After thirty-seven years of marriage, Edna knew Harold better than she knew the inside of her own purse—which was saying something, because her purse was a chaotic museum of old receipts, loose buttons, cough drops, and a lipstick she hadn’t worn since 1994.
Harold, on the other hand, knew Edna’s routines so well that he could predict her next move without looking up from his chair. Dinner at five. News at six. Complaints about the neighbors by seven. Snoring by eight.

Every night. Like clockwork.
It wasn’t that Edna didn’t love him. She did. Deeply. But love, she’d learned over the years, didn’t prevent boredom. It just made you more creative in how you dealt with it.
That evening was particularly warm. One of those sticky summer nights where the air felt thick enough to chew. The old fan rattled in the corner of the bedroom like it was reconsidering all its life choices, pushing warm air in slow, useless circles.
Edna stood at the ironing board in the middle of the room, pressing Harold’s shirts with mechanical precision. The board had been there so long it felt like a permanent piece of furniture—an unwanted third wheel in their marriage.
Harold lay sprawled on the bed, half-watching the late news, half-dozing. The glow of the television reflected off his glasses as he muttered about politicians and the price of tomatoes.
Edna finished a shirt, folded it sharply, and stacked it on the chair. She sighed.
Not a dramatic sigh. Not yet. Just the kind of sigh that comes from decades of repetition.
She set the iron upright, reached for a cigarette—one of the few habits she refused to quit despite everyone’s lectures—and lit it. She leaned against the ironing board like a movie star from another era, smoke curling around her head.
Then she smiled.
A slow, mischievous smile.
“Harold,” she said casually, as if asking about the weather, “shall we try a different position tonight?”
The effect was immediate.
Harold’s eyes snapped open. His hand trembled—not from excitement, but from pure, unfiltered fear.
Different position?
His mind raced.
Was this about exercise? Yoga? God help him, Pilates? His back still hadn’t recovered from the Great Gardening Incident of ’08, when Edna had insisted he “just twist a little” while pulling weeds and he’d been unable to stand upright for three days.
He swallowed hard.
“Well… uh… sure, Edna,” he said cautiously. “What did you have in mind?”
Edna leaned back, exhaled smoke dramatically like a Hollywood starlet who’d seen too much of the world, and said:
“How about you stand by the ironing board while I sit on the sofa and fart proudly into the cushions like royalty?”
There was a long pause.
The fan rattled. The iron hissed softly. Somewhere outside, a dog barked.
Harold blinked.
Once.
Twice.
“Well,” he finally said, adjusting his glasses, “as long as I don’t have to fold the fitted sheets.”
He paused, serious as a judge.
“That’s where I draw the line.”
The Unspoken Rules of Long Marriage
Marriage, Edna often thought, was less about romance and more about unspoken agreements.
You learn early on which topics to avoid. Which buttons not to push. Which bodily noises are acceptable before breakfast and which require an apology.
In the early years, they’d tried to be polite. Too polite. Harold would cough to cover a sound. Edna would pretend not to notice smells that could strip paint.
By year twenty, they’d stopped pretending.
By year thirty-seven, they treated bodily functions like weather events—sometimes inconvenient, sometimes impressive, always inevitable.
Edna sat on the sofa, settled into the cushions with deliberate ceremony. Harold shuffled over to the ironing board, hands behind his back, standing at attention like a soldier awaiting orders.
“Ready?” she asked.
“As I’ll ever be,” he said.
What followed was not romantic. It was not graceful. It was not dignified.
But it was honest.
And for some reason, they both burst out laughing so hard that Edna had to wipe tears from her eyes and Harold had to sit down before his knees gave out.
Love Without Illusion
Later, as they lay in bed—Harold already drifting toward sleep, Edna staring at the ceiling—she thought about how strange love was.
Young people thought love was fireworks. Passion. Drama.
But real love, she decided, was being able to joke about farts after nearly four decades and still feel comfortable.
It was knowing that the person next to you had seen you at your worst—flu, bad haircuts, questionable fashion phases—and stayed anyway.
It was laughter when dignity was long gone.
Harold snored softly, not quite like a broken lawnmower tonight. More like a slightly damaged leaf blower.
Edna smiled.
“Goodnight, Harold,” she whispered.
He snorted in his sleep.
And somehow, that felt perfect.
The Moral Nobody Talks About
If there was a lesson in their ridiculous evening, Edna supposed it was this:
Marriage doesn’t survive on perfection.
It survives on acceptance.
On humor.
On knowing when to let go of expectations and just enjoy the absurdity.
After all, anyone can love someone at their best.
But standing by an ironing board while your wife farts into the sofa like royalty?
That takes commitment.