WARNING: READING BELOW HAS GAG INDUCING POTENTIAL
Ever hear the one about the guy who had peachy-pink peonies imported from
Then there's that story of the man who kept his wife's kindergarten picture in his wallet because they met on the first day of school and (even after 66 years together) that photo never failed to make him smile.
Oh, and let's not forget my personal favorite: This one involves a woman who thought her boyfriend was taking her for a weekend in
"You know what? I don't feel like driving," the man said casually. "Let's head for LaGuardia and catch a puddle jumper." But as they approached the airport, he announced a little change of plans. "You'll be needing this," he said, and put a passport in her hand. The very surprised woman and her boyfriend didn't go to the
All three stories sound like urban boyfriend legends. But Peony Guy does exist --he colors my hair. And yes,
When I recount the tale of my friend's Parisian proposal to Johannes (a.k.a. the father of my child, the love of my life), there is a thoughtful pause. I know he must be doing what I did -- picturing the giddy hand-in-hand walk along the Seine, the caviar on toast points at dinner, Notre Dame glowing against a blanket of stars in the night sky. I sigh. He sighs: "Hey, do you remember the time I went out and bought the stuff that turned the water in your toilet that cool ocean blue color?"
"Yeah, honey," I said. "I remember."
I am a sensible woman. I keep Bactine in my medicine chest, an umbrella in my office, $200 in my sock drawer. I'd sooner remove my own spleen with a grapefruit spoon than buy a set of sheets that require ironing. I believe in practical shoes, low-maintenance hair, and whichever frozen peas happen to be on sale. I'm not entirely sure what a bodice is, but I can tell you that I don't want mine ripped.
Still, I can't help feeling that there's something to be said for moons and Junes and Ferris wheels. I believe in the power of marabou, the brothers Gershwin, bubble baths in claw-footed tubs surrounded by a bazillion twinkly white candles. I believe in strawberries coated in dark chocolate and raspberries floating in pink
I think fireplaces should be lit, compliments should be paid, La Bohéme should be sung, legs should be shaved. I want Lassie to come home, I want Ali MacGraw to live, and I want Gene Kelly to dip Cyd Charisse straight into next Thursday. I'm not proud of this, but in the interest of full disclosure, here it is: I am deeply relieved when Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan finally kiss. My name is Lisa, and I am a romantic.
The truth is that I fell for someone who prefers a blue toilet bowl to, oh, I don't know, let's say "
J: What are you reading about?
L: Ida and Isidor Straus. They were an amazing couple! Instead of getting into the lifeboat, she decided to die with her husband on the Titanic. Of course, if Julia were grown, I'd do the same for you.
J: What do you mean?
L: What do you mean, what do I mean?
J: You're not getting in the lifeboat?
L: No, I love you too much to let you drown all by yourself.
J: But I won't be by myself -- I think they were playing poker and getting drunk.
L: So you're saying that you'd rather play poker with John Jacob Astor than cuddle with me?
J: That's not what I'd be doing, because if you're not getting your ass into that lifeboat, then I am. We are not leaving an empty seat.
L: Oh, you're getting into that boat over my dead body.
J: Where the hell is the Tylenol?
L: Try the bathroom ... you know, the place with the ocean blue toilet water.
J: You mean like the ocean you want both of us to sink to the bottom of?
Things kind of spiraled downward from there, and I still break into a cold sweat every time Celine Dion starts wailing about how her heart will go on.
So Johannes and I won't be taking a cruise together anytime soon. And no, those weren't his arms around me as I perched on a dune watching the sun come up over the
But he did teach me how to fly a kite last summer, and we have been known to share steamed dumplings in a little East Village dive he discovered a few years back, and sometimes early in the morning I overhear him playing "tea party" with our daughter, and sometimes late at night I overhear him playing "Blackbird" with his guitar. He has genuine integrity, he has serious style, and he's pulled me through more than one bout of the stomach flu. Anybody can sprinkle rose petals across a big brass bed, but only a real man will hold your hair while you're throwing up.
Now, there are those who will say that references to intense nausea don't belong in a column about romance, but I'm thinking maybe it's time we broaden our definition of what constitutes romance. Ask yourself this: When the man you love realizes that half the screws are missing from the Ikea bookcase he's attempting to assemble for you, does he:
(a) Complain bitterly about herring and Volvos -- vowing to forsake all things Swedish for the rest of his natural days?
(b) Leave the shelving in a heap on the living room floor and question your need to read in the first place?
(c) Complete construction using a combination of rubber bands and Krazy Glue while suggesting you fill the thing with pamphlets rather than actual books?
If you answered (c), then, my friend, life is good -- because it means somebody out there loves you enough to try to get your bookcase together. That creative effort is the kind of everyday gesture on which great romances are built. I wouldn't be surprised to hear that while at the drugstore picking up the amulet of poison, Romeo also picked up a copy of "People" for Juliet. I like to imagine Abelard taping "Grey's Anatomy" for Heloise. I bet a day didn't go by that Mel Brooks wasn't funny for Anne Bancroft.
Don't get me wrong, I'll always want the chubby little cupids and coconut bonbons, but lately I find myself drawn to something richer, deeper, sweeter. Provided nobody decides to do a remake of "Titanic," with Johannes each day is Valentine's Day.
By Lisa Kogan from "O, The Oprah Magazine," February 2007
That’s Himanshu for me, like Johannes. He’s so solid and so committed to me. He’ll make me whatever I want to eat and he’ll dutifully drive me to the train every morning and make sure to check my tire pressure and check my calcium and vitamin intake on a daily basis.
He’ll do my laundry, cook, do the dishes and do anything to make my life easy. He won’t really ever consider buying me flowers, I think he did once when we were dating. He admitted it was because a guy was selling them at the red light.
He would never be the one whisking me to Paris like I whisked him and he’d rather sit on the couch drink beer and watch TV while cuddling with me than stroll thru a vineyard drinking wine at sunset which is something I'd want.
I'm the eternal romantic and he's the eternal pragmatist but you know what he treats me like I’m a goddess every single day, like I am the only thing that matters. He fusses over me like a new mother and he'll rub my feet after a long day even though the pain wasn't from the long day but the 4 inch heels.
A year ago I would have never imagined to be with someone so wonderful, some days I really believe he hides his wings. He is every bit a good man for all the rottenness in me. That I even deserve him amazes me everyday. I'm crazy and he's always calm.
I have single girlfriends who like me have gone a long time without love and who like me have looked for it and often times their idea of love is a little warped like mine was. I am surprised at my own acceptance of this relationship and how much I've grown as a result of it. Losing my mother and finally finding the love she always told me about has a lot to do with it.
I've really grown up and I don't have any unrealistic romantic notions about love. It's funny I planned this amazing surprise Paris/London trip for Valentine's day for him and he was so excited and we had a wonderful time. But you know what it was so lame in the grand scheme of things.
I'm so deeply in love with him and he with me that it didn't matter that we were strolling the Seine or walking thru the Louvre of peering over the Eiffel Tower or that we were on a boat on the Thames. What mattered was that we were together. I have never ever felt so incredibly complete and content in my entire life before.
