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Caroline Kenner's avatar

I love you Stacey! this is SO RICH. I laughed so many times! "You don’t invite women to Italy to the tune of several thousand dollars per person and then put the kibosh on wine." just collapsed me. Thank you for this wonderful story.

Right now, my love story is about taking care of my husband when he's unwell. And the good part: bad health is not a test of our love. We are so unwell we are selling our software companies (to my great relief) and retiring for real.

But when we got together, it was very tempestuous. I was leaving a bad marriage, Jason had been alone for a while...... and we were just coming off a huge community drama in which a longstanding community group was undergoing a painful schism. Jason *really* did not like the way I handled the schism, and truthfully, he did not like me.

But it turned out that polar opposites---when they can work it out between them---really do make a very strong couple. The Tarot card of our union is the Ace of Swords: the two sharp edges cut differently but they are both sharp as shit. And the card that came up for us on our wedding day almost eleven years ago: The Fool, card zero. The start of a Grand Adventure.

Love and blessings, dear one. I'll share your wonderful story with my closest 3K friends on FB and hope someone subscribes..... like I am about to do.

You'll be happy to read, I hope, that I am in final edits with the Tarot deck guide I finished writing a couple of months ago. I have already started writing a second book, and reached out to a dear friend who works for one of the Witch publishing houses over the weekend.

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Jack Cluth's avatar

I've been through two marriages. Erin is my third (and, as she's wont to declare, final) marriage. I've never been very good at honoring what I want and need. It's taken me years of counseling to get to know myself well enough to recognize that if I don't satisfy my needs, not only will I be miserable, but anyone in close proximity will suffer as well. Thankfully, I've found someone confident enough in herself and her own worth that she's decided to hang on for the ride.

What I've learned through my travels, the heartbreak, and the wreckage I've left behind is that happiness isn't something that leaps into your arms. More often than not, it will kick you in the nuts and leave you bleeding in the street before you recognize it for what it is. It can be WAY too easy to look past, over, and around it...because the tendency is to believe that happiness isn't something we deserve. At least that's the way it's been for me- I don't deserve good things because I'm not a good person. Turns out I'm the only one who felt that way about myself.

It's hard to be open and vulnerable. It can be terrifying to believe in yourself enough to trust another person with your heart...especially after a parade of callous snots have stomped that sucker flat a few times. I love your story because you found a way to do that...AND you had people in your life who loved you enough to sponsor your journey into the unknown.

None of us get out of this alive, and none of us can do it alone. We're all making this up as we go; some of us are just better at recognizing and grasping our great good fortune than others.

Never stop doing what makes you happy and makes you unique...though I'd recommend stopping short of digging out a kidney and putting it in an ice chest. That's never going to end well....

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