1/07/02
Gather Ye Flowers
Don't Buy The Garden
Fred Reed
Were a young man to ask me, "To marry perchance, or remain forever single?" I
would, given the hostile circumstances today of law and love, urge caution.
"Marriage is a commitment of several years of your life, plus child support," I
would say. "Do not make it rashly."
The question is simply, "Why marry?" As a young man full of dangerous
steroids, your answer will probably be, "Ah, because her hair is like corn silk
under an August moon; her lips are as rubies and her teeth, pearls; and her
smile would make a dead man cry." This amounts to, "I'm horny," with
elaborations. It is as it ought to be. The race continues because maidens are
glorious, and striplings both desperate and unwise.
Note, incidentally, that by the time October rolls around, corn silk is
shriveled and brown.
Why marry, indeed? In times past, marriage occasionally made sense. Life on a
farm required two people, a woman to work herself ragged in the cabin while the
man carried heavy lumpish things and shot Indians. Later, come suburbia, the man
did something tedious in an office and the woman did two hours housework and
stayed bored for six. It worked, tolerably. In the Fifties, nobody expected much
of life. It generally met their expectations.
And there was sex, though not enough of it -- the scarcity being the
propellant behind matrimony. Back then, before the miracle of feminism, women
had not yet commoditized themselves. A lad had to pop the question before he got
laid regular. Women controlled the carnal economy and, in a world that was going
to be boring anyway, that was probably a good thing. At least kids had parents.
Times change. Some advice to young fellows setting forth:
First, forget that her lips are sweet as honeydew melon (though not, of
course, green). It doesn't last. One of nature's more disagreeable tricks is
that while men are far uglier than women, they age better. Remember this. It is
useful to reflect in moments of unguided passion that, beneath the skin, we are
all wet bags of unpleasant organs.
Soon you will be a balding sofa ornament and she will look like a fireplug
with cellulite. Once the packaging deteriorates, there had better be something
to get you through the next thirty years. Usually there isn't.
Prospects have improved for the single of both genders. Sex is nowadays
always available. If you don't marry Moon Pie, which would be wise, you may get
another chance when she comes back on the market with the first wave of
divorcees. It's never now-or-never. Getting older doesn't diminish your
opportunities. As you gain experience, you will recognize the tides, the eddies,
the whirlpools of coupling -- the urgency of the biological clock, the lunacy of
menopause. Men by comparison embody a wonderful clod-like simplicity.
As you ponder snuggling forever with Moon Pie, compare the lives of your
bachelor and your married friends. The bachelors come and go as the mood strikes
them, order their apartments with squalid abandon, drive Miatas or Harleys if
they choose, and live in such pleasant dissolution as is consonant with
continued employment. The married guy lives in a vast echoing mortgage beyond
his means, drives sensible cars he doesn't like, and loses his old friends
because he isn't allowed to hang out with them.
Self-help books to the contrary, marriage does not rest on compromises, but
on concessions. You will make all of them. Perhaps it doesn't have to be this
way. But it is this way.
Moon Pie has only one reason for marriage: to get her legal hooks into you.
She doesn't think of it in these terms, yet, and she has no evil intentions. She
just wants a nice quiet home in the remote suburbs where she can live
uneventfully, raise progeny, and keep her eye on you.
If you think surveillance isn't part of the contract, try going out late with
your old buddies. Marriage is an institution founded on mistrust. If she thought
you would stick around if not compelled, she wouldn't need marriage. She wants
monogamy, at least for you and, with some frequency, for herself. She knows
viscerally that you would prefer the amorous insouciance of an oversexed alley
cat. You know it consciously. Marriage exists to control the male, until
recently a good idea. Now, however, she can support herself, and doesn't need
protection. She doesn't need you, or you, her.
She will, however, want to have children. Women do. At which point, God help
you.
Given the schools, drugs, latch-keyism consequent first to working parents
and then to divorce, and the cultural pressure on children to be slatterns and
dope-dealers, reproduction is a gamble. You may not even particularly like them,
or they, you. Nobody talks about this, but how many people do you know who
hardly talk to their grown children?
And you've just tied yourself into twenty years of raising them.
The moment Junior enters wherever it is that we are, Moon Pie will have you
screwed to the wall. She won't think of it this way, yet. She'll be delighted
with the cooing bundle of joy, his little fingers, his little toes, etc. But
divorce usually comes. The chances are two to one that she will file: Women are
more eager than men to enter marriage, and more eager to leave it -- with the
kids, the house, and the child support. It won't be amicable, not after seven
years. You will be astonished at how ruthless she will be, how well she knows
the law, and how utterly hostile to divorcing fathers the law is.
You don't understand how bad the divorce courts are. You probably don't know
what "imputed income" is. You think that "joint custody" means "joint custody."
Think again. Quite possibly you will have to support her while she moves with
your kids to Fukuoka with an Air Force colonel she met in a meat bar.
In short, marriage often means turning twenty-five years of your life into
smoking wreckage. Yes, happy marriages exist (I personally know of one) and
there are the somnolent marriages of habitual contentment or, perhaps, of quiet
resignation. But the odds aren't good.
Permit me an heretical thought. In an age when neither sex economically needs
the other, in which women do not need protection from wild bears and marauding
savages, not in the suburbs anyway, perhaps marriage doesn't make sense, at
least for men. The divorce courts remove all doubt. A young fellow might do well
to stay single, keep his DNA to himself, pick such flowers as he might find
along the way, and live his life as he likes.
from Fred On Everything
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