Thursday, 25 June 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

You saw her this morning across the kitchen table. Not for the first time — you have seen her thousands of mornings. But this time you saw her. The way she holds the cup. The small crease between her eyebrows when she is thinking about something she has not said yet. The particular angle of her wrist. You have lived with these details for years. This morning they registered differently. Not as background. As her.

She is not the person you imagined when you were twenty-five. She is the person who actually showed up. Who stayed through the years when staying was not easy. Who carried your children in a body that will never be the same because of it. Who sat across from you on the nights when you could not find words and did not ask you to perform competence you did not have. She did not arrive perfect. Neither did you. You chose each other anyway. And this morning, without ceremony, you are choosing her again.

Not because the feeling is new. Because the choice is. You are not in the first flush of anything. You are in the middle years, the part where the initial thrill has long since settled into something quieter and you have to decide if quiet is enough. And you are deciding, this morning, that it is. That she is. That the woman who is drinking tea across from you, who will ask you in a moment if you remembered to pay the electricity bill, who knows the specific way you get silent when you are worried — that woman is the one you want to keep waking up next to.

There is no drama in this. No grand gesture. You are not renewing vows. You are not making a speech. You are just noticing, in the middle of an ordinary morning, that you are still saying yes to her. That the yes has changed shape but it has not disappeared. It is steadier now. Less euphoric. More weight-bearing. The kind of yes that holds up a household, that survives a decade, that does not need to be loud to be real.

She does not know you are thinking this. She is looking at her phone, scrolling something, her face neutral. In a minute she will get up to start the children’s breakfast. The moment will pass. But you are holding it for a second longer. The simple fact of her. The simple fact that she is still here and you are still here and the choice to keep being here together is still one you are making.

This is not the love they write songs about. This is the love that comes after the songs. The love that knows what the other person looks like when they are sick, when they are angry, when they are so tired they can barely finish a sentence. The love that has seen the worst and the most boring and is still choosing to stay in the room. You are in that room. She is in that room. And this morning you are quietly, undramatically, grateful that you both chose not to leave it.

Your children exist because she carried them. This is obvious. But it is easy to let it become background fact instead of held knowledge. She grew them from nothing. Her body built their bodies. She was nauseous for months. She could not sleep the way she used to. Her spine curved differently. Her organs shifted. And then the children came and the tiredness changed shape but did not leave. And through all of it she did not stop. She kept going. Not because it was easy. Because she chose to. Because she said yes to the hardest work and then did it.

You see her with your daughter sometimes and it is clear your daughter is learning how to be a woman by watching her. Not through lessons. Through proximity. She is learning what steadiness looks like. What it looks like to carry exhaustion without complaint. What it looks like to love people even when they are making everything harder. Your wife is teaching this without trying to teach it. And your daughter is learning it without knowing she is learning it. This is inheritance happening in real time.

Your son reaches for her first. Not always. But most of the time. When he is hurt, when he is scared, when he wakes up in the night — he calls for her. You are there. You are present. But his body knows her differently. He was inside her once. Some part of him still remembers. He goes to her because she is the first place he ever was. And she takes him every time. She does not keep score. She does not ask you to split it fifty-fifty. She just opens her arms and he climbs in and that is what the moment needs.

She knows when you are holding too tightly. She does not always name it. But she knows. You can see it in the way she looks at you sometimes when you are talking about the business, about the timelines, about the things that have to happen or else. She does not argue. She just waits. And eventually you hear yourself. And you soften. She does not fix you. She just refuses to match your intensity. And somehow that is what brings you back.

You are learning to come home differently. Not as the person who has been managing all day and is still managing. But as the person who can sit at the table and not need to solve everything. This is new. This is hard. But you are trying. And she has noticed. She has not said much. But you can tell she has noticed. The way she relaxes slightly when you walk in. The way she does not brace for the next question about logistics. You are becoming someone she does not have to manage. And that is a gift you are giving her by learning to give it to yourself.

She is not your project. She is not the problem you solve or the person you fix or the variable you optimize. She is just herself. Complicated. Tired. Funnier than you give her credit for. Smarter than you remember on the days when you are only seeing her as the person who handles the children’s schedules. She has her own inner world that you do not fully see. Her own fears. Her own hopes that have nothing to do with you. And this morning you are grateful that she is her own person. That she did not dissolve into being only your wife, only the children’s mother. That she kept some part of herself separate. That she is still someone you do not completely know.

The years have changed her face. Not dramatically. But the skin is different. The lines around her eyes are deeper. She is aging in front of you and you are aging in front of her and neither of you looks the way you did when you met. This is not a problem. This is just what time does. You are both becoming older versions of yourselves. And you are doing it together. And that is the thing you are choosing again this morning. Not the young version. The version that is here now. The version that is real.

She will ask you in a moment if you remembered the electricity bill. You did not. You will apologize. She will sigh. This is the texture of the actual marriage. Not the idea of it. The daily small failures and small repairs. The forgetting and the remembering. The asking again. The trying again. The staying even when it is not romantic. Even when it is just two tired people trying to keep a household running and not doing it perfectly.

You are choosing her again. Not because you have to. Because you can. Because the choice is still yours and it is still hers and you are both still saying yes. Quietly. Without fanfare. Just the steady decision to keep building this life together. To keep waking up in the same house. To keep raising these children. To keep being the person she comes home to and letting her be the person you come home to.

This is the gratitude this morning. Not that the love is perfect. That it is still here. That she is still here. That you are still here. That the choice is still being made. That the yes, though quieter now, is still a yes.