It was good, making love two nights in a row. Doggone it, maybe we
men are right about sex not being the answer; sex is the question,
yes is the answer, and it blows away a ream of troubles, especially
when it's your old beloved. Oh, miracle of miracles. Authentic
rapturous passion between two old pros. You lie in bed afterward in a
warm daze, tired, rapturized, like a salmon who made it back to the
headwaters, like an old stallion who has fulfilled his destiny one
more time, and life begins anew. In the dark, the judges are holding
up their scorecards--8.1, 9.0, 9.0, 8.9--but that doesn't matter so
much, what matters is that the war is over, the roads are open again,
the ice is gone, spring is here, and you have discovered, for the
863rd time, the great beauty and simplicity of your life as an animal
here on earth. You rise naked from the bed and go down to the creek
for a drink of water and far off in the distance other males sound
their cries of manly joy and you reply with a deep, chesty roar and
the forest is quiet. You drink your water and return to the warm nest
of percale and eiderdown and fit your naked self into the dozy curve
of Madame's body where she lies swooned on her side and you smell her
dew and roses and absorb a simple thought about marriage: this woman
is all women, and when you chose her, you became Jay Gatsby and Robert
Jordan and Prince Andre and Raskolinov and Ishmael and embarked on a
life of imagination, which adultery cruelly violates, and breaks up
the music in your head, and also it's a hell of a lot of work to scout
up something inferior to what you and she can create at home. You have
roamed the Western world in search of a the perfect tuna sandwich; your
wife makes a good tuna sandwich; your powers of imagination are what
make it perfect.
--Garrison Keillor, "Love Me"
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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