In a couple of days, on June 24, 2026, it will be the fiftieth anniversary of my first date with my husband, and I can't resist marking the occasion with a celebratory post. If you'd told us that evening that we were launching a fifty-year relationship, we'd have laughed our heads off.
We met at the Free Association, an anarchist free school on West 20th Street off Fifth Avenue long before that block's gentrification. After a few months of snappy banter and a couple of heated political disputes, he invited me out for a beer at Paula's, a lesbian bar on West 11th Street off Greenwich Avenue in the Village. Both places are long gone, but Paula's was resurrected briefly in the alternative New York of Lawrence Block's The Burglar Who Met Fredric Brown (2022). As his character Bernie Rhodenbarr says, “There were guys who came there on a regular basis, and not to hit on lesbians. I guess they liked the atmosphere." We were so skeptical about the evening going well that we each invited a friend along.
We had little in common beyond our zest for political dialectic—the left’s fancy word for arguing at that time. And we both were readers. My favorite book was Ursula LeGuin’s The Dispossessed. I was also reading P.D. James, Ellis Peters, and Patricia Moyes. He was reading Kropotkin’s The Conquest of Bread, Barbara Tuchman’s A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century, and Heinlein’s The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress. By two years later, much had changed. In a poem titled “Insomnia,”* I wrote nostalgically about
. . . love among the leaflets and petitions
we had no place else to go
all we had then is gone
the strangeness, the friendships, the poverty
we have nothing left of that
except each other
Change is a constant in a fifty-year relationship. At the beginning, nobody thought we’d stay together, including us. Today, we’re still discovering unexpected ways in which we’re so different we’d be incompatible if we hadn’t also spent fifty years on working out how to get along. When we married, we talked about growing old together but didn't quite believe it would happen or could have imagined what it would be like. He’s retired and I’m in that liminal space between setting myself a rigorous standard of productivity and doing as much or as little as I like, happy as a bee knee deep in pollen.
He’s currently reading The Triangle of Power by Alexander Stubb, current president and former prime minister of Finland. I read a book a day or sometimes two in three days. Right now I’m particularly enjoying Sherry Thomas’s Lady Sherlock series, a riff on the Holmes canon that may be my favorite since Laurie King created Mary Russell. On our various electronic devices, I stream videos, mostly French and Korean series, also British and other English-language cop shows, rarely American. He hangs out online with global gaming friends he’s made over the years, listens to short story podcasts, and watches videos on art restoration, cooking, archaeology, and what’s going on in the world. I can’t get him to watch a movie with me, even on the rare occasion when it’s one I think we’d both enjoy. As I said, we’re different.
A lot of people ask us how we make it work. Certain aspects anyone can try at home (that’s the work). For the rest, you have to be lucky. You have to love each other (that’s the luck). It takes a lot of work, especially if you’re different: talking to each other; not always being right; letting go of expectations, including that you’ll agree on everything and do everything together. You can’t expect perfection. It doesn’t exist. You find that your beliefs and ways of doing things are not the absolutes you thought they were. What a liberating surprise, once you get used to the idea.
*included in my first poetry collection, I Am the Daughter, and in a volume of Best Poems of 1980 (Monitor)
22 June 2026
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Congratulations! We just had our 64th wedding anniversary and I can certainly agree with your advice for a long and happy marriage.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Janice, and congrats to you too. Sixty-four years is impressive!
DeleteCongratulations! My own fifty-two year marriage may have had some rough spots, but I truly do not remember them. I realize that no one is perfect but I will defend to the death that my wife was.
ReplyDeleteWe remember plenty of rough spots, but we can laugh about them.
DeleteHappy anniversary! I love the story of how you two have made it work so well, although you're very different from each other. Mazel tov!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Elizabeth.
ReplyDeleteAw...such a nice story, Liz! I can almost see the 'scene' as you describe it, in 1976! I met my husband Mike in 1974, at university. We married four years ago! He had kept track of me, and when my beloved first husband died...well, after a decent interval, we found hope in each other, during the pandemic. I love your story.
ReplyDeleteAnd I love yours, Mel. That is so sweet!
ReplyDeleteHappy anniversary, you crazy kids. Barb and I are looking at 41 years married next month. When we met in a community theater production, we were both fresh out of bad relationships and NOT NOT NOT looking to start anything new right away. She's a much better writer than I am, but a better actor, too, so if she tells me a story is good, I believe her.
ReplyDeleteOf course there are rough patches. If marriage were easy, anyone could do it.
It must be fascinating having a partner in the same creative fields. In another life, maybe...
DeleteI love it! Often I've wondered what Mr Z looks like and now I have my answer. Looking at the photos, it all makes sense. Did your parents warn you the relationship couldn't possibly last?
ReplyDeleteBy the way, I promised myself if I ever bought a sailboat, I'd name it The Ship Who Sang. Unfortunately, that ship has sailed.
Everybody warned us it couldn't last, except for some of the anarchists, who didn't believe in monogamous relationships in the first place. And NOT Mr. Z. That's another story.
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ReplyDeleteDid you ever visit a Village steakhouse called The Ninth Circle? The brownstone's upper level housed the bar and the subterranean restaurant could be found under the steps. Diners made their reservations at the bar for the eatery below.
ReplyDeleteI'd enjoyed meals there a few times and one evening I took a visiting date there. We climbed to the bar and snagged a couple of stools, awaiting the bartender's attention, where he informed us the restaurant had closed. Odd, I'd noticed a lot of activity, but I was otherwise oblivious.
Once we were out out on the street and striding away, girlfriend said, "Did you notice not one woman was present, not upstairs or down?" And that's how I discovered a favorite steakhouse had become a gay bar.
(Years later, Max's Kansas City followed by Max's Terre Haute became the Village steakhouse of choice, a favorite hangout of Warhol.)