Newlywed Ruminations: Are you part of an SBC? Raise your hand!

3 12 2009

To borrow a phrase from my friend Jonathan, the SBC is the “successful Black couple.”

The SBC is a couple – married or committed – that revels in the beauty of being together. SBCs unapologetically love and forgive and are sick and tired of people being negative about marriage and commitment. SBCs don’t buy into the popular sentiment that marriage is for White people. SBCs reject the thought that all marriages – especially Black ones – end in divorce. In fact, the D word is shunned as a part of the vocabulary of the SBC – much like how contemplating your own death is usually a morbid no-no. News flash: Just because Tiger or Tasha did the wrong thing in their marriage doesn’t mean anyone else will.

SBC’s believe in the power of cooperation, they’ve thrown away their “lists” and they have a set of agreed upon, established goals they are trying to accomplish together. SBCs know that wealth and education are easier had together than apart. SBCs are also mature enough to know that they are done playing the field – or perhaps never played the field at all – and therefore are OK being with each other. In fact, in their eyes, there is no greater prize than the other half of the SBC.

I had the pleasure of sharing a chocolate dinner (yes, you read that right, a chocolate dinner) with a fellow SBC. Fully confident in each other, they enjoyed their meal/dessert and shared stories of their couples love with me. We bonded over stories of doing things together as a family unit, learning together, growing together, learning how to be selfless and in so doing showing others that SBCs are the rule, not the exception. I know of another SBC in my age group, my girl Tearsa. She encourages her friends to tweet about positive Black commitment.

I agree with Tearsa’s stance. If we spent half as much time talking about what DOES work and what is RIGHT and GOOD about Black relationships and Black people in general, then the immature failed-at-being-romantic betrayals of prominent Black athletes would be inconsequential to us and would have no bearing on our own relationships. I suggest that we flip the script. Start from a positive place. Believe that you can be a part of an SBC. We do exist.

I’m part of one. My parents are in one. Most of my cousins (who are married, that is) are part of one. My boss is part of one. My hubby’s parents are definitely an SBC, as is my sis-in-law and her hubby. My wedding dinner hosted some 300 people and 80 percent of them were SBCs. We went to Orlando to celebrate our one-year anniversary with another SBC from Philadelphia. My church is full of SBCs. My fav group of journalists are all successful SBCs. When I go out to dinner on Friday nights, I see SBCs all around me – laughing, clinking glasses, showing off sparkly wedding bands and rings, rubbing pregnant bellies and holding hands.

Don’t you see them too? If not, try looking a little harder. Or perhaps you’re in the wrong place.

SBCs tend not to be in the club, but they will be in the lounge. SBCs hold lots of house parties and dinner parties and game nights. SBCs serve their community at soup kitchens or Girl Scout troops or by volunteering at the youth center together. They attend Delta balls or Kappa balls or Links events. Wannabe middleclass? Sure, if that’s what you want to call it. But to see it from a more positive viewpoint, one of the beautiful aspects of such goings-ons is that they celebrate the SBC rather than tear it down. In fact, often at such events, to be part of an SBC is expected.

Now, there are also SWCs, SHCs, SNCs and SACs. It’s all good no matter your race.

Do you want to be part of a successful couple?

It takes one to know one. If you are single and you want to strengthen your SBC range, then start hanging out with other SBCs and their like-minded friends. Surround yourself with people who believe that Black love is more than simply possible, but that it is the Way and the Truth. Remember that like attracts like. Great minds hang together. Positive minds hang together.

Remember: the negative person looks around one day and discovers that there is no one listening to their complaints.

But us SBCs? We’ve found our flock and we support each other. It aint always easy, and yes we get on each other’s nerve, but we stick together. Our mindset is to stay together forever. Period.

SBCs of the world rise up and show’m how it’s done.





Newlywed Ruminations: One year into the magic marriage…

30 11 2009

Many of my friends ask what it’s like to be married.

