thefourthvine: Two people fucking, rearview: sex is the universal fandom. (Default)
Keep Hoping Machine Running ([personal profile] thefourthvine) wrote2010-06-19 09:48 pm
Entry tags:

Wife.

Best Beloved and I have been together for 18 years. At first, I said I wouldn't say I was a wife, or that I had a wife, until I could have a legal marriage. And then I had a legal marriage (obtained during the brief period when marriage was possible for us in California), and I still hesitated to say "wife," largely because if I made a list of my 2,000 favorite words, neither husband nor wife would be on it. I just don't like them. But, you know, it's important for me to say it, all the same. We're married, and there are a lot of Californians who can't get married, and there are other Californians who'd like to take our marriage away from us. It matters that people hear me talk about my wife; it helps them understand that my marriage is just the same as anyone else's. It helps them define my marriage as normal, not society-destroying or child-harming or boils-inducing or whatever the latest claim is.

I also get a certain amount of evil pleasure out of the word. (This is in addition to the regular, ordinary, non-evil pleasure, of course.) In my neighborhood, we are beset by many types of door-to-door people - magazine subscription sellers (my absolute least favorite), "fundraisers" who never seem to have the card they are legally obligated to carry to raise funds door-to-door in my county, appointment schedulers, sellers of various products and services of dubious usefulness.

And these people are very, very good at dragging out a conversation I don’t want to have; basically, I would have to slam the door in their faces in order to get away from the pitch. So I take joy in the following conversation, which always happens:

Door-to-Door Guy [yes, they are always men]: So, you and your husband -
Me: Wife.
Door-to-Door Guy: *blink blink*
Me, in a helpful, explaining tone: I don't have a husband, I have a wife.
Door-to-Door Guy: *assumes the expression of a dog who has just run at top speed into a sliding glass door he didn't know was there*

[There is a pause of variable length as Door-to-Door Guy scrabbles back onto familiar ground. Familiar ground is, of course, agree with the potential customer.]

Door-to-Door Guy, blinking off his tharn: That's cool!

[Door-to-Door Guy inevitably embarks on a lengthy speech about his sincere belief in equal rights, sometimes only slightly undermined by such remarks as, "Can you do that? I mean, like, legally?" or "But you're not really married, right?" My favorite was probably, "But have you tried it with a guy?"]

I actually award points to the Guys based on how fast they recover and how believable their sudden declaration of Equal Rights for All is. I expect a speedy recovery and decent acting skills in exchange for my wasted time, I tell you what.

But my point is, wife is my word. I choose to use it. I make other people use it, and sometimes I deliberately make them uncomfortable with it.

Other people avoid it. They aren't sure what to say, so they come up with a weasel word ("friend" is my least favorite of those; it never fails to make me want to say, "Actually, I prefer 'fucktoy'"), or they avoid the whole thing, or they pretend I have some other relationship that makes them more comfortable than the one I actually have. I am used to hearing people say, "So she's your roommate?" or, "She's your, um, um, mmmmm?" or, "Well, I don't have a way to put that into the computer, so can we just say she's your sister?" (True statements all!)

There have been improvements, of course. Years ago, I used to spend a lot of time patiently scratching out "husband" on forms. These days, actually, the forms mostly fit our family fairly well. We were Parent 1 and Parent 2 on the earthling's preschool forms this year (except on the one mandated by the state, where we were father and mother), and we're mostly Parent 1 and Parent 2 everywhere. But the people taking the forms are often kind of puzzled. The best we can generally hope for is something like our recent conversation with the lady who comes by your house when you forget to send in your census form (whoops), which went like this:

Census Lady: Okay, so you're - um, you're going to have to help me pick the right one, here, because they didn't cover this in my training and I haven't had another couple like you so far, so - what do you want to be called?
Me: Married. We're legally married.
Census Lady, selecting the appropriate box: Oh, that's wonderful! Okay. Married. So, what is your relationship to the child, [earthling]? [This is the price you pay for forgetting to mail the form, fellow US citizens: you have to answer these questions after they are carefully read to you by someone trained to be very, very clear about each one. Best just to send the thing in, really.]

