I know that D will understand what I mean by what I am going to say here, but I do also want the rest of you to know that I do not mean any of this in the materialistic way it may sound. That disclaimer being offered:
I can’t help feeling more connected, more solidly a couple, every time D and I purchase things together. I am sure that much of this stems from having had to do the dreaded “divvying-up” on two occasions in the past (only one of which I remember bitterly, tho neither time was less than heart-breaking). I see sharing in things, and things purchased together are symbols of a couple’s ability to share. The dastardly divvying is, for all intents and purposes, like saying, “I am not going to share with you any longer.”
Heck, to be honest, I can’t even give away something that I have received as a gift from someone I love or loved. If you really want to screw me over, buy me a gift and act excited about your present while making sure it is the least wonderful, least “me” thing you can find. I will have it until I die. I can see it now: someone I have pissed off recently is going to give me, for my birthday, some awful biography of some or another Bush family member, and there it will be on my shelf when I am 80…
Anyway, what I was trying to say earlier is that, each time we buy something together, it isn’t that the thing is co-posessed and therefore binds us in some legal property-ownership kind of way, but rather that it represents our decision to buy it, a decision usually based on a bit of negotiation and a lot of excited planning, a happy shopping outing (or surfing), and a week or so of “when’ll it finally be delivered, I wonder” antsiness. I end up attaching all these memories to the thing, as well as memories of its use. They all become part of the thing.
I know. I am a loon. I don’t think, at all, that this is a symptom of some craving for legal matrimony. I know for a fact that I don’t want to get married married. I feel more attached now than I ever have in my life, and in a healthy kind of way. I don’t neccessarily think it is a symptom of anything more than a fascination with things symbolic, of pomp and ceremony, of tokens and memories. I am sentimental to a fault.
Did any of this make sense? Probably not. :)