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Would you like some ROLL with that FROSTING? |
The same goes for ketchup. I mean, if whatever you are eating needs KETCHUP smothered all over it in order to TASTE good, you aren't eating a good piece of (fill in the blank). Like a hamburger, french fries, eggs, the list goes on.
Things like frosting and ketchup (which I really could live without and never miss for even one day) are SUPPOSED to be the "icing on the cake" that ENHANCES the goodness of what is already there; not the frosting on the cinnamon rolls that HIDES what the rolls themselves are lacking.
And tonight, I kind of think that this principle applies to a LOT of things. I'm thinking about some legislation right now that probably shouldn't have passed and was covered by WAY TOO MUCH frosting; but I might just as soon be thinking about employment, relationships, activities, education, and any other number of things.
If it's lacking in substance . . . no amount of frosting is going to change that.
You can't fix a broken marriage by spending a lot of money on expensive gifts, trips, toys, etc. It's just empty calories going into a malnourished situation.
I was also thinking about this in terms of dating. Mostly post-marriage. (Cuz who hasn't heard enough about dating PRE-marriage . . . or more than enough sometimes? ;-D) Maybe even particularly for people who have been married for 10 or 15 or 30 or 50 years. (Cuz again, we all get the advice to date as newlyweds and new parents; but what happens to dating for empty- or almost-empty-nesters?)
If you want to have a happy and successful marriage, one that will more than stand the test of time (but actually EXCEL in it) and all eternity, you can't fill it with a bunch of frosting. It's going to get old. It's going to leave you empty and craving and longing for something more. It's going to leave you disappointed and wishing you hadn't even taken that first bite that left you just HAVING to eat more and more, TRYING to get some sort of satisfaction out of it, but ultimately feeling DISAPPOINTED, discouraged, EMPTY.
Some advice I've been thinking about (mostly that I received or heard others receive at SOME point in my life) to avoid the frosting trap and instead have an amazing cake with JUST the right amount of ENHANCING icing:
1) NEVER stop dating! Yes, you -- you who are in your 50s and your kids are gone and you spend a lot of time on the road being grandma or throwing yourself into work and hobbies, rarely coming together with your spouse for more than a movie or dinner in a restaurant. Yes, YOU -- you who have been married for five years and gotten so stuck in the daily grind and living on a budget that you don't even think about dating each other any more. NEVER NEVER NEVER stop dating! When Dave and I got married, our dear friend and Stake President counseled us to ALWAYS remember why we fell in love to begin with, what we did during that magical time, and to make sure we never lost it!!! That is AMAZING advice (and talking about it/reminiscing sounds like a GREAT date-night idea to me!!!).
2) Think outside of the box. I mean, how many times can you go out to dinner or see a movie (especially TODAY'S amazing media selection) without those days soon turning into LOTS AND LOTS of frosting? Or maybe your movie night is a game night . . . and you play games all the time, so much so that it is normal, not special or a stretch in any way. Remember when you first started dating and you used to get really creative about asking someone out on a date and/or responding when someone asked YOU on a date (maybe it's just an Idaho/Utah thing)? Remember how much fun it was to plan and prepare every step of the way, all the time anticipating how much THE OTHER PERSON was going to enjoy it and get a KICK out of it? Not to mention the fact that YOU ALREADY WERE!!! Reading a book together or having a candlelight picnic in your living room or playing the Wii or doing a workout video together can all be REALLY fun and REALLY fulfilling activities IN THEIR TURN. You just have to make sure they aren't the EVERY DAY things that you just CALL DATE NIGHT because they are typically labeled as "date ideas."
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Dave's FAMOUS Chocolate Cake (a Curry Family SECRET Recipe) |
4) Just DO it! Nike has it right! In the end, you can talk about it, plan for it, prepare for it, complain about it, listen to talks on tape about it, slander your husband to your girlfriends for not doing it, etc. But what it all comes down to is that you have to just DO it. Just DATE!!! Just make time!!! Just make it happen! Don't get caught up in the preparations and having to find a babysitter or plan something amazingly memorable and earth-shattering. Sometimes the simplest moments of silliness and laughter leave the most PROFOUND effects. No excuses! You aren't too old! It's not for your children and grandchildren. You're not too poor. You're not too distanced from each other. You're not too busy. You just need to MAKE IT HAPPEN!!! Today! This week!
5) Remember it's about YOU! Date nights aren't a time to go over the family budget or talk about the problems Jimmy is having in school or Jaime is having with her girlfriends or you are having with work or the world-at-large is having with the world-at-large. Date nights aren't a time to schedule your week's activities or pay bills or fold laundry. That's all another topic for another time. (Like try a weekly companionship inventory or family council.) Date nights ARE for you and your spouse to reconnect, rebuild, re-romance and "woo," refocus on and celbrate each other, on being a couple, on being one, on being each others sweethearts, on having fun, on walking down the SAME road in the SAME direction at the SAME speed . . . and all while holding hands, of course! Your relationship is strictly yours. You aren't your parents (however good or bad their relationship may have been). You aren't that couple whose relationship you really admire or that one whose relationship you count your blessings every day that you are not stuck in! But depending on what you do together TODAY, you will probably be ONE of those tomorrow. :-) So decide what you want to be, what kind of a cake you want, what kind of frosting, what decorations, etc. and BECOME what you want! But just focus on the cake -- not the entire meal, appetizers to entree to dessert.
I have some ideas, if you're interested (not because I'm good at this but because I decided TODAY, after reading this post and this post, that I AM GOING TO BE . . . so my mind is RACING around this topic right now).
That's all I've got . . . so far, anyway . . . though I reserve the right to edit/update as I go along and learn and do and become in MY reality with MY husband! ;-D
3 comments:
I was really interested by the title of your post... and I agree with most everything you said... I only disagree with the "non important" parts of your post.
In my ever so humble opinion the more frosting the better. I don't eat cake, cinnamon rolls, whatever for the cake, but for the frosting. Heck just give me a tub of frosting and i'll be happy.
And Ketchup.... again ketchup only makes things better.
Sean says that as long as I have a stock pile of Ketchup, frosting, and Ranch i'll be set for the Second Coming. (He thinks he's pretty funny).
Anyway... just thought i'd put in my opinion =)
Do you have enough books to read?
You need to read "A Thomas Jefferson Education" by Oliver Van DeMille! It's a method that can be used on any child, no matter the schooling (public, private, home, etc) chosen. It's a lot of the substance with A LOT LESS of the frosting, and helps teach a child to LOVE learning. Honestly, I think you'd devour this book about as happily as I did if not more so.
Funny thing, I've been thinking of education in terms of food (junk vs. whole wheat, etc) ever since reading about TJeD, even though he never makes the analogy. You and I must think on the same levels or something.
That was really great! Thank you for all of the great idea/point in dating. This is an area that I could use improvement on!
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