My point is, usually there is a disconnect somewhere. The Census Lady had no actual problems with married lesbians, but obviously it was not something even considered by the people who trained her (or the people who trained the people who trained those people, or the people who designed the trainings, or the people who signed off on them, or any of the other many people involved, and this is the federal government so I'm guessing it was a lot of them). The person who wanted to make Best Beloved my sister was personally clueless, although it turned out her computer was not - it was happy to accept wife and wife.

But that is not what I wanted to talk about, actually.

Recently, we had another insurance snafu, compounded by an unfortunate phone fail on my part, which resulted in the earthling and me showing up for his speech therapy appointment only to be told that we could not have it, as his re-approval is still pending. (No, we could not just pay that one session. As mandated by our insurance, the earthling has speech therapy in the outpatient rehab department of a hospital, and while the medical professionals at that hospital rock, the billing department does whatever the opposite of rocking is, to the extent that Best Beloved used to have to call them up and beg them, beg them, to tell us what we owed them in copays, or, alternately, to accept a check that wasn't for precisely what we owed, applying it to the balance or carrying it forward. Neither of these things ever happened, by the way. After many useless phone calls, we'd send a check and get it back a week later with a sticky note on it saying it wasn't for the amount owed, but they still wouldn't tell us how much that was. We eventually gave up pleading with them to let us give them some money, and now assume they will let us know how much they want if they actually do want any. So, you know, these people cannot do accounting for copays; they surely cannot cope with the financial exigencies of self pay.)

Anyway. The person who manages the appointments and also the insurance stuff called me over and said, "I called and left a message on your home phone. I wanted to call your cell, but I don't know your name, so I didn't know which of these numbers were yours, and I didn't want to risk calling your wife and maybe bothering her at work."

Under normal circumstances, I would have fixated on the part where she assumed that our son's medical care would be less important to Best Beloved than two minutes of her working day, but I didn't even think about that until we were back in the car, because: wife. The officer manager (who, by the way, is married to a man, and wears a cross every day, and who has two or three kids and is pregnant with another) said it like she says it all day long, like it was every bit as normal for me to have a wife as it is for her to have a husband. And, like I said, I have been with Best Beloved for 18 years and officially and legally (at least for now, please don't fuck up again, state of California) married to her for almost two years, but no one has ever called her my wife before without me forcing the issue.

For the first time ever, there was no disconnect anywhere. The insurance manager looked at our form, saw two female names for Parent 1 and Parent 2, and thought, I have no idea which wife is the one I see every week. Crap. I'd better figure that out. And when she was talking to me, she called Best Beloved my wife.

Which she is. But it has taken half my life to hear that from someone's mouth naturally and totally unprompted. Two days later, I am still blinking in surprise.

It was, I'm not going to lie, awesome. Maybe not entirely worth the wait, but awesome all the same.

And it even made me like the word "wife."
fox: snoopy is jubilant! (snoopy dance (by rahalia))

[personal profile] fox 2010-06-20 12:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay for the insurance manager. (Something I never thought I'd say.) Boo for everyone else. Except you and BB, who get a belated mazel tov!
jenlev: (time is like a kiss 2 by salieri)

[personal profile] jenlev 2010-06-20 12:22 pm (UTC)(link)
I love this post for many reasons. Including that it gives me a bit of hope to see changes happening in this culture on a human level. In the face of what passes for news these days it's nice to consider that good things are also happening.

Also...my way of solving the 'guy at the door who won't go away and wants me to join whatever religion of the day they represent' (which is what we end up with in these parts) is to tell them that "I can't talk right now, we're busy out back sacrifcing a goat at the altar of Poseidon".

