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I met Jake and Myrtle when I was dating their
granddaughter.
Our dating relationship had arrived at the meet-the-
extended-family stage, which can go either way. I didn't have
much extended family to speak of; all of my grandparents had
passed away, and the few aunts and uncles I had scattered about
would have greeted me with, "Now, you're John who?"
But Alfie, who is now my wife, comes from a tight-knit crew,
three generations sitting around the Sunday dinner table and all
that.
Jake and Myrtle Shoemaker were Alfie's grandparents on her
mother's side. I wish you could have known them. You would
have loved them. They spent a lifetime loving each other and
those around them, working hard, living simply and richly
without a hint of presumption. Jake and Myrtle are my marriage
and family heroes, and the longer I live the more heroic their
lives become to me. They were who I think we all want to be,
deep down.
I didn't grow up around many long-term married
relationships, which contributed to my hesitancy — all
right, paralyzing fear — of joining the fraternity
of the marriedhood, thus my late-coming to the party (married
at 29). I simply had no picture in my head of two people growing
old together. My grandparents passed away when I was young,
so I have little memory of them, certainly no memory of their
marriage relationships. Quite frankly, I was never around many
elderly people, much less those happily married.
I knew some young couples who were happily married. I
knew a few middle-aged couples still on their first marriages
and who seemed to tolerate one another. Everyone else was
either divorced, like my parents, or on a subsequent marriage.
Penguins have more commitment than most couples I knew.
I don't expect you to believe this, but it's true: I didn't
personally know a single couple that was finishing the race
together, not one. Having no picture of the end made me wary
of beginning. Jake and Myrtle changed that.
When I met them, Jake and Myrtle were both in their 80s
and closing in on 60 years of marriage. 60 years! I hardly knew
anyone who'd been alive for six decades, much less
married for that long. I kept staring at them, studying
them like they were a museum exhibit. Look. They keep
smiling. Wait, now they're holding hands.... She just brought him
some tea.... He's helping her down the steps. I'm sure I
made them nervous with my psychopathic ogling.
The two met and married in the late 1920s. As the story
goes, Jake was hanging out downtown with his best friend when
Myrtle passed by on the other side of the street. "I sure would
like to meet that girl," Jake wished out loud to his friend. "I think
I can arrange that," said his friend. "She's my sister."
Consider the odds against this daring young couple: neither
had more than a high school education, the Great Depression
was in its early stages and jobs were scarce and becoming more
so, and they were barely out of the teenage years. The future
couldn't have been anymore uncertain. But with a simple faith
and trust in God and undying optimism, they leapt into the
unknown, got married and started a family.
They gave little thought to "keeping up with the Joneses,"
unless by that you mean "eating." To me, hard times means
$2.75 a gallon for gas or a slow Internet connection. They were
glad to have any income at all and to be dry and warm when it
rained at night. It seems to me their young lives were defined by
hardness, but they didn't see it that way. To them, it was just
"life." There were no How To resources about life, no
books or conferences on marriage or parenting, just the Bible,
which as it turns out was a pretty solid source of information for
them.
* * *
My dating relationship with Alfie had reached that place
where the water current begins picking up speed and you realize
the river will soon require a commitment from you that is going
to make pulling over to the shore very, very difficult. You and
your paddling partner both hear the waterfall in the distance and
feel the cool mist on your face, but can't quite bring yourselves
to acknowledging it out loud.
Usually, this would be where I would look for a nice place
on the shoreline to pull over and camp for a while. Or possibly
just grab a life vest and jump. All I could see everywhere around
me were wrecked canoes, or rowers yelling at one another, or
worse — not talking at all, just sitting there, paddles in
the boat, bumping into rocks, waiting for the crash.
But this time was different. Jake and Myrtle were up ahead,
having made it through the class five rapids (defined by the
International Whitewater Rating System as "extremely difficult;
long violent rapids that must be scouted from shore; dangerous
drops, unstable eddies, strong, irregular currents and
hydraulics"). They were waiving me forward to the deep, calm
pool of contentment.
"It's a great adventure!" their lives said to me. "Strap on that
life vest, hang on and paddle hard! Go for it!" That's what I
needed. They provided for me a vision of marriage, a good
marriage that handled whatever life threw at them, and thrived
— all the way through to the end.
I was there at the end, when Jake's health was failing, and
the sun was setting on this extraordinary couple, 62 years of
two becoming one. I was there to see Myrtle try to paddle alone
after so many years of rowing with her partner. One year after
Jake passed, nearly to the day, Myrtle joined him, unable to
mend her broken heart.
By then my wife and I were a few years into our marriage,
doing our best to manage the unpredictable currents of young
couple-hood, banging off rocks and getting stuck in low water
and shooting thrilling rapids. Whenever our paddling was out of
sync and the water would splash over the nose of the boat and
douse our faces, I'd look up ahead, beyond the roaring
whitewater, and see Jake and Myrtle, holding hands and cheering
us on, assuring me that a little water in the boat is OK. Just bail
it out, make adjustments and keep going.
Twelve years later, with each new bend in the river, Alfie
and I keep learning to better navigate the waters and row in
unison (which says more about her than me, because if I were
paddling with me I'd want to turn around and whack me in the
head with an oar).
Despite all our fears of the future and challenges of the
present, we know we can do this, and here's why: we have a
picture in our minds of the end of the race, of looking back to
our kids and grandkids and cheering them on, of leaving the
same kind of legacy that was left for us. Our hope is that maybe
some day when the tide rises and the river roars, some young
couple will look downstream, past the churning currents, and
see us waiving them on. You'll recognize us. We'll be the ones
standing on the shoulders of Jake and Myrtle Shoemaker.
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