By Courtney Pierce
Romantic gestures change over time. It’s only through living long enough that I appreciate the layers of their importance to our health and development. But make no mistake, romance is alive and well at every stage of our growth.
When I was in high school in the early seventies, a time of
first boyfriends, self-conscious gestures bloomed on wobbly training wheels. Everything
felt awkward and new: a heart race at a glance in class, a passed note with a crudely
drawn heart, and fingers laced in mine to walk the halls at the ring of the
bell. It’s a wonder that I learned anything at all from my teachers. Romance
was all about me and what I felt within myself. What should I do? What should I say?
Having grown up with only sisters, I had to learn about how
man-boys functioned.
First loves came with rules: boyfriends had to pick me up
and deliver me back home at a designated time. He had to pay for expenses of
the entire date. Per my parents, dressing had to fall below a threshold of
suggestiveness, including a ban on dangling earrings.
When I turned twenty in 1979, the world changed. I met a man at a music club in San Francisco. I was a classical music student at San Jose State, so dancing at rock concerts was like my “Rumspringa.” I lived in two worlds of music. I taught him, and he taught me. We fell in love and lust and were married six months later. A great time was had in the 1980s. I didn’t have a lot of experience in what it took to invest in a long-term relationship, not many people do at that age, but we thought we did. He loved me and I loved him, and that was all that mattered.
My thirties and forties held a different kind of romance with my husband. We
both fell in love with having careers, moving up the corporate ladder, and
saving money. We established a solid
foundation of owning homes, taking care of pets, and acquiring “stuff.” Up, up, up. It became a false love drug. We
moved to three different states to follow the American Dream. When my career
eclipsed his, a bruised ego took us on opposing tracks. That was a romance
killer.
In my fifties, life took an unexpected hooked turn. My parents and younger sister were in dire straights with illness. My husband wanted me to give up my career, which I did. My family needed me, and I thought I’d earned some time off to write. I wrote six books over five years while I took care of my family. There was little romance in that period of time, but I certainly learned a lot about myself and my husband. We divorced after 37 years. I never would have guessed that would happen, since I believed in “death due us part.” In the romance department, I starved for validation that I’d done the right thing for my family. What the heck do I do to start over? My marriage was in my DNA footprint.
The world had drastically changed since I’d first been a bride in
1979. As a post-menopausal woman who was starting from scratch with a load of baggage, I lived a
solitary life for three months. I’d gone back to my career in entertainment,
purely to pay the bills, keep up the house, and spoil my cat. Romance became
fantasies of how I wanted to spend the rest of my life. I had to re-learn
how to be open and to accept new people in my life. Long-time friends didn’t
know me without my ex-husband. I had no idea how to not be identified as a couple,
to start from scratch with so much history, or how to maneuver through the
health concerns that I’d never had to deal with.
Then, by chance, I met a man who had gone through so much more than me. We were meant to be together, to help each other, to move into the next stage of life together. We both craved safety, companionship, and commitment. It was a meeting by divine provenance. Our first date sealed the deal.
We brought each other back to life with romance. We’d race to my house during the day for clandestine meet-ups and go back to work. On weekends we backpacked and made life plans under a view of a million stars. He took me to new heights. At night we wrap ourselves around each
other while he stroked my fingers slow and meaningful, as if to verify I was really
there beside him.
Romance in our sixties is about setting aside selfishness. When I lost it for a period of time, I appreciate anew when it came back into my life. It’s important to think about my partner and to anticipate what we each want and need. He'll look in my eyes and tell me that I look especially beautiful today. Out of
nowhere he’ll say, “I’m so lucky to have you as my wife. My wife. I like the
sound of that.” Romance pours into me when he shares it openly with me.
Then I look at his handsome face, wrap my arms around him, and give him a kiss like it’s the last one I’ll ever have.
Special note: It is poignant that this will be my last post with Romancing the Genres. I will be focusing on my new book, BIG SKY TALK. It's long overdue. I've enjoyed writing my posts over the years, and I send much love to the Genre-istas.
Courtney Pierce is a fiction writer living in Kalispell, Montana with her husband and stepdaughter. She writes for the baby boomer audience. She spent 28 years as an executive in the entertainment industry and used her time in a theater seat to create stories that are filled with heart, humor, and mystery. She studied craft and storytelling at the Attic Institute and has completed the Hawthorne Fellows Program for writing and publishing. Active in the writing community, Courtney is a board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association and on the Advisory Council of the Independent Publishing Resource Center. She is a member of Willamette Writers, Pacific Northwest Writers Association, and Authors of the Flathead. The Executrix received the Library Journal Self-E recommendation seal.
Print and E-books are
available through most major online retailers, including Amazon.com.
Check out all of Courtney's books:
courtney-pierce.com and windtreepress.com
New York Times best-selling author Karen Karbo says,
"Courtney Pierce spins a madcap tale of family grudges, sisterly love,
unexpected romance, mysterious mobsters and dog love. Reading Indigo
Lake is like drinking champagne with a chaser of Mountain Dew. Pure
Delight."
Coming in 2022!
When Aubrey Cenderon
moves to Montana after the death of her father, the peace and quiet of Big Sky
Country becomes complicated with a knock on the door from the sheriff. An
injured grizzly bear is on the loose and it must be eliminated before it kills
again. The sheriff's insistence that she buy a gun for protection will present
Aubrey with some serious soul-searching, because the grizzly-on-the-run is
hunting her too . . . for a different reason.
4 comments:
What a lovely post! Throughly enjoyed it. Thank you.
So glad your got your "second chance", Courtney. He seems to be a perfect match for you.
A beautiful post. So sorry it is your last with us. But enjoy moving forward into other adventures. And... come back and visit every now and then. We'll miss you!
Loved your descriptions of romance at different life stages! I'm glad it didn't take you long to find true love after your divorce.
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