Being new to marriage, I at first offered generic answers. But now that I’m a little over a year into my promise, I’m seeing that my first marriage lesson is that of true companionship. It is not like dating. And, contrary to single’s belief, marriage doesn’t mean that I automatically have a date every time I want to see Rocky Horror Picture Show at midnight on a Friday. ;)

He’s my companion and my love, but he is not at my beck and call. We’re individuals with individual interests. We need to spend time apart. We love to spend time together. I’m not a huge basketball fan. He’s not really into the Legend of Zelda. We’ve learned how to catch perch, clean a skate (related to the stingray), play on opposing Fantasy Football teams and keep each other well-fed even when we both have the flu. I call his mother. I Facebook with his sister. I’m friends with his cousins. I cook dinner and get beers for his friends. I was there for him – and so was my family – when his cousins died in a horrible accident. I’m also there for him – and proud of him – when he’s happy and doing interesting things like winning at DJ Hero or volunteering at a local museum.

He, in turn, comes to all of my crazy family gatherings and has joined my family, dues-paying club. He runs into my great-uncle at Home Depot and rather than turn the other way, carries wood to my 87-year-old uncle’s car and makes sure he gets off OK. He picks up my friends from the airport. He took a “guys” football trip with my uncles. He reads every single article that I write. Quite dear to my heart, he washes dishes. He sat silently by my side and squeezed my hand as I attended several heart-breaking funerals this year. He even stepped in to be a pallbearer – something he did not have to volunteer to do. He reminds me to chill out, sit back and relax. He tells me I’m a wonderful cook. And he doesn’t complain too much when I turn up the heat because I am perpetually cold. He challenges me to trust myself.

I know more about him now than I ever did before, but I can’t quite articulate what it is that I know. I do know for sure that he is really, truly my best friend and his knowledge of how I operate is almost up there with my mom’s knowledge. I also know for sure that we are both very much in tune to how the other one feels. It’s kind of like a vibration.

And let me tell you, I didn’t know him like that when we were dating. I didn’t know him like that when we were engaged either. I swear that saying vows is some kind of spiritual magic, if you will. It is a heart-bind that ties you in a spirit way to your significant other. Love. God. Magic. To me, God is magic. God is also love. These magic marriage ties are powerful juju and nothing to be trifled with.

This is not to say that we haven’t had some snafus. We have hung together through some pretty heady circumstances this year. And in many ways, I like to know that he is my rock in the storm. I am also his. We stand.

We are building our house on stone, not sand.

The first year of marriage is…. sweet.





Newlywed Ruminations: Foot in Mouth Disease or, Is the “baby question” really a good idea?

29 11 2009

“When are you going to have a baby?!?!”

It’s a well-intentioned question. I get it.

Now that I’m a year and a few months into being married, the question pops up with increased frequency. Usually it’s only asked by people close to me – and a few friends/acquaintances who *think* they’re close to me. It’s interesting that people ask because the most important people with the best right to know – the PARENTS – have yet to even bring it up. Plus, no one asks my hubby. They only ask me.

I usually say that I’m not old enough to have a baby yet. Then I add that the hubby and I have to travel to both Paris AND Amsterdam before we have kids. Plus, I’d like to be married for a hot second before introducing someone else into my new relationship.

I’m not to the point where I’m furious because someone asks. But I’ve talked with other couples about this and they tell me that the “baby question” is one of the rudest questions you could ask a woman. Why? My friends say it’s rude because she might be infertile and if so, her infertility is none of your business. She might have been raped at a young age and had her ovaries ruined. Her husband might have a low sperm count. They might have been trying for years to no avail.

And if any of that actually happened to a couple, they might be too traumatized to discuss the details of their sex life over dinner at Thanksgiving or Christmas.

The hubby told me that he doesn’t think it’s anyone’s business to know whatever it is we have decided about kids. His take on it is that people have to just wait and see.

