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OKNancy

(41,832 posts)
Sun Sep 10, 2017, 03:23 PM Sep 2017

A lovely excerpt from Hillary's book: I excerpted a part about her marriage [View all]

Hillary Clinton On Losing the 2016 Presidential Election & Her Marriage to Bill


https://www.vogue.com/article/hillary-clinton-memoir-election-marriage?mbid=social_twitter


We’ve been married since 1975. We’ve had many, many more happy days than sad or angry ones. I know some people wonder why we’re still together. I heard it again in the 2016 campaign: that “we must have an arrangement” (we do; it’s called a marriage); that I helped him become president and then stayed so he could help me become president (no); that we lead completely separate lives, and it’s just a marriage on paper now (he is reading this over my shoulder in our kitchen with our dogs underfoot, and in a minute he will reorganize our bookshelves for the millionth time, which means I will not be able to find any of my books, and once I learn the new system, he’ll just redo it again, but I don’t mind because he really loves to organize those bookshelves).

I don’t believe our marriage is anyone’s business. Public people should be allowed to have private lives, too. But I know that a lot of people are genuinely interested. Maybe you’re flat-out perplexed. Maybe you want to know how this works because you are married and would like it to last 40 years or longer, and you’re looking for perspective. I certainly can’t fault you on that.

I don’t want to delve into all the details, because I really do want to hold on to what’s left of my privacy as much as I can. But I will say this: Bill has been an extraordinary father to our beloved daughter and an exuberant, hands-on grandfather to our two grandchildren. I look at Chelsea and Charlotte and Aidan and I think, We did this. That’s a big deal.

He has been my partner in life and my greatest champion. He never once asked me to put my career on hold for his. He never once suggested that maybe I shouldn’t compete for anything—in work or politics—because it would interfere with his life or ambitions. There were stretches of time in which my husband’s job was unquestionably more important than mine, and he still didn’t play that card. I have never felt like anything but an equal. Bill is completely unbothered by having an ambitious, opinionated, occasionally pushy wife. In fact, he loves me for it.

Long before I thought of running for public office, he was saying, “You should do it. You’d be great at it. I’d love to vote for you.” He helped me believe in this bigger version of myself. Bill was a devoted son-in-law and always made my parents feel welcome in our home. Toward the end of my mother’s life, when I wanted her to move into our house in Washington, he said yes without hesitation. Though I expected nothing less, this meant the world to me. I know so many women who are married to men who—though they have their good qualities—can be sullen, moody, irritated at small requests, and generally disappointed with everyone and everything. Bill Clinton is the opposite. He has a temper, but he’s never mean. And he’s funny, friendly, unflappable in the face of mishaps and inconveniences, and easily delighted by the world—remember those balloons at the convention? He is fabulous company.

We’ve certainly had dark days in our marriage. You know all about them—and please consider for a moment what it would be like for the whole world to know about the worst moments in your relationship. There were times that I was deeply unsure about whether our marriage could or should survive. But on those days, I asked myself the questions that mattered most to me: Do I still love him? And can I still be in this marriage without becoming unrecognizable to myself— twisted by anger, resentment, or remoteness? The answers were always yes. So I kept going.

On our first date, we went to the Yale University Art Gallery to see a Mark Rothko exhibit. The building was closed, but Bill talked our way in. When I think about that afternoon—seeing the art, hearing the stillness all around us, giddy about this person whom I had just met but somehow knew would change my life—it still feels magical, and I feel happy and lucky all over again.

I still think he’s one of the most handsome men I’ve ever known. I’m proud of him: proud of his vast intellect, his big heart, the contributions he has made to the world. I love him with my whole heart. That’s more than enough to build a life on.


Much more at link.... go read it.

