Twelve years ago – on this very day (as Shutterfly so aptly reminded me) – I was saying “I do” for the first time in my life.
I was young, naïve, blissfully ignorant…. And so, so, so misinformed.
I meant the words I said with all of my 21-year-old heart, but I was ill-equipped to fulfill them.
I was short-tempered, self-righteous, and lacked any understanding of the word Grace whatsoever.
The bigger problem was my mountain of unrealistic expectations. I was expecting marriage to fulfill me. My husband to complete me. And thought we would live happily-ever-after day-after-day.
I read recently that, “Expectations are disappointments waiting to happen.”
I did not hide my disappointment in my first husband.
Soon, disappointment led to disenchantment. Then to disdain and disgust. Which eventually led to the most gut-wrenching D-word of all: Divorce. And that led to months and years of darkness and depression.
But tonight, 12 years later, I’m sitting on my deck watching the sunset, listening to my husband chipping golfballs in our backyard. My life has been totally redeemed.
If I could go back and talk to the girl in this photo, I would explain that marriage is not so much about who you are married to, but how you are in the marriage.
This marriage is honestly not terribly different than the last.
My husband still does things that annoy me, sometimes forgets things, or breaks a promise… we disagree, argue and sometimes even shout at each other.
My marriage is imperfect. My husband is imperfect.
Unfortunately, it took my entire life falling apart to realize that so am I.
But the breaking of me made way for the best of me in its place.
A friend recently asked me if I knew what I knew now, could I have made my first marriage work? My answer was yes, but, I wouldn’t know what I know now had I not gone through my first marriage failing.
I had to be humbled. Today, I am patient and kind (on my good days!), but most of all, I am full of grace.
I know the last time my husband and I argued, will not be the last time we argue. I know the last time he broke a promise, will not be the last time he breaks a promise. Or the last time he hurt me will be the last time he hurts me.
But I have done those things too. And I will do them again. At times, I take him for granted, and often don’t speak to him in a polite tone.
I have a limitless supply of grace for him and he does for me.
I would tell the young girl in the white dress that grace – not love, as we were sold – is the most important part of making a marriage work.
There is an indescribable peace that comes with knowing that despite your imperfections – even at your ugliest, even when you don’t deserve it – the other person is never giving up on you.
This is exactly how Jesus love us.
And giving that peace to another human being is what walking out a lifetime of real love looks like.