We had a lunch date. With a room full of Aggie testosterone. I think I was one of three females in attendance. Jeff, as you well know, is a devoted USU fan. A fanatic really. He spends hours pouring over the Aggie boards listening to all the details and insider info on football and basketball. We fork over all our extra money to the university just so we can then drive to Logan at least 30 times from September to March and watch sports, freezing our tailends off and complaining about how cold Logan is. He also goes to all the coaches luncheons where he gets to socialize with other crazed Aggie fans and avoid yet another boring sandwich I'd make him for lunch. But he loves every second of it. And that's where our "nooner" came in to play today. Jeff asked me last night if I wanted to go. I usually turn him down for these kind of things but since I didn't want to make just one lunch, I took him up on the offer. He looked at me a bit puzzled and said something to the effect that I could care less about football. To which I replied back, "Yes, true. But I love you and you love football."
And so we went together. I felt all sneaky, leaving both kids at daycare (hoping that Cole would survive without me until I got back to work... didn't happen... he was starving when I got back, hence pictures of us at the USU vs. BYU football game instead of us on a date today) and running out for a long lunch. The food was yummy - much better than any sandwich I'd have come up with. There were plenty of fanatics just like my husband and it suddenly became clear to me why Jeff goes to these things. However, I am in dire need of some Football Lingo 101 if I'm going to fit in with this crowd. What the heck is a FBS school anyway? And I thought only basketball had a guard.


At any rate, I actually looked up the lesson that talks about nurturing love and friendship in a marriage to see if it was really counsel from church leaders or just our teachers trying to make us feel guilty. Guess it's the real deal. The lesson says:
- “Friendship is … a vital and wonderful part of courtship and marriage. A relationship between a man and a woman that begins with friendship and then ripens into romance and eventually marriage will usually become an enduring, eternal friendship. Nothing is more inspiring in today’s world of easily dissolved marriages than to observe a husband and wife quietly appreciating and enjoying each other’s friendship year in and year out as they experience together the blessings and trials of mortality” (Elder Marlin K. Jensen of the Seventy in Conference Report, Apr. 1999, 81; or Ensign, May 1999, 64).
- One of the less obvious but more significant reasons for divorce is “the lack of a constant enrichment in marriage, … an absence of that something extra which makes it precious, special, and wonderful, when it is also drudgery, difficult, and dull.” He counseled: “In the enriching of marriage the big things are the little things. It is a constant appreciation for each other and a thoughtful demonstration of gratitude. It is the encouraging and the helping of each other to grow. Marriage is a joint quest for the good, the beautiful, and the divine” (President James E. Faust in Conference Report, Oct. 1977, 13–14; or Ensign, Nov. 1977, 10–11).
- “Keep your courtship alive. Make time to do things together—just the two of you. As important as it is to be with the children as a family, you need regular weekly time alone together. Scheduling it will let your children know that you feel that your marriage is so important that you need to nurture it. That takes commitment, planning, and scheduling” (Elder Joe J. Christensen of the Seventy in Conference Report, Apr. 1995, 86; or Ensign, May 1995, 65).