Another newlywed friend said that every time she passed on a glass of wine at dinner everyone at the table was like “oh! Are you expecting?!?!?!” She didn’t want to tell them that she was being treated for a vaginal infection and therefore couldn’t drink liquor. Awkward. Awkward. Awkward. She wound up saying she wasn’t pregnant and didn’t feel like wine tonight.

As for me, I find it odd that folks want to ask if I’m pregnant every time I get the flu or food poisoning. This is despite knowing that, for example, I’m running a fever of 102, am on antibiotics and just had rare pork loin for dinner… I think it’s funny and speaks to the fact that people think I wouldn’t have gotten pregnant prior to getting married. Even funnier when you consider that I had PLENTY of stomach flues prior to tying the knot.

In fact, while we were sitting on the couch, someone very close to me suddenly and unexpectedly reached over to rub my stomach, told me I was glowing and asked me if I was carrying a baby in there. All this in the space of six seconds. “Er.. No.” I said, suddenly reminded that I’m no longer the teeny size 0 that people expect me to be.

I was a little freaked that someone reached over to rub my stomach. (That was just weird and I totally sympathize with pregnant women who complain about that random kind of rubbing action.) But secondly, I was embarrassed that because I no longer have the 97 pound body of myself some 10 years ago.. [Read: because I have gained weight now that I'm no longer 21] people will now assume that I’m pregnant. And truly, unless you’re my trainer or my hubby, I don’t want anyone else ever asking me about the physical condition of my mostly-flat (on most days) stomach.

A newly-pregnant friend was aghast at this tale. Said she: “What if you had just had a miscarriage?”

If I had just had a miscarriage, that question might have seriously hurt my feelings. Good thing I was just suffering from too much apple pie and ice cream from a birthday dinner.

I made a similar “baby question” mistake four years ago. I was covering Hurricane Katrina down in Gulfport, MS and I was interviewing the injured who had been brought to a local veterans administration hospital. One of the nurses walking me around the premises had a huge stomach. She was rubbing it and holding it. After two days of working with her, I felt comfortable enough to ask when she was due. “I’m not due,” she said. “I have a 20-pound tumor in my belly.”

Ouch.

All I could say was “I’m so very sorry for assuming.”
– — — — — — — –

What say you? Do you ask? If so, how? And if you are on the receiving end of such questions, how do you respond? I think it’d be pretty horrifying to the asker if you gave a blow-by-blow description of your attempts to get pregnant. But if you say, “Yes, I’m trying to get pregnant,” will the asker then continue to ask month after month after month?

Thoughts?





Newlywed Ruminations/Living together before marriage?

24 11 2009

A friend asked me whether I thought it was a good idea to live together before marriage… Here’s my take:

I know some folks who believe that it’s necessary to live together before marriage to “test out” what happens when the relationship gets real close. It’s a practice for marriage, they say. You live together, pay bills together, perhaps have some kids, make love every night and maybe, one day, actually walk down that aisle. And if it doesn’t work out, after six years of living together, you can break up! No strings attached.

Isn’t that lovely?

Actually no. You just wasted six years of good dating life on some fool who was not the “one.” Why on earth would you do that?

You shortchange yourself by living together before marriage. If you are good enough to be a sexually-close roommate, or to carry someone’s child, you are good enough to be yoked. And if you don’t want to be yoked, why are you “testing” marriage anyway? If you don’t want to have that person in your life permanently then why are you having – or fathering – their child?

Of course, this post only makes sense if you have a desire to be wed. If you have no desire to be wed, then none of this matters anyway.

However, real talk: people who live together before marriage with no clear wedding date already set are three times as likely to never marry at all. People who live together with a wedding date set for the very near future (three to four months) have a better shot at staying married. People who don’t live together until marriage have the best shot at staying together.

Let’s repeat with statistics. People who cohabitate have only a 45% chance of ever getting married. More than eight out of 10 couples who live together before marriage will break up before the wedding. Only 12% of couples who start off shacking up have a marriage that lasts longer than 10 years.

