
Home > Marriage > Humor & Fun
 Marriage Partnership, Spring 1998
Aphrodisiacs & Old Lace
Did Bob and Judy wear out the romance when they wore out the honeymoon
negligees?
by Betty Smartt Carter
My husband and I are private people. Never, ever would
I discuss our sex life in publicoffering up the most sacred, intimate moments
of our marriage to be examined by strangers.
So why don't I tell you about my good friendumJudy, instead? Okay. Judy
and Bob have always had a great relationship. It used to drive everyone crazy,
how crazy they were for each other. They held hands, smooched loudly, talked
baby talk. When Judy and Bob walked into a room, the temperature shot up
about ten degrees; mold started to form on bread. In their first year as
husband and wife, they sanctified the marriage bed at least once a day. They
often dashed home from church to drink water from their own cistern before
company arrived for dinner.
In some ways, the years have only improved things. Judy and Bob still get
along great, and they're still very passionate. But even the happiest couples
have differences, and on one intimate subject, Judy and Bob have always
disagreed. Bedwear.
Judy started married life with a drawerful of bridal-gift negligees. Like
so many wedding presents, they didn't exactly suit the bride's taste. The
only other time in her life Judy had worn red satin, for instance, was to
her sixth-grade Halloween party, when she dressed up as the Human Torch.
Mysteriously, though, Bob seemed quite pleased not only with the red satin
camisole, but also the black fishnet teddy and the leopard-spotted thing
(whatever it was).
This worried Judy. Bob had never shown such bad taste before! They had
experienced a wonderful, almost mystical level of agreement on everything
from carpet swatches to cubism. From what dark depths of his soul had sprung
this passion for man-made fabrics and loud colors?
Judy went along with it as long as the wedding presents lasted. She wore
the red camisole till its spaghetti straps had turned into vermicelli. She
wore the leopard-spotted thing till snaps shot off the underside with a loud
"ka-pop!" Then, when the last of the tasteless nighties had been trucked
off to Goodwill, Judy breathed a sigh of relief and wore what she liked to
bed. Most of the time, a T-shirt.
See, for Judy, what's sexiest is what's most comfortable. Bob's old T-shirt
was as sexy as it gotsoft, see-through (after years of heavy use), and
easily removable. No snaps to fly off at awkward moments. No straps to get
hooked on the bedpost by accident. No scratchy lace to cut off her circulation.
Bob seemed to think the T-shirt was temporary. "You going to wear a T-shirt
to bed again, Honey?"
"Is something wrong with that?" Judy asked.
"Well, it's okay some of the time, I guess, but it's not very sexy."
"You're wearing a T-shirt, Bob. I think you're sexy."
"That's different. All I'm saying is a little variety is nice."
The next night the weather cooled down a little, so Judy hauled out her old
navy-blue-and-green flannel pajamas with lace around the high collar. They
looked like hand-me-downs from Eleanor Roosevelt.
"You said you wanted variety!" she declared when Bob winced.
"That's not what I had in mind."
"Bob, this is what Victoria really wore to bed."
He sighed. "No wonder she kept it a secret."
Judy didn't stop wearing her T-shirt. She had a right to be comfortable,
she thought.
But then she put herself in Bob's shoes. On any given day at work he saw
how many pretty, well-dressed women? Thirty? Forty? Stopping for gas on the
way home he often passed racks of porn magazines, their lurid covers only
half-disguised in peekaboo brown paper. Back on the road he headed past a
sign for Hooters: "Made You Look." The world had it in for godly, married
men like Bob. Deliciously packaged, faultless female bodies littered his
life, yet he was supposed to hurry home to the woman in the Florida Gators
T-shirt? Maybe it was asking too much.
Resolved to do her husband a favor, Judy headed to the lingerie store, taking
a friend along for emotional support. The negligees they examined fell into
two categories: pretty pastel cotton things that she liked, and slinky cartoonish
numbers that would probably appeal to Bob.
"Moo," said Judy, holding up a nightie that wouldn't fit Gwyneth Paltrow
on a diet. "I give up. Let's go home."
"Judy!" her friend snapped. "Remember? You're doing this for Bob."
In the end, Judy marched up to the cash register and plopped down a hot-pink
negligee with the brand name "Breezy Love" printed on the tag in the back.
"'Sleazy love' is more like it," she mumbled, pulling out her checkbook.
"Come on, Judy," her friend coaxed. "It's not like you're going to be wearing
it all night!"
That night, Bob smiled when he pulled back the covers. "Hey, what happened
to the T-shirt?"
"I gave it the night off," she said.
"Makes me feel kind of sorry for the Gators."
"Not to worry. They'll be back on the old gridiron tomorrow."
Betty Smartt Carter lives with her family near Birmingham, Alabama. Her
latest novel, The Tower, the Mask and the Grave (Shaw), is a
thriller.
Copyright © 1998 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
mp@marriagepartnership.com.
Spring 1998, Vol. 15, No. 1, Page 26
Marriage Partnership
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