the silver mine reminds us of another secret we’d like to share—beware the man who makes a lot of money while still young enough to really enjoy it. It usually goes to his head, and by that we mean the wrong one.
Do not get the wrong impression here. Despite the occasional disappointments, shouting matches (Mommy shouts, Daddy runs away) and long stretches of the silent treatment, Mom and Dad finish each other’s sentences. They cannot be apart. They adore each other, when they are not complaining about each other.
Mommy has observed more marriages than we have. She also is part of the generation in which a wife had a more clearly defined role in marriage. Sometimes that was a good thing; other times, not so good. Here is our mother’s advice to us on how to keep a man—did we say “keep him happy”? No, we just said “keep.” ...
GLORIA’S RULES TO KEEP A MAN AFTER YOU ARE MARRIED
1.
Your Looks Count:
Keep up your appearance. If you gain fifty pounds during your pregnancy and lose forty of them, you’ll feel better about yourself and he’ll still have the girl he married.
2.
Get Away Together As a Couple:
Sol and I used to go away for weekends in Westchester when the girls were young. It wasn’t expensive, it wasn’t too far away—but it was away from our ordinary routine and we got to be alone, together.
3.
Be Afraid of Virginia Woolf:
Try to find fairly happy couples to socialize with, not the kind who fight in front of you all night long. Not only is that kind of behavior unpleasant; it can also be contagious.
4.
Pretend a Little
: If your spouse has a hobby he loves, like sports, you should try to seem a little interested once in a while. (Personally, I never did that, but it sounds like a good idea.)
5.
Keep on Your Toes:
Do not be naïve about other women taking an interest in your husband! A friend of mine was definitely after Sol for a very short time, during a time when she was fighting with her first husband and before she found the man who was to be her second husband. I was gullible and stupid; that can be a dangerous combination. Every woman has to stay on her toes.
6.
For Better or for Worse Includes Richer and Poorer:
If fortune fails you, don’t give up. Be understanding of his plight. Pitch in and help where you can. I realize many women today contribute significantly to household income, but in my day those women were rare. Men need to work and earn money to feel valuable. When their earnings dip, their ego drops too. Be gentle during the rough times.
Gloria’s Example
Marriage is a partnership in the truest sense of the word. When one is having troubles of any kind, the other steps in to help. Sol was having financial difficulties when Lisa was ready for college. I was out on leave from teaching and had no desire to return; in fact, I hated teaching in New York City public high schools. But we needed the money to pay Lisa’s tuition, so I went back to work until Lisa finished college. You do whatever it takes to get through. That’s why I always felt it was so important for my daughters to have their own way of making a living, even in those days when men were expected to bring home the paycheck.■
ask yourself
1.
How much
do
you resemble the girl in the wedding photo? If not, is there something within your control that you can work on to be that woman again?
2.
Do you make time just for the two of you? How often?
3.
When was the last time you got away alone for a little time together?
4.
Are you mentally prepared to stay for the long haul? If not, is marriage the right choice for you?
5.
When money is tight, do you pitch in and work to help?
6.
Do you show an interest in the things he is interested in?
Who Said Your Husband Has to Know Everything?
We love our husbands. Most of the time, we even like our husbands. But our husbands are not our sisters. Hell, they’re not even our girlfriends. Are they best friends, in the sense of being there for us, supportive and kind, loyal and true? Yes, they are. But does that mean they are entitled to know what we spend at the hairdresser, how often we go for touch-ups at the dermatologist and the details of how much it really costs for our children to get all the tutoring they need? Uh ... no. That’s why we have girlfriends.
What about when your friend or family member tells you a secret? It is usually understood that you can tell your husband, but what if your friend asks you not to? Do you tell him anyway? We say no way. A confidence is a confidence; if you don’t want to keep any secrets from your husband, fool that you are, let your friend know this ahead of time so she can decide whether or not she still wants to tell you. Don’t you know that some men are the
worst
gossips? There is
no
way some men can keep a secret.
Our Aunt Cooky believes she has to tell her husband, our Uncle Sy, everything. This irks Mommy, whose feeling is: “Why start trouble? You are just going to do what you want anyway, so do it.”
Gloria’s Story
Years ago we were invited to a family Bar Mitzvah. There I met a very good-looking, newly married couple who were very good friends with our cousin. I danced with the guy, we talked and that was that. A few days later the phone rings and this same guy asks if he could send a limo for me to take me to New York City. After getting over my shock, I said quite nicely that I was very flattered by the offer but would not accept the invitation since I was a very happily married woman. I should have been quite angry with him, but I must say that I was flattered, even though I thought he was a piece of trash and pitied his wife. Ultimately, I decided against telling Sol since this guy was our cousin’s close friend. Why start trouble? ■
Lisa’s View
Daddy had a wooden valet hanger for his pants in our parents’ bedroom. Mommy used to go into Daddy’s pants pockets and take money out of his wallet. She did this often and without asking. In fact, it used to look like stealing, because Mommy always did it with a little sneaky look on her face, as if Daddy wasn’t going to notice he was missing twenty dollars. When I asked Mommy about this surreptitious ritual, she always said, “Your father doesn’t have to know everything.” Later, I learned that most of this money went to pay for Jill’s reading therapist. Mommy felt Daddy wouldn’t want to pay for the lessons if she told him how much they really cost, so she told him they cost much less and gave Daddy the satisfaction of thinking the check he wrote paid for the whole therapy. But you have to wonder where Dad thought all those twenties were going.... Maybe the hairdresser?
And speaking of secrets, I was a little miffed recently when I found out my husband kept one of his own. A mutual friend of ours had confided to my husband that his wife had filed for divorce, but I only found out about it much later, after the wife finally got around to telling me. I thought that Bill should have shared the husband’s secret with me, since we both knew the couple well. But Bill honored the request his friend had made not to tell anyone about it, and for Bill that “anyone” included me. So you see? Don’t be a fool. You think you have to tell him everything? Why? I guarantee your husband does not share this philosophy. Most men have plenty of secrets. Give yourself permission to have one or two yourself.■
BOOK: Secrets of a Jewish Mother: Real Advice, Real Family, Real Love
11.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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