This is a Valentine's Day contest story. Please vote.
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A loving husband buys his beautiful wife yellow roses every year for Valentine's Day.
I gave my wife, Helen, flowers lots of times but I only gave her roses on Valentine's Day, a tradition we started from our first Valentine's Day together. Our wedding anniversary, roses signified that Valentine's Day was our most special day. Roses were her favorite flowers and a yellow rose was her favorite rose.
Different from the red rose that signified love and romance, the yellow rose signified warmth and friendship. Definitely, especially as the years passed with my bad back and my wife's bum hip, we had grown to be more best friends and close companions than we were sexy lovers, that's for sure. It's been so long since we had sex that I can't remember when it was last that we were sexually intimate. Although there was a time, long ago, when we had sex like bunnies. Our five children are testimony to that.
It really didn't matter which color roses I bought her, she was always so happy and appreciative that I remembered her on our special day with roses. Yet, after a while, she made such a fuss over getting yellow roses, and seemed a bit disappointed when I bought her red or white roses, that yellow was the only color rose I bought her. In the excitement she showed receiving her beautiful bouquet of yellow roses, it appeared that the yellow rose was the key to her heart and the way for me to get lucky that night. Not always being the fool that I sometimes am, on Valentine's Day, without fail, I bought her yellow roses.
Magically, even if it had been a while, since being so romantically inclined, erotically aroused, and sexually intimate, with her bouquet of yellow roses prominently displayed on the nightstand in front of the window to capture the light during a bright sunny day, we'd have sex that night. My personal motivation, looking forward to having sex with my wife on Valentine's Day night, never caused me to forget to buy her yellow roses that morning. Besides, how could I forget her? I couldn't disappoint her.
No matter what was on my mind that day, I'd scour the neighborhood going from florists to florist searching to find yellow roses. I suppose I could have ordered them, but that would have spoiled my fun adventure in searching for the best bouquet of yellow roses. I needed to see them first, before I bought them.
Not every florist carried yellow roses. With the younger women feeling that red was the color rose for an older woman and white roses used more to dedicate things, remember souls, and to denote innocence and purity, yellow had become a popular color, that is until the hybrid roses appeared in every color under the sun. Nonetheless, yellow was the color that the florists sold out of quickly. Now with all the different color hybrids in their inventories of flowers, the florists tried selling me a different color, orange, pink, or lavender. Yet, I knew that if I wanted to have hot sex that night with my wife, even though some of the other colors were equally as beautiful, no other color roses would do, only yellow.
Yellow roses were her favorite color roses. She loved them. To her, the yellow rose was a symbol of our love. Valentine's Day was the day we were married in 1967. With the altar filled with yellow roses, her corsage and bouquet made from yellow roses that matched her yellow hair and that went so well with her pearls and her ivory, laced, wedding gown, and all the maids and ushers in attendance, including me and my best man, wearing yellow roses, we looked like participants on a float in the Rose Bowl Parade coming down the aisle.
Helen was my rose, a real American beauty. Ten years before the program was even aired, she looked like Jaclyn Smith, one of Charlie's Angels, but with blonde hair. Maybe more correctly, being that my Helen is older, I should write, Jaclyn Smith looked like Helen, but with dark hair.
Married for more than 40-years, I don't know what I'd do without my Helen. I'd be lost. She's my best friend. There's no one else like her in the world. Without her there beside me, I'd have no one to talk to, joke and laugh with, and tease. She has a good sense of humor and gives back her quick wit, as much as she receives my good natured ribbing.
I've been teasing her all my life and I love it when I make her laugh. It wouldn't be the same watching all of my favorite television programs alone without her sitting there beside me on the couch. As if still dating, as if we're still teenagers babysitting, while hoping to steal a kiss, sometimes we hold hands and other times we sit there with my arm around her with her snuggling up against me.
Lost and lonely, my life would be so tragically empty and meaningless should anything happen to her and I was suddenly alone with my bad self. I couldn't bear to live the remainder of my life without her. I'd just want to die. Rather something happen to me than to her, I'd give my life for her.
