Susan makes her home in the far west mountains of NC with her husband and six children. Originally from South Florida, she sees symbolism from oceanside. Deviating from the pearl as the great prize, she seeks it's source, the oyster. To her, people are like oysters. Not always pretty, hard at work, sometimes in great pain, wrapping their art in nacre and sacrifice. Most oysters don't even produce pearls. They exist for the better of their environment, cleansing marshland so others may enjoy the beauty of their surroundings.
In
your eyes, the light the heat...I see the doorways to a thousand churches.
Forget "The Notebook." The
movie "Say Anything" is the one that taps the sap for me. Peter Gabriel's song,
"In Your Eyes" makes the movie, or does the movie make the song? Or is it John
Cusack's portrayal of Lloyd Dobbler that just melts my heart? I guess it's the
whole thing put together. Maybe it's the notion that Lloyd reminds me of Rob.
His girlfriend in the movie, Diane Court, reminds me of me,
minus her lustrous auburn hair and Honor Society medals.
So in honor of our 25th wedding
anniversary, I post these scenes set to the song, which haunts and brings me
back to 1987, even though the movie came out in 1989. The clothes, music, and
cultural pulse of our generation is portrayed well, one year before our first
child was born.
Diane and Lloyd were approaching
high school graduation. Rob and I met in our junior year of college. We married
soon after finishing undergrad in 1987.
Lloyd's goal in life is to be
Diane's one and only. His unassumming humor, gentility, and love win her
over. That's pretty much how it was with Rob and me. Rob wasn't just another
guy. Lloyd's friends, (who are girls) advise him, "You're not a guy. The world
is full of guys. Be a man."
The strained relationship that
Diane had with her father resembled the struggles I had with my Dad. Different,
but similar. The endearing part is how Lloyd supports without invading her space
or manipulating. He serves as a leaning post when Diane is strong, and even when
she rejects Lloyd, he hangs in there when she unadmittedly needs him the
most.
Yea, we
had a short break up. Rob says it was six weeks. I say it was two. Nevertheless,
we figured out that we couldn't live without each other.
Diane's window is open. She,
restless lying on her bed, hearing the lyrics, "and all my instincts, they
return, and the grand facade, so soon will burn...without the noise, without my
pride, I reach out from the inside."The classic scene of Lloyd holding the
boombox over his tall body, playing "In Your Eyes" from a cassette tape, is
totally Rob. What guts! What heart. By the way,(taking a stab at what make his
car is), I love the old Malibu Cutlass.
Lloyd teaches Diane how to drive
a stick shift. I already knew how to do that, but the instructional portion of
the movie is cute. Diane is at ease with Lloyd's gentle guidance. He isn't
patronizing in machismo. He just wants to be with her. Their affection is at
once natural and desperate.
Lloyd says his main talent is
being in love with Diane. That's how it lasts 25 years. In terms of being
married to me? Rob is good at it.
And during takeoffs and
landings, he still holds my hand.
1 comment:
I LOVE this..and John Cusack and Ione Skye and Peter Gabriel and by extension you and Rob! And I picture them holding hands and waiting the 11 minutes almost every time I fly (I think he tells her most accidents happen in the first 11 minutes!)
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