That has ended the conversation rather quickly the four or five times I've actually had the opportunity to try it. I'd feel sorry for the guy at the door if I wasn't so annoyed that they think it's ok to stop by and take up my time the way that they do.
kass: Siberian cat on a cat tree with one paw dangling (Default)

[personal profile] kass 2010-06-20 12:33 pm (UTC)(link)
I am so appalled at all of the people who can't handle "wife" as a concept, and so happy about the ones who can! I can't wait to meet you and your wife and the Earthling someday.
watersword: The words ACLU: got rights? (Politics: ACLU)

[personal profile] watersword 2010-06-20 12:40 pm (UTC)(link)
::sniffle:: It's my ALLERGIES. I am totally not tearing up. ::reaches for handkerchief::

(although, seriously, the door-to-door people haven't encountered any same-sex couples? WTF?)
laurajv: Holmes & Watson's car is as cool as Batman's (Default)

[personal profile] laurajv 2010-06-20 12:51 pm (UTC)(link)
awww. yay! my hopes for many recurrances in the future.

when my friends T & U were domestic-partnered in CA, T did not want to use "husband" because he felt like it was a faux marriage -- not the *relationship*, the legal status -- so he started out using "faux husband" and went with "fusband" after a while. They're married now, and it was nice for everyone, I think, to make that switch.
ell: (Default)

[personal profile] ell 2010-06-20 01:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay for wife!

I'm gonna have one soon, too :-)
ell: (Default)

[personal profile] ell 2010-06-20 01:07 pm (UTC)(link)
of course I have to move to a different country to do it as she's not a US citizen...
coriana: (Default)

[personal profile] coriana 2010-06-20 01:16 pm (UTC)(link)
That is so GREAT. The unfazed medical office person, that is -- though I think your inspiring door-to-door salesmen to burst into equal rights speechifying is pretty cool too.

I live in Massachusetts, and have for most of the years since marriage was legalized, and just in the past year or so have begun to hear the phrases "my friend Jane's wife" "my co-worker Bob's husband" drop easily from my straight friends' mouths -- I'm not used to it yet; it always makes me pause with astonished joy and reflect that the world really is getting better, it really is.

(Also, hi. I subscribed to your journal a few weeks ago, having followed a link to one of your meta posts and then discovered a NEW FAVORITE FIC EVER via one of your recs. Nice to meet you!)

~ c.
laurajv: Holmes & Watson's car is as cool as Batman's (Default)

[personal profile] laurajv 2010-06-20 02:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't live in MA, but my husband grew up there, and his mother takes the Boston Globe. I still remember the first time I was reading the paper there and came across an article that was all "Ms So-and-so lives with her wife Such-and-such..." and went, whoa, for reals they just get to write that in the paper now, awesome.

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[personal profile] jadelennox - 2010-06-20 17:27 (UTC) - Expand

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[personal profile] indywind - 2010-06-21 15:00 (UTC) - Expand
toft: adam's levitation device (mythbusters_levitation)

[personal profile] toft 2010-06-20 01:28 pm (UTC)(link)
This was a completely lovely post, although I wish you hadn't had to go through all of the stuff that *made* it a great moment. (*boggles at the 'sister' question*)
myalexandria: (Default)

[personal profile] myalexandria 2010-06-20 02:13 pm (UTC)(link)
this made me really happy! and also really sentimental (but I'm sick, so my defenses are really low.)
princessofgeeks: Shane in the elevator after Vegas (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2010-06-20 02:37 pm (UTC)(link)
thank you for the post and thank you for this wonderful glimpse of your family.
cereta: (Jim and Artie aren't fooling anyone)

[personal profile] cereta 2010-06-20 02:47 pm (UTC)(link)
That's...kind of sincerely awesome.
sage: Still of Natasha Romanova from Iron Man 2 (bear hug)

[personal profile] sage 2010-06-20 03:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, this is awesome. Many years ago I worked in a law office where one of the women loudly and frequently used the word wife and loudly and frequently talked about hosting lesbian scrabble nights at their home. She was an amazing, vivacious person and did so much to normalize the concept for me. After that, well, I lived in the Austin area for 15 years.

But! What this post made me aware of is the number of women I have on my flist/circle or know in RL now who are married -- legally and/or spiritually -- to women. The number keeps rising. It makes me so FOND and happy and weirdly proud.

