So, my husband should be going out of town next week. This will be only the third time in our nine-year relationship that we will have been apart overnight.
The first was in December 2016. I went to Florida solo to visit my mom, grandma, and aunt—all of whom are dead now, in that order.
Which feels impossible when I write it that way. At the time, they were simply people I was going to see.
It was very early in our relationship, before we were married. We had been living together for less than two months. It was easy on both of us.
In some ways, it was kind of fun.
So, at the prospect of my husband being out of town next week for a few days, I figured it would be the same.
But next week, Juneteenth—a day I have off from work—falls during his trip. I didn't realize this until after all the plans were made: tickets bought, car reserved, hotel booked.
Why does one day—no work, no husband—hold some sort of newness that I'm examining yet can't quite explain?
In my first marriage, to a totally different guy, I was alone a lot. I was on my own a lot. There were months when he didn't step foot into the apartment where we lived, and I saw him only a few days a week. In many regards, it was as if I wasn't married at all.
I was married, but I didn't share my life with him, and he did not share a life with me. We were coexisting in the way coworkers might sometimes see each other in meetings, make small talk, help out on a project, then disappear back into their own tasks completely separate from one another.
What do they even do on a daily basis?
We don't really know.
It's only the overlap we see and feel and know.
But this marriage has been different. From the start, we wove our lives together into one. The minutes, the hours, the days, the weeks—it is intrinsically linked. We have time apart, hours here and there. We have separate hobbies, hours here and there. But even apart, there's this line of communication: texts when we get there, when we leave, check-ins, do you need anything, do you want a Coke from the gas station?
Perhaps it's the solitude, quietness, the realization of how noisy my life is.
How full.
Of course, there is the background noise: another person with whom I share my home, moving from room to room, working, taking phone calls with colleagues, watching TV.
But then there's me.
When all that external noise falls away, I fill it with podcasts, TV, YouTube, music, voice messages to friends. I am always filling the void.
I keep picturing ten o'clock on that Friday morning.
No meetings?
No husband in the next room?
No agenda?
Just coffee growing cold somewhere in the house and no particular reason to be anywhere.
Just open-ended moments.
Who I am when nobody even wants anything from me.
My mother is gone.
My grandmother is gone.
My aunt is gone.
The first time we spent a night apart, they were all still here.
And, for now, my husband is simply my husband. In the next room. Going on a road trip. Mowing the grass. Stopping at the gas station.
Footsteps echoing from the other side of the house.
But a thirty-six-year age gap has a way of making the future feel less hypothetical.
Maybe that's what feels so strange about next Friday.
Not that he will be gone temporarily.
That someday he will truly be gone forever.
For one quiet Friday, I find myself staring at the smallest possible version of that reality.
No work. No husband. Just me.
Maybe that's what feels so strange about the whole thing.
Not being alone, but remembering I will eventually have to re-learn how.