It seems easy to shack up and it’s a very non-committal way to express a commitment, but it is really good for you in the long run? Statistics would seem to point to an answer of no.

And from a personal standpoint, I believe that when you shack up you take away the magic of the first year of marriage. That first year of marriage should be getting to know each other better and intimately; learning how to split up household chores; setting up life insurance policies and wills; opening up wedding presents every weekend for the first month; picking out photos for your wedding album; arguing over who gets to write the thank you note to Aunt Francine; figuring out schedules and anniversary trips; getting excited about dressing together and showering together and cooking together and living together… But if you spend all that time on some random dude or gal that you just “test out,” what do you do when you get married?

I suppose you just skip all the stuff that’s exciting for a newlywed couple and in so doing, it’s possible that you might erase some of the “magic” of the first few years.

This is not to say that all couples who shack up have an untimely demise. I know a few folks – and have read about a lot more – who have figured out how to make cohabitation work for them. For these folks, cohabitation only works because both people are truly ok with that status. But if one person in the relationship changes their mind and wants marriage, then shacking up doesn’t work. And if that’s the case, why even put yourself into that situation?

If you want to be wed, try to avoid the shack. It’s one thing to shack because your lease ran out and your wedding is in one month. It’s a whole other thing to shack up for three years in the hopes that, one day, you’ll be married. If you want to pretend to be married, why not take the plunge and go all the way there? And if you’re not ready to go all the way there, why pretend? That’s why they call it DATING.





Newlywed Ruminations/Toss the “list” and get married – and richer – quicker

23 11 2009

Everybody has a list of items they want to find in their boyfriend/girlfriend/husband/wife to be.

It’s good to know what you want so that, in a “the Secret” kind of way, you can visualize your future with the end in mind. However, some of this visualization goes a bit too far. It is unrealistic to expect that your man be six foot three, muscled up, a brain surgeon, owner of three homes and four BMWs, have a great relationship with his parents, have no kids, work out four times a week, speak two languages and be a perfectly romantic guy who fulfills your every whim. AND be 27.

Likewise, gentlemen, a lady who looks like Beyonce, has her own hair, sings like Chaka Khan, cooks like Rachel Ray, is a freak in bed, enjoys oral and anal sex to the exclusion of traditional sex, has a flat tummy for the rest of her life, never goes on her period, has a perfect credit score, enjoys football and basketball, is happy to clean up after you and is happy to have your children without evidence of a solid relationship is also a pie in the sky kind of list.

Let’s be more realistic, shall we?

Barack Obama wasn’t born a hot shot. When he dated Michelle he drove a car with a hole in the floor. He looked funny. He didn’t have money for fancy dates. Michelle made more money than him. Hello. She still dated him because she liked him. Who knew that he’d be rich and famous and president one day? Michelle’s list didn’t require that Barack already be a part of high society.

Look around at folks in their 50s, 60s and 70s. The reason why many of them are married, drive Cadillacs, have big houses, tithe thousands of dollars to church and can take fab trips to Athens or to Jamaica now that their kids are out of college is because they pulled their money together and made their finances WORK when they were a young couple.

My parents, for example, have done quite well. But they didn’t always have a house on a hill. They used to live in the ‘hood. But they worked hard to move up and out. They pooled their resources after they got married. They decided to start a business, to get a few more degrees, to buy more property, to lean on cousins and grandparents for help with babysitting and so on and so forth. Decades later, they built a comfortable life.

Let’s repeat that: DECADES.

If you want a young man financially situated like Obama, then you will need to find a professional ball player who will marry you without a prenup. Or, you need to find a man who is 67, wrinkled, on Viagra and retired from a government job that he held for decades. For the guys, you’ll need a woman like Oprah. Good luck finding that.

As for me, I chose a perfect-for-me guy who is working on his masters degree, owns some property and already has a decade of managerial experience under his belt. He aint driving no Caddy or a Beamer. And that’s OK because I don’t drive a Beamer either. ;) Like me, he’s working to improve his situation. And, like me, he’s realized that us working together on more education, paying for property, plotting out ways to pay down debt – those are the quickest ways to success.

