gretzky-awards

Don’t Treat Your Wife Like Wayne Gretzky

Is it Yours, Mine or Ours?

I’ve noticed that since Janet arrived here about eleven months ago we have had many discussions that somehow end up in one place – ownership.

As I mentioned in a previous blog, I just leased a new car. Since I always lease every three years instead of buy, at my advanced age I have been through the process many times. In fact I made a big deal to Janet about how this was going to be my last lease, since by the time the lease is up, I will in all likelihood be retired. Actually in all likelihood, I will be soaking up the sun and drinking San Mig Lights on the beach, but that’s another story.

I went through the whole car process, which as anyone who has dealt with new car dealerships knows can be a weird combination of exciting, exasperating, nonsensical – and of course – expensive. Naturally the car is in my name: I’m the one with 30+ years of credit, a salaried job, and a driver’s license. A week or so after I got it we were driving somewhere and she made it clear that, “it’s your car, not mine.”

I purchased the home we live in seven years before Janet ever arrived, I pay the mortgage – so it’s mine, I suppose. She likes the house, takes good care of it, maintains it more than I do. But in the end, it’s in my name, so she says, “it’s your home.”

The same can be said of the stuff, both necessary and frivolous, that is inside the home. I bought it all; in a few cases before Janet was born; so it’s mine.

There’s even the iPad that Janet now uses almost exclusively, but she knows that, “it’s still your iPad.”

The kids are mine of course, unless or until we have one together. It’s my city, my country and my life that she has entered.

Now, I have tried to do my best to use words like, “our home,” or “our dog,” or at least “the dog” – more likely “the damn dog.” I try to purge the words “my” or “mine” out of my vocabulary; but I am sure I slip up. I want Janet to view this as “our” life, but I am sure that sometimes it’s tough for her to do.

Hence, it is important to use viagra cost in canada your steroidal drug as and when recommended. Quite a large number of males have noticed big change into brand viagra uk their health and relationship as well. One of saddest things about sales cialis people in abusive relationships is the way they use their counseling losses and therapy misses to lock themselves in their despair, until the lid pops and they end up in a domestic abuse divorce. Well, order levitra the ease and reliable service are usually the reasons why a large number of people are going online to shop for the things they need. Of course, this isn’t because Janet is from the Philippines. Some of it is about age and time on the planet; I’ve just had many more years to accumulate stuff than she has. It’s also about being a spoiled Westerner; most of us just have more cash to accumulate crap than our Filipina partners do.

Speaking of cash, that’s probably the biggest divider between mine, yours and ours. I have a somewhat high paying job, therefore in her mind, “it’s your money.” This part of the issue is starting to fade, as Janet gets a weekly paycheck, and therefore has her own money. Of course she also knows the disparity between what I earn and what she earns is large and she cannot understand it. Truth be told I think of the backbreaking, crappy, minimum wage labor jobs I had in my teens and twenties and wonder why they paid nothing and my current, cushier job pays much more. I suppose that’s a cultural and economics debate that I am unwilling to make. I’m just happy to take advantage of it.

I know that many Western couples, especially blended families, who get re-married in middle-age, sometimes go to extreme limits to make sure that everything is jointly “theirs.” They sell the house(s) and buy a new one together. Get rid of the cars and much of the accumulated crap of a lifetime, and perform a do-over. Maybe they have another kid or two, just to blend up the family a bit more. It’s not my job to judge anyone – but such people are completely mental. Buying or selling a house is one of the most stressful things in life and to do both just so one party can feel comfortable, seems to me to be extreme.

Now, I know that as the years go by, some (maybe most) of these issues between us will fade. At some point Janet and I may get a new home to live in, and she will truly think of it as “ours.” She will get a driver’s license and we will share a car! She will take her paycheck and purchase things that she will genuinely view as hers or ours; although since most of her current purchases are at either “Forever 21” or “H&M” I won’t be claiming joint ownership anytime soon.

I have no grand conclusions here. I suspect that for most couples where there is an age and income disparity or just a plain junk disparity, ownership debates are inevitable.

For some reason I am reminded of a story about Wayne Gretzky. The story may or may not be true but I heard it told by comedian, Denis Leary, years back. Now for those who don’t know anything about hockey, Gretzky was the greatest hockey player who ever lived; there’s not even credible debate about that. He holds every record worth having. He won the Stanley Cup 4 times and was league MVP a boatload of times.

Well the story goes that the comedian was invited to “The Great One’s” home. Gretzky is married to an actress; has been for many years. The comedian was given the nickel tour of the lavish and tasteful home. He could see nothing from Gretzky’s career housed there. Finally he was handed a beer and brought into the garage. Now to quote Denis, “I’ve been to Wayne Gretzky’s house. He’s got five MVP trophies, you know where they are? They’re in the fucking garage!” So there, in the garage, were the five MVP trophies and all the accumulated memorabilia of one of the greatest athletes to ever live!

Now the easiest thing (and accurate too) would be to say that some American women are just a tad controlling. I could rant about feminism too I suppose, though I’m not really anti-feminist. But in this case I will just say, when it comes to your Filipina wife:

Don’t treat your wife like Mrs. Gretzky treats Wayne.

5 thoughts on “Don’t Treat Your Wife Like Wayne Gretzky”

  1. Hey Dave,
    The issue you’re struggling with isn’t just about the cultural or age gap, though both can certainly exacerbate it. Mainly, as you suggest, it is the kind of thing most new couples deal with in the early stages of their marriage. And you’re rignt: time will mitigate the struggle, though not everyone’s solution is the same. In the meantime, you don’t have to do anything as drastic as selling your house. You can begin with easier things like getting her that license, encouraging her to acquire skills that will increase her and building her credit by, among other things, adding her name to your bank accounts and credit cards. THEN you sell your house…

  2. Great writing as usual. Dave.
    These things will come later, and there will be more ‘ours’. Although probably set in your ways, you are not too old of a dog to teach new tricks to.

    As for this guy Gretzky; TBH I never heard of him, but I did Google The Stanley Cup and it states that it is a Trophy for a team. Saying he won it, instead of the team he was a player with, won it, is a case similar to ‘mine’ and ‘ours’.

    As for the trophies in the photo, not many wives would really want them in their living room.

    Good luck to you (plural), and thank you for article.

    Pascal

    1. Thanks Pascal. Nice to see you here. I don’t know about teaching this old dog new tricks, but you are right, as time goes on things will more and more be “ours.”

      Gretzky is Canadian, not Irish, so you’re not expected to know him 🙂 And you’re right, the Stanley Cup is for the NHL championship and therefore a team accomplishment. But in America, at least, individual greatness is measured by team championships: Michael Jordan’s 6 NBA titles, Magic Johnson’s 5, and Gretzky’s 4 Stanley Cups. Of course he doesn’t possess the Cup but all those individual trophies. Since I have no trophies I can’t speak to what a guy ought to do with them. If I had ever gotten one of my screeplays produced, and if it ever won an Oscar – well at least the Oscar fits on the average mantle.

      But the Gretzky story reminds me of my ex-wife. When I excitedly purchased my first big screen TV, she took one look at it (she wouldn’t go to the store to check it out) and refused to have it in the living room. It ended up housed in our dank, dark unfinished basement, where I spent many happy times watching DVDs and contemplating my future. Post marriage, when I moved into my current home; well let’s just say the big screen, which has been replaced by a bigger screen, was placed front and center in the living room, where Janet and I have watched hundreds of movies over the past year.

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