And yes, the Census Lady came to me, too, but when she hit the gender question she was careful and clear about it being about personal gender identity and entirely confidential, which I thought was surprisingly cool. Could be that I just got a good census worker, but it was way more painless than I expected. *g*
quinfirefrorefiddle: Van Gogh's painting of a mulberry tree. (Torchwood: J/I Hug)

[personal profile] quinfirefrorefiddle 2010-06-20 03:50 pm (UTC)(link)
That is a wonderful story, I'm so glad you shared it with us.

(Also, I just know that 'fucktoy' line is going to pop into my head at the most inappropriate moments... but I'm kind of looking forward to that.)
azurelunatic: Vivid pink Alaskan wild rose. (Default)

[personal profile] azurelunatic 2010-06-20 04:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh yay.

I do not scruple at closing the door firmly to door-to-door salesmen, even mid-pitch. It wastes less of both of our times. (I used to be phone research, and I'd rather a quick "no" than an extended one.)
devohoneybee: (2 women and lotus)

[personal profile] devohoneybee 2010-06-20 05:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Belated mazel tov! Thank you for being you, and for sharing your life and joys the way you do.

Also, 18 years! Chai!
jadelennox: rainbow flag and American flag: this land was made for you and me (politics: ssm optimism)

[personal profile] jadelennox 2010-06-20 05:18 pm (UTC)(link)
ridiculously slow movement forward is movement all the same. Thanks for the dash of hope.
soc_puppet: You found kitten! (Robot, heart, kitten) Way to go, robot! (Way to go robot!)

[personal profile] soc_puppet 2010-06-20 05:28 pm (UTC)(link)
How lovely ^_^ As we say at Shakesville, feel the homomentum!

(Your post also reminded me of this comic. Not quite the same, but the theme is similar, I thought.)
sothcweden: birds flying high at sunset/dawn (Default)

[personal profile] sothcweden 2010-06-20 08:26 pm (UTC)(link)
...said it like she says it all day long, like it was every bit as normal for me to have a wife as it is for her to have a husband. As it should be; and I'm convinced that day will come, someday.
sherrold: Rse from Dr Who, smiling and full of love (Default)

[personal profile] sherrold 2010-06-20 08:52 pm (UTC)(link)
I used to hate 'wife' when I was in a het marriage (20 years ago!), but it has slowly been growing on me, and as B and I spend longer and longer pushing to get this right and not quite getting it (Washington state has finally made it to "Domestic Partnerships, all but marriage". Hmmpt.), wife is beginning to sound better and better to me. Yay for when it works, eh?

Hey, there may be something in the water today; Cimorene had a very cool and similar (except for some Finnish differences) post today: http://cimorene.dreamwidth.org/2886894.html
dine: (Esther & Till - copperbadge)

[personal profile] dine 2010-06-20 09:02 pm (UTC)(link)
how damn terrific - reading this was awesome and totally made my day
azremodehar: Yes, I have multiple Axel icons, what of it? (:D!)

[personal profile] azremodehar 2010-06-20 10:09 pm (UTC)(link)
*wibble*

(Was pointed here by a friend as a pick-me-up after a bad week. It worked. <3)
out_there: Ianto is amused and very adorable (TW: Happy Ianto by cowboyhd)

[personal profile] out_there 2010-06-21 12:10 am (UTC)(link)
That is awesome. And it totally made me smile.
threerings: (FOTC-hiphopopotamus)

[personal profile] threerings 2010-06-21 03:18 pm (UTC)(link)
That is totally and completely awesome and I'm feeling all warm and fuzzy now. I know the *blink, blink* and confused looks you're talking about, mostly from my best friend being a man married to another man for several years. I would say things about "his husband" or being in their wedding or whatever and would end up having to explain that yes, I really meant what I said and yes, they were married.
adalger: Earthrise as seen from the moon, captured on camera by the crew of Apollo 16 (Default)

[personal profile] adalger 2010-06-21 04:03 pm (UTC)(link)
I love your writing so much. Do you have books I can buy? Please tell me you're on my bookstore shelf somewhere.
merrily: Mac (Default)

[personal profile] merrily 2010-06-21 04:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I would like to draw sparkly hearts all over this post.

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