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It's
a cliché by now that men stop talking once they get married.
My husband, Dan, is no exception.
Like everyone, I remember those late, sometimes all-night talks.
What started out as loose and free-flowing has turned into something
more akin to constipation.

It's the surface that bores
me. And after 15 years of marriage, a lot of what Dan and
I have is surface. Will you put in a load of laundry? Do you
have time to take the dog to the vet?

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"How was your trip?"
"Fine."
"What did you do?"
"Oh, the usual."
Sometimes, if I have the energy to keep knocking on the door
and to find creative ways to do it, I get information, maybe even
impressions -- seldom feelings. But it takes work.
Me, I love to talk.
"Get off that phone!" my seven-year-old rages when
she's come into the room for the third time to talk to her mommy
and I still have the phone to my ear.
On those rare occasions that I've spent a day by myself, not
saying a word, I feel abnormal, like something is wrong. Silent
meditation retreats are definitely not my thing.
Actually, it's communication I love. If I could earn enough doing
so, I'd take up song-writing full time. I have few secrets and
don't mind opening up to strangers. I actually love those personal
growth seminars where you are invited to talk about the deeper
parts of yourself. And I'm fascinated by the deeper parts of other
people. The biggest compliment I get from my friends is, "You
make me think."
It's the surface that bores me. And after 15 years of marriage,
a lot of what Dan and I have is surface. Will you put in a load
of laundry? Do you have time to take the dog to the vet? Gabrielle
needs to be tested on her spelling questions. Yeah, I can stop
at the cleaners and get your suits. Shall we go out with Adrian
and Jane Saturday night?
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Dinnertime
By Sara Eisen
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Shake the roaring
lion off my plate
And I'll enjoy my dinner more
(and please patch the hole
where the rain pours in it's soaking on my seat.)
The jungle fighting thick
in smart suburban kitchens
the vines just wrap themselves around normality
waiting for someone to climb them
and swing;
I look from time to time
as I pass
between the sink and the washer
and sing.
Continue
Reading ...
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Of course there are times when we do talk about deeper things.
Our relationships with our sisters, the effects of certain childhood
experiences, interpersonal issues at work. But these are few and
far between and get drowned in dailyness. "Even Venus
will get chilled between the stove and the fridge," the French
songwriter Georges Brassens wrote in a song explaining why he
would not ask for his love's hand in marriage.
But it's not just the dailyness that has quenched Venus's fire.
There's something else that goes on with Dan and with the husbands
of most of my friends that I am at a loss to understand. Are they
overwhelmed by our words, by our need to share our experiences,
thoughts, feelings? Do they, like John Gray maintains in Men
are from Mars, Women are from Venus just want to crawl
into their caves and be left alone?
The new joke circulating around these parts: What do men want?
Respect and a
you guessed it.
An invitation to male readers: I don't know where to go from
here. Will you help me finish this article? Will you click on
the button below and tell us why (if) you talk less to your wife
now than you did when you first knew her? And what, if anything,
would you like to do about it?
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