I'm forgetful sometimes and she's always reminding me where I put things. She knows everything about me. My personal walking encyclopedia, she's my history of all the dates, places, and times of my past. She's my permanent record of all of our experiences together. A memory jogger, she remembers all the names of all our friends, when I don't and no longer can. Just as someone would prompt the President of the United States, the name of the person walking towards him, she'd do the same for me or she'd say their name out loud, when greeting them, so that I'd remember who they were.
"Michael, how are you?"
I can't tell you the number of times she saved me from being embarrassed. Some people wouldn't understand and would take it personally, if I didn't remember them by their name. They'd think that I was being rude, that they were forgettable enough for me not to remember them, or that I didn't like them. They'd take my not remembering them as a personal affront to who they are as a friend, relative, or acquaintance to me. They wouldn't realize that it was my physical disability with progressing dementia for not remembering them. They'd think it was their fault for being forgettable and slighted and not mine.
Names are the hardest for me to remember. Sometimes, I hate to admit it, but I forget the names of my grandchildren. Not remembering the names of my grandchildren is most disturbing to me, but there's so many of them. Between my five children there's seventeen or eighteen grandchildren, I don't remember which and when they're in the house together at a birthday party or a barbeque with all of them running around in and out and looking so much alike, I can't tell one from the other.
"Who are you? What's your name? Who's your Daddy?"
"Oh, Grandpa, you're such a tease. I'm Joey and my Dad is Anthony, your son."
"I knew that," I'd say rubbing his head, patting his ass, and sending him on his way, while knowing that I didn't know that and, even that I now know that, I'll soon forget it.
If they had numbers on their foreheads, I'd have a better chance of remembering which of my children had them and what their names are. Such as 1-A would be my son, Anthony's first born, John, since he's the oldest, and 2-B would be my daughter Emily's second child, Christine, and so on. With the numbering system as my numerical guide, very helpful to me to finally know who was who, I no longer felt bad about not remembering their names, when I had their numbers to help me to remember.
Only, my wife didn't understand and my children were mad at me, when, one day, I was having such a hard time remembering who was who, I wrote my grandchildren's identification numbers on their foreheads with magic maker. I don't know why they all made such a big fuss. The ink wasn't indelible and could easily be erased with some soap and warm water.
At the time, I thought it was a good idea and my grandkids liked it enough. They all thought it was a game they were playing with grandpa and they liked the personal and loving attention I gave them by giving them their own personal identification numbers written on their foreheads. It made them feel special having their numbers on their foreheads, at least I thought it did, except for my number four child, Maureen's son, Tom, 4-F. With his Dad in the military, knowing what it meant and taking it the wrong way, he didn't like that 4-F designation so much.
"Mom, grandpa wrote on me with magic marker. Look, I'm 3-C," said Julie my third child, George's daughter.
It's bad enough to forget names, dates, and places, but it's hurtful when my children talk about me, as if I'm not even in the room.
"Mom, you need to get Dad some help," said my number one child, my son, Anthony. "Put him in one of those nursing homes that specializes in the care that he--"
"I can hear and understand you. Hello? I'm right here in the room. Just because I forget things doesn't mean I'm an idiot."
"Sorry, Dad."
Sorry Dad. I get a lot of that lately. Sorry Dad. I am a sorry Dad and a pitiful grandfather for not being able to remember my children and my grandchildren's names. What the Hell is wrong with me? Some days I know them and other days I don't. Some days they all look like strangers to me, even Helen. I have my good days and my bad days. Yet, now knowing enough when I'm having a bad day, I just smile and nod my head, acting as if I know who everyone is, while hoping to remember or waiting for someone to call them by name.
Sometimes I feel trapped inside of myself, as if the window to the outside world that has been slowly closing has finally slammed down and been nailed shut. Shut in and unable to open the window to the world outside my head with my family all strangers to me, I'm inside looking out. Even though I try to open the window by trying to remember what it is they are all so desperate for me to remember, I can't.