74 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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That is what marriage is all about..... CatMor Sep 2017 #1
Yes to your comment! Heartstrings Sep 2017 #2
That is a beautiful passage, Nancy. sheshe2 Sep 2017 #3
+++ Agree iluvtennis Sep 2017 #44
Just beautiful and heartbreaking for what this country has lost. MoonRiver Sep 2017 #4
No kidding! calimary Sep 2017 #32
+ a million or so! eom BlueMTexpat Sep 2017 #42
Thank you for sharing this. lapucelle Sep 2017 #5
Bing- 3catwoman3 Sep 2017 #46
!!! Alice11111 Sep 2017 #68
Well, ya see Scarsdale Sep 2017 #71
Bill Clinton, George Bush the elder, and George Bush younger, Jimmy Carter, Barack Obama, and even haveahart Sep 2017 #6
I'm in tears. I've been married since 1975. Nothing is livetohike Sep 2017 #7
Congrats, livetohike. kag Sep 2017 #60
This is beautiful. can't wait to read the book. Thanks for posting! n/t seaglass Sep 2017 #8
Bill is the lucky one. LakeArenal Sep 2017 #9
It's 41 years for us. So much of what she described calimary Sep 2017 #33
Wow just wow Lotusflower70 Sep 2017 #10
Really shows her human side. The more excerpts that are released (or the more people actually.... George II Sep 2017 #11
In her OWN words. Nobody else's. HER life. And she's shared it with us. nolabear Sep 2017 #12
An adult talking eloquently about deep, long-lasting love between adults in a real way. ehrnst Sep 2017 #13
That was great. Doreen Sep 2017 #14
Don't most religions teach about the power to forgive? volstork Sep 2017 #16
Good point. Doreen Sep 2017 #19
Many American Christians here, Volstork, and that's very insulting. Hortensis Sep 2017 #39
I agree with you 100%. volstork Sep 2017 #48
Oh, THOSE "Christians." They're easy to pick out also. :) Hortensis Sep 2017 #49
I'm glad. volstork Sep 2017 #56
It is our business oberliner Sep 2017 #22
Not the part between them. nolabear Sep 2017 #28
Agreed oberliner Sep 2017 #29
Which I don't. nolabear Sep 2017 #30
I agree with most of what you said. Ilsa Sep 2017 #61
Staying together ruined the haters narrative. That is what they are still so angry about. Boomerproud Sep 2017 #24
This Is Why We Should Be Able to Upvote Posts Leith Sep 2017 #27
Beautiful. I will have to get the book now! cpamomfromtexas Sep 2017 #15
This makes me even more eager to read the book. murielm99 Sep 2017 #17
What an inspiration! NurseJackie Sep 2017 #18
I did laugh at the run-on sentence about Bill reorganizing the bookshelves blaze Sep 2017 #20
Very moving and eloquent, and I believe every word she is saying. spooky3 Sep 2017 #21
That was lovely. Thank you. lucca18 Sep 2017 #23
After his presidency when she was a Senator, I saw him make a small talk to a class demigoddess Sep 2017 #25
Beautiful. k&r DesertRat Sep 2017 #26
She had me at "We've...." One of the loveliest excerpts of a book I've read. Thanks. nt Honeycombe8 Sep 2017 #31
Man, I need this book! Thanks for posting. Best thing I read today. Madam45for2923 Sep 2017 #34
Just beautiful. MLAA Sep 2017 #35
That is...just beautiful NastyRiffraff Sep 2017 #36
She is clearly thinks deeply MontanaMama Sep 2017 #37
That brought a few tears... Raster Sep 2017 #38
Mark Rothko ! I knew it! I just knew it !!! pangaia Sep 2017 #40
I always admired how she withstood adversity & hatred. Basic LA Sep 2017 #41
kick kentuck Sep 2017 #43
That is beautiful mcar Sep 2017 #45
I am not counting her out. dixiegrrrrl Sep 2017 #47
How nice to read this .... Shoonra Sep 2017 #50
One of the staff nurses at the peds office... 3catwoman3 Sep 2017 #51
Chelsea is so lucky to have such amazingly gifted, accomplished and loving parents onetexan Sep 2017 #52
I can believe all hats true I've always loved Bill Clinton blueinredohio Sep 2017 #53
Ditto at 42.5 with Mr. Barnes joanbarnes Sep 2017 #54
K&R. Very touching. Thanks for posting it. nt tblue37 Sep 2017 #55
ImWithHer&Him. oasis Sep 2017 #57
They would have made a great president and first "gentleman?" BigmanPigman Sep 2017 #58
Thank you for posting this Gothmog Sep 2017 #59
Guess I'm going to have to read her book PatSeg Sep 2017 #62
k and r with deepest thanks!! niyad Sep 2017 #63
Love this! Her book is generating such huge interest. She is still a force R B Garr Sep 2017 #64
I love this ismnotwasm Sep 2017 #65
great passage NewJeffCT Sep 2017 #66
While I do like Hillary - a lot, Bill is a god. SpankMe Sep 2017 #67
That's a nice excerpt. aikoaiko Sep 2017 #69
- Bigredhunk Sep 2017 #70
I read this aloud to my husband during a family visit to Trump supporters, Native Sep 2017 #72
I loved this - thank you for sharing. Justice Sep 2017 #73
the power of this excerpt is in the simplicity. love the part about the bookshelves. Justice Sep 2017 #74
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