I talk with his friends and with my friends who are trying to find the perfect someone. Many of them have a list of some sort. And most of those lists are set up to help them fail. Everybody wants the perfectly perfect mate with the perfect social status, income, car, home, brains and physical looks. Everyone wants to marry up. But guess what? Marrying up is a fairy tale ideal that doesn’t really translate well to today’s society. You want up? Get up there yourself.

The status quo trappings of success only come with a winning Lotto ticket, an extraordinary job or time. And study after study shows that married people earn more money, live longer and have fewer physical ailments than the singles amongst us. Start a little younger and put in a few decades with Malik or Tarik or Jason and you just might wind up with a president if you plan your collective futures just right.

And gentlemen, this means you must get over your own list for yourself. No one wants to start dating you when you get old and have lost your hair and your six pack. So, you don’t've time to get the house and Jaguar before you find your wife. Find her. Marry her. Let her love lift you into being a better man. Then, buy a house and a Jag together.

Rather than looking for a rich mate, why not look for a mate to get rich with?





Newlywed Ruminations/Friends after marriage

22 11 2009

A lot of people want to say that being married is the reason for the demise of a friendship. But I’m of the opinion that friends “break up” because they are intended to break – not because of any other reason. Perhaps a marriage or a new baby or a new house or a new job speed up the break, but the break was on its way to occurring anyway.

You ever hear the adage about people being in your life for “a reason, a season or a lifetime?” It’s true.

I’ve found that, in the last five years, the relationships with my friends have changed, or evolved. I’ve grown closer to my friends who are in healthy, loving relationships with the opposite sex. I’ve grown closer to my siblings. I’ve also grown into a different relationship with my parents, a more adult relationship. As for my single friends (or friends who aren’t dating) I’ve found that I have more meaningful relationships with them now that I can better appreciate the time that I am able to carve out to spend with them.

My priorities have changed, and that means friendships change too. It used to be all about getting a raise and a better job, kicking it at the club, seeing how many numbers I could get from the guys at the bar and talking about what I want in a man… Now it’s more about enjoying life, having a long conversation over a cup of coffee and taking the time to wake up at 6 a.m. and watch the sun rise while walking on the lakefront. I doubt that marriage has much to do with any of this. Instead, I think this is a function of age and maturity.

This is not to say that my single self was bad. Not at all. I enjoyed being single. However, I also enjoy being not single. And mostly, I enjoy my new, more mature self. It’s easy to understand why friendships and relationships would then shift or strain when faced with that maturity. I also now have a better understanding of why my friends with children drifted away a bit and then came back later. I got it then, but I get it even better now. Priorities suddenly, and lovingly, changed.

The pastor said, during marriage counseling, that cleaving to your husband marks a separation from others. Some might not understand the intensity of that cleaving. And that’s ok, he said. The pastor’s wife (who was also involved in the counseling) said that for women in particular, it’s important to set boundaries when it comes to female relationships. Yes, you need them, she said. But some women are upset about your newly married status and they sometimes show their frustration even when they love you.

This marriage and friendship thing is a touchy subject.

But here’s my litmus test – and advice for those going through friendship issues at the beginning of a new marriage: If the friend is newlywed and you love her/him, you cut her/him some slack for at least a year as she/he gets used to the new marital status and the new, and permanent, roommate. For once, the friendship might not be 50-50. It might dip to 90-10 or 60-40 as the new relationships flatten out. (And trust, it will bounce back, just give it some time.)

Just like your mother and father get out the way and let you cleave to your husband, your friends must do the same. And you must do the same when that friend decides to cleave to another.

As my mother has said, friends are still there for one another, but not in the same way. The husband (or wife) becomes the most important friend. No one – save God – trumps the husband. It’s a difficult thing to understand unless you go through it. Insta-loyalty, if you will. But in the end, even if situations – i.e. marriage or maturity – dictate a slight change in the relationship, a true friend will understand and will simply holla back later.





