So a brief background on me & FI. We were off & on for the first 3 years of dating. He was always the one to leave me (no cheating or anything terrible was involved...just young and couldnt figure out what he wanted). The last time we split up he ended up meeting somebody else and getting married because he was going into the navy & she wanted to go with him. They weren't right for eachother and he was still in love with me....they ended up getting married but divorced soon after. It broke my heart that he got married, even knowing BEFORE the wedding that he was still in love with me. Anyways...we've now been together 4 years and living together majority of that time. We couldn't be any happier.
There is a video game called "Braid" that has a storyline in it that FI has always liked because of our past. I'm just not sure if this will potray to other what WE see in it. We take from it: how important forgivness & learning from mistakes is. How forgiving is an important part to every successful relationship.
We're scared it might more point to our past "baggage" and be more depressing. Or make FI look like a bad guy or something (though everybody at the wedding knows our story and love FI). Anyways.... serious opinions are welcome, even if you think it would be absolutley TERRIBLE for a wedding lol
Tim is off on a search to rescue the princess. She has been snatched by a horrible and evil monster.
This happened because Tim made a mistake.
Not just one. He made many mistakes during the time they spent together, all those years ago. Memories of their relationship have become muddled, replaced with wholesale, but one remains clear: the Princess turning sharply away, her braid lashing at him with contempt.
He knows she tried to be forgiving, but who can just shrug away a guilty lie, a stab in the back? Such a mistake will change a relationship irreversibly, even if we have learned from the mistake and would never repeat it. The Princess's eyes grew narrower. She became more distant.
Our world, with its rules of causality, has trained us to be miserly with forgiveness. By forgiving too readily, we can be badly hurt. But if we've learned from a mistake and become better for it, shouldn't we be rewarded for the learning, rather than punished for the mistake?
What if our world worked differently? Suppose we could tell her: "I didn't mean what I just said," and she would say: "It's okay, I understand," and she would not turn away, and life would really proceed as though we had never said that thing? We could remove the damage but still be wiser for the experience.
Tim and the Princess lounge in the castle garden, laughing together, giving names to the colorful birds. Their mistakes are hidden from each other, tucked away between the folds of time, safe.
126 Invited

37 Ready to Rock!

9 Party Poopers

80 Can't find the mailbox

