When we pass by an old couple holding hands on a park bench or sharing a quiet meal at a café, we often smile at the sweetness of it. We might admire their closeness, even envy the ease with which they move around each other. But what we see is only the surface, a moment carved out of decades. What we don’t see is what makes that love remarkable.
We don’t see the silent nights when words became weapons and silence became shelter. We don’t see the tears they shed alone in separate rooms, the anger that surged in their chests, or the heartbreak of feeling misunderstood by the one person they trusted most. We don’t see the weight of responsibility, the exhaustion, the days that felt like survival instead of love.
But we also don’t see the decision to stay. Again and again. The countless times they reached out in the darkness, swallowing pride just to feel a familiar hand. The way they learned to speak gently after speaking too harshly. The way they apologized even when they weren’t fully in the wrong; not to win, but to heal.
Love, for them, is not roses and serenades. It is compromise. It is cooking dinner when you’re angry. It is folding laundry when you feel unappreciated. It is choosing not to bring up that one comment that still stings. It is building a life that no one else understands because no one else saw how many times it almost fell apart.
Their laughter now is lighter because they’ve cried together. Their eyes are softer because they’ve seen each other at their worst… and stayed. Their hands are worn, but they are strong from holding on through every storm.
We often praise young love for its spark. But old love, true, tested, and tender, is where the real miracle lies. It’s not about never hurting each other. It’s about refusing to let the hurt win.
The Lesson:
In a world quick to discard what’s broken, old couples remind us of something deeper: Love isn’t found, it’s forged. It’s not about the absence of struggle. It’s about showing up after the struggle and saying, “I still choose you.” Over and over again. That is where the real beauty lives.
They sold us a picture in glossy disguise,A life neatly wrapped with a bow on…
I’ve come to believe that if you want to understand human history properly, you don’t…
Darren wasn’t burned out in the dramatic sense where a man slams a laptop shut…
I swear I'm not going back at writing regularly about hockey, but as a long…
There’s an interesting pattern I’ve seen over the years, both in conversation and observation. People…
Arlene Dickinson is one of Canada’s most respected business leaders, known for her sharp insight,…