Newlywed Ruminations/Did you get rid of your little black book?

14 11 2009

A number of soon-to-be weds have asked me if the hubby and I had marriage counseling prior to tying the knot. Yes. We did. It’s a requirement of the church, in fact, and it was a requirement of the pastor. He told us that since he was marrying us, he is responsible before God for making sure that we understand the commitment we were about to undertake.

We had several good sessions. I can’t discuss everything that took place, but I do think it’s important for all couples to talk over what marriage means. I’ll never forget when the pastor asked us if either us of still had a little black book. He said that all of my friends needs to be the hubby’s friends and all of the hubby’s friends need to be my friends. And if we have friends who’ve yet to meet the other, then we all needed to have a collective pow wow or forever get rid of them from our lives.

Black books are for singles, he said. If you want to keep your black book, then you need to reevaluate why you’re getting married.

There were other lessons too, like how we would worship together, how we would raise children, where we would spend holidays, how we spend money, whether the hubby knows that I like to buy shoes and I know that he likes to buy CDs, what’s in each of our bank accounts, understanding each other’s credit score, liking each other’s parents/sisters/brothers, talking about household chores, talking about separate vs. combined bank accounts, discussing moving for the job (his or mine,) discussing sexual expectations and on and on and on.

You have to know who you are marrying and marriage counseling helps you see them in their totality. This way, if you don’t like what you learn, you can break off the engagement.

You don’t to be married before you realize that your wife has secret friends on the side and has no intention of getting rid of them. You don’t want to be married before you realize that your husband will make babies, but has no intention of helping you raise any babies.

These are questions you must ask. ANd if you like the answer great! If you don’t, then maybe it’s time to take a break.

People are who they are before you marry them, we were told. You must love them from the get-go because they will not change. At best, you will learn new things together and grow together as a married couple.

Are you on the fence about counseling? Don’t be. The best gift you can give your husband or wife to be is the gift of further understanding who they are.

- ASG





Newlywed ruminations/ A dinner party gone wrong

8 11 2009

Six couples. Three singles. One friend’s house. Pizza for dinner. Wine. Beer. Fun. Then? Weirdness. Somewhere between talking about jobs, kids (or lack thereof) and vacation plans, someone brings up the issue of sex. Ok. We’re game, let’s all talk about sex.

It’s all good, and very general, until one married guy says that he thinks that a prime component of marriage is “good head,” or oral sex. His wife is sitting next to him, mind you. Then this guy, who I’ll call “Mr. XYZ” goes on to say that men wouldn’t cheat if more oral sex was to be had.

Mrs. XYZ is silent.

Can anyone say awkward?!?!

One guy tries to recover the situation by saying something funny about sex. Then I jump in and say that the proper ways to use and enjoy sex are actually passed down from mother to daughter, father to son, in many cultures. Unfortunately, in Black culture, we are left to fend for ourselves with little discussion – except at odd dinner parties or with friends – so it’s no wonder that many people are uncomfortable and whathaveyou.

Then I’m like, have any of you all watched Dr. Laura Berman, or Dr. Drew? Dr. Laura is on the radio here and she’s a trip. Blah Blah Blah. And Dr. Drew? He’s got a new show where he helps people with sexual addictions. Blah blah Blah.

The tension in the room falls as we discuss Dr. Laura’s commentary, which many of the folks have heard before. There’s laughter. More wine. More beer. Then Mrs. XYZ says, “well I know that Dr. Laura says to communicate, but what if you say that oral sex hurts your neck, what does she say if your husband doesn’t want to listen to that?”

Oh boy.

Now, I’m not the hostess of said party. The hostess was silent for most of this interchange. Then, another partygoer says, “So… how about them Bears?”

