A Surprise Guest Appearance Of Purest Love

(NOTE: Based on time elapsed since the posting of this entry, the BS-o-meter calculates this is 13.266% likely to be something that Ferrett now regrets.)

“I didn’t sleep well last night,” Eric said.  “I never sleep well when my wife’s not in the room with me.”
“Tell me about it,” I said. “I haven’t slept next to Gini in two weeks.”
Gini is having some fairly serious back issues, and as a result the big floofy bed we bought is hurting her.  She’s sleeping in the guest room with the firmer bed, which is a) much smaller, and b) in a room flooded with light when the sun rises, which doesn’t bother her but does wake me the heck up.
So we’ve been sleeping apart.  And that worries us.  We’ve got our own personal rule that “When couples start sleeping in separate beds, they’re in trouble” – which, yes, I’ll probably hear from a hundred people that they sleep in separate beds and they’ve been married for seventy-billion years, but we know of at least three couples where moving into separate beds led to moving into separate houses and then into separate relationship statuses.
And for us, that sort of late-night reconnection is a strength of ours.  We don’t really cuddle all that much – the floofy bed is a fucking quicksand pit – but hearing her next to me, her scent filling the room, being able to reach out and feel her, is just a pillar of reassurance for me.  I sleep sketchily without my sweetie, twisting and turning, but her back is in dire straits and until we get her chronic pain managed (which we hope we can and soon), we need to be in separate locations.
Without Gini, I go to bed later, because I need to be exhausted before I can drop off.  My friends have noted my later-night texts.  I play Civilization 5 until I’m practically nodding off, and even then sometimes I’ll just pop awake and be unable to get back to sleep because this empty bed is lonely.
It’s pathetic.  It’s loving.  There’s not a contradiction here; we need each other, and are so adoring of each other that we work at home and feel isolated if Gini has to go work in a separate room.
And so, last night, I finished up putting the finishing touches on my early-civ American empire, having just built a University in every township, and slogged to bed wearily.
And there was a Gini.
“I’m going to try to sleep here,” she said.  “I need this.”
And she did.
And I dreamed that David Bowie had visited my house, and was hanging around singing songs for me, and that things were going well and when I woke she was there and I had work to do but by God my sweet love was next to me and the day was going to be better.
Nearly fifteen years, and still that in love.

2 Comments

  1. ellixis
    May 21, 2014

    I know those feels. When Husband-san has had to be deployed, I have, notably, gotten into truly unhealthy sleeping patterns because the bed just feels too empty when the house is empty. When he’s on night shift, we don’t get to sleep together either, but knowing he has slept in our bed recently is comforting and lets me sleep.

  2. ambertallula
    May 21, 2014

    My husband has been away for a few nights, and god the depression takes advantage of the aloneness and lack of sleep. It is so easy to take for granted how much good our lover’s very presence does us. A lot of people write about how true love means not being dependant on each other, but I know I have true love and I know I’m hopelessly dependant on him. Everyone’s different 🙂

Leave a Reply to ellixisCancel reply