So I was all snuggled
down in bed with my late night mug of tea, reading Deborah Raney’s Another Way Home (Book 3 in her Chicory Inn series), when I quite literally laughed out loud. The scenario between the
middle-aged characters, Audrey and Grant, could have been a page out of my life
and I had a funny suspicion something close to it may have played out in the
Raney household as well.
Grant has just returned
home with bags of household supplies from Walmart, requested by Audrey.
He returned a minute later with another load of department
store bags. “I saved you the trouble of buying me new skivvies.”
“That was thoughtful of you.”
The scene gets funnier,
but I won’t spoil it for you. The part that triggered my memory was Grant’s
doing his wife a favor by purchasing his own underwear, and her response, which—although
not stated—could only be interpreted by my wifely mind as dripping with delicious
sarcasm.
Having married at the
ripe age of 18 and 19, Hubby and I never lived on our own. So when we took up
housekeeping and life together, we each automatically assumed the role our same
gender parent had played and depended on the other to do the same. I guess his
mom had always bought his gitch and it took me only thirty years to start questioning
why I was doing this for him as well.
One day when he
announced his underwear was full of holes and needed replacing, I declared my
freedom.
“You’re a big boy. You
can buy your own underwear from now on,” I said. Or something to that effect. I
may have included a rant about how I worked full time like he did and wasn’t it
enough that I washed, dried, and put his gitch away?
Well, technically, we
have a machine to wash and dry them. But still.
He didn’t argue.
But as the weeks went
by, I kept noticing the same old ratty gitch showing up in the wash and no
new ones making their appearance. I didn’t mention it, but I refused to give
in. I don’t know how many weeks went by. Maybe it was months. Neither of us
mentioned the underwear situation.
Then one day I was in
Walmart for some other things. I must have been in a particularly benevolent
mood that day, because as I passed by the men’s section, it occurred to me that
it would take ten seconds to grab a package of the underwear Hubby liked and
toss it into my cart. Was this really a hill worth dying on? Surely I could be
the bigger man and swallow my pride this once.
I did it, proud of
myself for conquering my own stubborn spirit.
When I got home late
that day and walked into our bedroom, Walmart bag in hand, I thought I was losing my mind. On top of Hubby’s dresser sat a brand new package of underwear—the exact
duplicate of the package I’d bought.
Without a word, we had
both surrendered on the same day.
Hubby was good for
underwear for a long time after that. And I can’t help thinking God had a good
chuckle.
Author Richelle E.
Goodrich said, “If you think the most courageous and difficult thing you can do
is stubbornly stand your ground, try graciously giving in.”
For a hilarious three minutes of comedy that only a Canadian can truly appreciate, listen to this Gitch/Gotch sketch from CBC Radio.
LOL! I LOVE this post, Terrie! So happy I could inspire such a thoughtful and profound discourse. ;)
ReplyDeleteGitch? Is that Canadian for underwear?
ReplyDeleteGoogle it, Michael.
Delete