Everyone jumps wholeheartedly into a discussion of Jay Cutler, except for two more guys who someone start talking about the faults of the black middle class and how the black middle class doesn’t help students. This one dude is a teacher and he feels as though he’d rather have people give him money than have them volunteer in the classroom.

That conversation goes downhill as well, as the guys and their wives proceed to lambast black folks who don’t do as they do with the community. When it is pointed out that everyone helps in their own way, the two dudes reject that notion, instead saying that the only way to help is to do it their way.

Oh boy again.

This whole time, the hubby and I are sitting back in the cut, along with another husband and wife team. The four of us exchange looks the whole time. We’re on the same team here… You never discuss your marriage in public, let alone with strangers. And you never, ever, never talk about your sexual dissatisfaction in front of strangers and you certainly never say things that put down your significant other. That’s not love. That’s spite.

We left shortly thereafter. It was just too uncomfortable to be there with these guys yelling at each other about the faults of everybody in the room and then to follow that up with the sexual faults of their wives – who were sitting there in the room too.

I thought that some things were off limits in terms of polite dinner conversation. Have we gotten so comfortable with our casualness that we now disrespect each other at every rip?

Here then are the new rules for dinner parties:

1. Do NOT talk about sex. At all. In any way, form or fashion.
2. Do NOT criticize anything that could be related to your dinner partners.
3. Do ask everyone what they do, where they live and try to find a common item to discuss. i.e. if you like the architecture in their ‘hood, ask about that.
4. Do ask people more about themselves or about a non-confrontational situation… Why do you teach? Why are you an architect? What’s it like being a prosecutor? Why did you choose the South Side when you were looking at places to live? How about those Bears? How about those Blackhawks? How about the parking meter situation? Ever been to the Bahamas, Turks and Caicos, Detroit? Let’s talk about travel. Tell me about your wedding, your office, your block, your church. Did you see CSI last week? or V? ANYTHING positive and pleasant and not too deep.
5. Do NOT talk about your spouse unless it is lovely praise.
6. If you have nothing nice to say, be quiet and drink some wine.

That is all.





Newlywed Ruminations/ Cooking for your man

5 11 2009

I cook for my husband. I cook for him nearly everyday. I cook for myself. I cook for myself nearly everyday. I cooked for my father. I cooked for my family. I cook for my friends when they come over. And I would cook for my mother if she ever let me.. But she’s so much a better cook than me that she’s always telling me to go sit down somewhere. Or here, peel this potato.

All this to say, I’m tired of all this mess about why women like me should NOT be cooking for their man.

Puh-leeze.

But let’s back up for a moment…

I’ve been married now for a little over a year. When I talk to friends or acquaintances, it’s usually on the phone, and I’m usually cooking. Pop an ear bud in and get to chopping, you know?

So lots of people know that I cook. But from the moment I got married, the comments about cooking took a nefarious turn. “What is HE cooking for you?” “What does HE do around the house?” And I’m like, “Whoa Nelly. Why is the hubby coming into this conversation? We were just talking about Gray’s Anatomy!!”

This has happened with so much frequency that I now have the urge to write about it. First, I think that people are way out of line to even question what happens in a marriage – especially when what happens in marriage is not discussed with them. Second, I think that women who have anything negative to say about a married woman cooking for her man need to just be quiet.

Now, if you choose to eat out everyday, that’s your business. I certainly don’t chastise and say “why don’t you cook more, you bad woman you?”

These women who are hating on women who cook need to either learn to boil some rice for themselves or stop thinking so hard about other people’s relationships. Or maybe they need to go eat something.

Some people cook because they like it. Some cook because they’re good at it. Some cook because they’re hungry. Some cook because they’re both broke and hungry, and it’s always cheaper to eat healthy and cheap when you eat in.

And if you’re going to cook anyway, what’s wrong with cooking an extra plate or two or three?

