She is my wife, my lover, my best friend. For over fourteen years, our marriage
has endured and grown. I can honestly state that after all this time together, my
love for Patricia has not diminished in the slightest way. In fact, through each
passing day, I find myself more and more enraptured by her beauty. The best
times of my life are the times we spend together, whether sitting quietly watching
television or enjoying an afternoon at a San Diego Chargers game.
There is no secret to why our marriage has lasted while so many others have
failed. There is no formula for success that I can offer, other than to express that
the most important feature of our relationship is that it has never lost the sense of
romance that bloomed when we first met. Too often marriage kills the romance
that was born in the courtship of a relationship. To me, I have always felt that I
am still courting Patricia, and therefore the romance has never died.
Romance is not something that can be taught or copied. One can only be
romantic through another. Patricia, my wife of fourteen years, has instilled the
romance in me. I am romantic because of her. Patricia has always brought out
the best in me. The many aspects of our romance are too numerous to mention.
However, there is one special romantic interlude that I began over fifteen years
ago.
Before we were married, Patricia and I could not see each other as much as we
would have liked during the week. The weekends always went too fast, and the
days in between dragged on forever. I decided that I needed to do something to
make the weekdays go faster, or at least to give us something to look forward to
during the week.
And so it began one Wednesday some fifteen years ago: I bought a card and
gave it to Patricia. There was no special occasion. The card was just an
expression of how much I loved her and how much I was thinking about her. I
picked Wednesday for no special reason other than it was the middle of the
week.
Since that day, I have never missed a Wednesday - Patricia has received a card
from me every Wednesday, every week, every month, every year.
The purchase of the card each week is not done out of habit. It is my romantic
mission each week to find the right card. At times, my search takes me to many
different card stores to find that perfect offering. I have been known to spend a
considerable amount of time in front of the card displays, reading up to a dozen
different cards before I choose the right one. The picture and the words in the
card must have specific meaning to me and must remind me in some way of
Patricia and our life together. The card needs to evoke an emotion in me. I
know that if a card brings a tear of happiness to my eyes, I have found the right
one.
Patricia awakens each Wednesday morning to find her card, and even though she
knows it will be there, she still lights up with excitement when she tears open the
envelope and reads what is inside. And I still get just as excited giving each card
to her.
At the foot of our bed is a brass chest that is filled with all of the greeting cards
Patricia has received from me over the past fifteen years, hundreds and hundreds
of cards, each one full of just as much love as the next. I can only hope that our
life together will last long enough for me to fill ten brass chests with my weekly
messages of love, affection and most of all thanks for the joy Patricia has brought
to my life.
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