When Skylar and I got married my mother—the woman who birthed me into this world—the being from whom my body emerged through a process she has since called "a bloody massacre"—the person is supposed to live her life in absolutely loyalty to me—that mother committed an absolute hate crime against her only son.
She didn't mean to hurt me, I think, when she told my husband—the man who swore to worship me in front of all the angels in heaven at an extremely expensive party where I had to pay for napkins that must have been made of pure gold considering how much they cost—my mother gave that man advice that has resulted in a scheduled and weekly torture session for me ever since.
"Good marriages require you to be on the same page," she told him. "So I'd suggest you pick one night a week to have a planning session where you can talk about what you have going on over the next seven days, schedule quality time, and discuss any areas where your relationship might need work."
Well, Skylar what's his name frickin loved this idea. And the next thing I knew, a recurring event was added to our shared calendar on Sunday nights. "Companionship Inventory."
Skylar had just learned this phrase from some absolute monster of a person who decided to start teaching him Mormon lingo so Skylar could slip it into conversations with me at random. Within just the few weeks before this, he had told me "the Holy Ghost goes to bed at midnight" and to "return with honor" when I left the house. But none of his new phrases caused me as much immediate emotional pain as "companionship inventory."
For the uninitiated, "companionship inventory" is a thing Mormon missionaries do on a regular basis. It's essentially the activity my mother proposed we try. A companionship of Mormon missionaries assigned to be together at all times sits down and talks about the schedule and then they have a heart-to-heart about any problems going on in the missionary companionship.
If you mention the words "companionship inventory" to anyone who ever served a Mormon mission, the vast majority of those people will immediately start experiencing an eye twitch.
Pretty much everyone who has had to do it has at least one horror story. Like when one of my companions asked me if I was gay and attracted to him and I was like "NO and HELL NO" when really the answer was "obviously yes and HELL NO." (Lots of hygiene issues). And then I had to spend the next ten weeks pretending to be totes masc and way into sports games so as to convince him I was telling the truth.
So when my husband, the future mother of my kidney stones, decided to put "Companionship Inventory" on our shared calendar, telling me that we were going to follow my mother's advice, I suddenly became a 19-year-old closeted Mormon missionary in far western Ukraine with a haircut that I describe now as "British Presbyterian lesbian from the 90s."
This time in Strangerville, how was your Insurrection Day? Meg and Eli discuss it. And Eli shares a story about what it felt like to close out 2020.
Story
A New Kind of Peace, by Eli McCann (music by Our Friendly Beasts)
Production by Eli McCann & Meg Walter
~It Just Gets Stranger
Ugh. I loved my mission. I'm well-adjusted and don't really have much if any baggage from my mission. I know people who legitimately have PTSD from their missions. I don't. And yet I feel COMPLETELY TRIGGERED when I hear "companionship inventory."
ReplyDeleteI have a feeling I could pull them off if I went through it now, with the tools I've learned from a psych degree, a law degree, and 8 years of experience mediating, but as a 19-year-old those were the most painful, counterproductive, hellish wastes of time. Bless you for putting your shoulder to the wheel, as it were, and pushing along.
Spit my drink out at "the future mother of my kidney stones."
ReplyDeleteLoved. " a haircut that I describe now as "British Presbyterian lesbian from the 90s." " because when I saw that picture I first thought, I wonder who that man girl is?? Sorry....maybe not sorry 🤣
ReplyDeleteMy eye was already twitching from the moment I read the title and so I LOLed when I got to the "eye twitching" part. It is true. And I loved my mission. And I loved my companions. Except one. Hence the twitch. Nobody else ever made me do a companionship inventory except that one.
ReplyDeleteBTW, my husband and I do that same thing but we call it family council. Is that a better option?
I feel like family counsel would make me feel like I’m about to be disciplined. But, yeah. It’s probably better.
DeleteWe call ours "weekly planning", if you're taking alternate suggestions! (We used to call it family planning hahaha).
DeleteSo happy you're doing it! It's a good thing! If you fail to plan you plan to fail. Another one for you...I could embroider it on a pillow for you....so SKYLAR could put it on the couch. LOLOL
ReplyDeleteMom
XOXOXOXOXO
I love this. I need to do this. Once you have kids you'll appreciate this. We never do this and we really should because our biggest fights are about scheduling things. Thank you, Eli's mom, for this great idea.
ReplyDeleteI never served a mission, but my eye still twitches when I hear companionship inventory!! As a 19 year old I got engaged, but eventually the guy called it off. It was a messy breakup and neither of us handled it well, but some part of it included a lengthy discussion about all the things that he didn’t like so much about me/my personality/my spirituality/how messy my dorm room was. I was talking it over with a friend afterward and they said “Wow he just had a Companionship Inventory with you....?” And I’ve mentally labeled it as such ever since. Haha!
ReplyDeleteWhat an awesome husband! Lucky you! (Sorry not sympathetic, I think it's a good idea, but I know my husband would never go for it).
ReplyDelete