What I don’t get is why single women feel the need to go there with you. When I was cooking for this same man, and I was unmarried, I never heard a peep from the feminists. The minute I got the ring? Then came the lectures – most of it from serially single women, mind you – : don’t be his slave, don’t clean up after him, don’t merge your money, don’t get married without a prenup, don’t do this, don’t do that.

All kinds of unsolicited advice came from people who couldn’t sustain a relationship with their own parents, let alone a boyfriend. It was as if my engagement made me a public spectacle and these people thought that they had a say-so in my nuptials. To top it off, none of the singles had advice about what TO do with your husband.

And then there’s the random anti-marriage-cooking people you meet at conferences or at networking events or at work. They see my hand, ask how long I’ve been married. I answer and then they go into a long lament about how women are slaves, all marriages end in divorce and they prefer being single because of blah blah blah. At that point, I usually find a reason to go get another cup of coffee or I suddenly have an important call to take.

Why do so many people come from such a negative place?

Ah, but as RuPaul told me last week: “What anything thinks of you is none of your business.”

I’m taking his comment to heart.

But I do think that cooking, like reading, is fundamental. Just like every woman should know how to change her own tire and check the oil levels in her car; every woman should know how to cook one good meal. It doesn’t have to be for a man. It should be for yourself. For your children. For your parents. Or hell, for the homeless man outside who would give his left foot for a chance to boil and eat some fresh rice.

Every time my husband fills his plate a second, or third time, my heart just goes pitty pat. He’s eating something that I MADE. He likes it. He likes it so much that there are rarely leftovers.

Then he always says, “Baby, that was the best meal I’ve had all year.”

It’s probably not true, but he says it anyway. Actually, the fact that he cleans his plate is enough of a plus for me.

Sustenance people. Gotta eat.

p.s. The hubby has just now chimed in, 10 minutes after I posted. He says he doesn’t know why women want to take score on things like cooking for their man. He figures that women who don’t cook, and also got negative commentary, must be “amazed” by the selflessness of women who do cook. And, for the record, he does cook (and he does a bunch o other stuff, none of which is anybody’s business. ;) ) In the end, we deliberately chose each other, which is a good thing because I’d be mad as hell if he didn’t eat my spaghetti!





Newlywed Ruminations/An easy recipe

4 11 2009

Ok. Ok. I heard you ladies! Here’s a very easy chicken recipe. It’s great for friends, fam, YOU and of course, very man-friendly. (If you don’t know what this is about, you must read the blog entry I wrote about cooking for my husband.)

I’m'a go easy and you and not ask you to buy a whole fryer.. Instead, go buy a whole cut up chicken or a bag of raw, unseasoned chicken wings. NOT FROZEN, my peeps! Fresh!

I hope you have a baking dish. If not, get thee to Macy’s and buy one. They only cost, at the most, $20. Now, get thee some paprika, salt, pepper and thyme.

Rinse chicken with water. Pluck off extra feathers. Place chicken in dish. Turn oven on to 350 degrees F. (on bake please, NO broiling, you’ll burn the bird!)

Sprinkle chicken with paprika, salt, pepper and thyme. Flip birdlings over, and reapply said spices. Cover with foil and pop in oven. Let it cook for about 45 minutes, even less if you’re only doing like, six chicken wings. It’s done when you smell it. Seriously. Also, all those juices will have popped out of the bird and it will no longer bleed blood, instead it’ll oil and grease.

(after you eat, save this oil and grease and pop it in a plastic bag. Put the bag in the freezer. Later on it’ll make good gravy!)

In the last ten minutes of cooking, take off the foil and let it get brown on top.

Add boiled broccoli and rice a roni (chicken flavor) and you have a really easy, 40 minute dish. I’ll post a picture the next time I make it. (Although, when I bake chicken, I tend to buy a whole chicken and cut it up myself. But that’s a lesson for another day because you need good, sharp knives to tackle a whole chick,)

I’ll post a picture the next time I make this dish.

And, no one was slavin’.

Repeat after me: cooking is easy. Cooking is easy. Cooking is easy.

That is all.








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