Anonymous won't care for this story very much. What a shame... It's about a patient man trying to hold his marriage together when increasingly he seems to be the only one in the marriage.
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Some lessons you learn by watching others and some you just learn the hard way. This is the story of how I learned my lesson the very hard way.
I screwed up in so many ways. I knew this was true the day I got out and my good friend picked me up at the gate. "Come on, buddy, the beer is on me. You must be thirsty." If I had just gone to see him that fateful night, if I'd just turned around, walked away, and divorced the bitch, these past seven years would have been very different.
My name is John Edward MacKenzie. My parents call me Johnny. When I was a teenager, my teachers and coaches started calling me Johnny Mac. When I went to work, it became just Mac. That's where it stands today. Everyone except my parents just call me Mac.
There are two things you need to know about me. The first is that I'm a pretty big guy. I'm an even 6 feet tall and I keep myself in pretty good shape. I have a low-energy job, so I visit the gym a few days each week. People meet me and they just assume that I played football in school. I hate football. Football is moronic! Here is the game of football in a nutshell: line up, snap the ball, run into the guy in front of you... line up, snap the ball, run into the guy in front of you... line up... Well, you get the idea. I didn't play it. I don't watch it. Football is stupid.
Here's the second thing you need to know: all my life I was the guy who didn't get mad. I kept my cool no matter what was happening. My wife, on the other hand, had a nasty temper. She didn't discuss, she fought. She'd say anything, do anything, to win the most insignificant disagreement and get her way. She was manipulative, vindictive, and a lying skank; but I'm getting ahead of myself. The only good thing I can say about her is, "Thank God the divorce was final seven years ago."
I met Dolores a few years out of school. Everyone called her Dory, like the boat. I had a good job working in a manufacturing plant that made brushes. I kid you not. We made tooth brushes, clothing brushes, those fist-size brushes you use to clean pots in the sink, and some really nice wooden handled brushes that were sold in woodworking supply shops. It wasn't high tech, but I made good money doing it and my nights and weekends were my own. I was happy.
Dory was incredible in the sack. She believed in the third-date rule, but I didn't know that until I took her home at the end of our third date. She tried to kill me with sex. I almost dialed 9-1-1 to report an "assault with a dangerous pussy". I slept very well that night and the next morning she accosted me again. After that, we were a couple. We got together every few days and all weekend long. We went everywhere together and it wasn't long before I popped the question.
There's a lesson for you that I learned the hard way and you can learn from my mistake. Don't rush into marriage. It takes a long, long time to really know a person and I didn't take nearly long enough. I married this loving, devoted woman who was eager to give me sex all the time and pretty soon after I said, "I do." we didn't. I exaggerate, but not a lot. The sex was good for about a year, maybe eighteen months, and the marriage was good, too. We got along great. She laughed at my bad jokes and we enjoyed being together. Then, slowly, all the good things started falling off. She was a little less pleased with me. Sex became a bit less frequent, and then downright rare. Every day or two became every week or two if I was lucky and less if she was in a bad mood which was happening more all the time. When we did have sex, it felt more like a mercy fuck to keep me manageable. As the good things fell off, the bad things piled on. The credit card bills got bigger. She worked later, went out with her girlfriends more, and was tired at night. She wanted dinner delivered where we used to cook together. I knew that reality would settle in eventually, but this was not a reality I relished.
All the while I kept my cool. I tried to talk with Dory about our lives, tried to put some spark into our evenings and weekends; I even suggested we go away for a little vacation. I got nowhere. If she didn't like the conversation, it became an argument. If the argument continued, the punishment would start. I knew where this was headed and I tried to make her understand, but she was having none of it. She knew what she wanted and that is the way it would be. What I couldn't understand was "Why?"
What happened next should have taught me that keeping it in wasn't going to work. Dory started bringing her girlfriends home from work and inviting them for dinner. These were the nights when she didn't go out with them. Dinner meant I had to buy for five (me, my wife, and the three bitches) because she was too busy visiting with her friends to cook. Whenever I walked into the room, I was asked to go someplace, do this, or get that. It became abundantly clear that I was not welcome.
I was sitting in the spare bedroom reading one night when I heard her friend Betty say, "My God, he's such a wimp! How can you stand it?"
Dory laughed, "Are you kidding? He does whatever I say. He'll put up with anything. Damn, I could fuck George right here in the living room and he wouldn't even raise his voice!"
I couldn't believe my ears. First of all, those bitches can all go fuck themselves! And second, who the hell is George?
Look, guys who keep their cool are not guys without emotions and I'm no wimp. Let's make that clear! I feel everything that every hot-headed asshole feels. I just don't want to create more problems that require more fixing. I figure two people who mean well can find the middle ground and solve their problems. But, it was becoming increasingly clear to me that the only middle ground between those bitches and me was them kneeling at my feet and begging me not to throw them out bodily. Dory would not be far behind.