When I was 26 a very sweet, funny man asked me to marry him. I said yes and we went out and bought an engagement ring. A year later, I married him and slid a wedding ring behind my engagement stone.
Next April, we celebrate 18 years of marriage. And, yes, we’ve travelled the traditional path of children, arguments over pillow thickness and a mortgage that has so many zeros I should start investing in zeros.
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I’ve never really thought much about the significance of those rings. I’ve spent more time looking for my iPhone charger than I have thinking about those delicate pieces of platinum. If I was being honest, if I did contemplate my rings my thought would more likely to be punctuated with words like ‘responsibility’, ‘predictability’, ‘to-do lists’ and ‘worry’, rather than ‘love’, ‘commitment’ and ‘pride’.
Because in my mind, people without rings like mine travel toexotic locations at a moment’s notice because they didn’t have to get six girls to netball camp, drop the dog off at the clippers and wait for the dishwasher repairman. People without rings like mine drive tiny, cute, two-door cars and go to cool outdoor parties that start in the afternoon and don;t even consider wet weather option. People without rings like mine haven’t followed a traditional path and following my logic, they are flying untethered and free.
Were the rings, and the length of my marriage, a sign I was boring and safe and would never ever be able to put into action one of those inspirational quotes I read every day on Instagram? I mean, there once was a time when I'd eat chicken from takeaway shops and not worry for the next six hours about food poisoning.
Then, one day, my rings went.