reclaiming wife

Archive for October, 2011

I got this excellent email from the now happily married Jessica two weeks ago. I couldn't let such a good thank you note to all of you, about what we crack on about every day, lie unpublished. So, All The Things, consider yourself on notice:

My wedding is a week from today. I was running around today feeling consumed by WIC-promoted Consumerism... thinking, Oh My God, I need to buy a new dress for my rehearsal dinner and new shoes and we should buy everyone in the wedding party more stuff to thank them and what about a cute hanger, don't I need a cute hanger for my dress?! And, and, and....

Anyway, all of a sudden I had a moment of clarity. I turned to my fiancé, who was looking (rightfully) frightened, god bless him, and said, "We don't need All The Things." We already have All The Things that matter.

We hugged and went home. We're about to enjoy a nice bottle of wine.

All in all, my fiancé, our bank account, and I thank you, Team Practical.

P.S. When I emailed Jessica to ask if her wedding survived no cute hanger, she said, "It sure did.  As did the filthy dress (thanks to amazing second line through NOLA's French quarter). It's funny how the joy is the only detail that matters..." Wedding Graduate post coming soon.

Photo from the APW Flickr stream by Emily Takes Photos

Long time readers will remember Manya (who now writes at Safari Mama) from her Wedding Graduate post and her super brave post on the wedding she should have called off. Today's post is in Manya's usual frank and funny voice, and it's about the difficulties of knowing you want to marry someone before they are ready to marry you. When she sent me the first draft, I giggled all the way through it. I, too, once had a fake Kn*t account with a fake wedding date and read wedding magazines on the Subway "to relax." But Manya clearly hadn't let herself off the hook for the way she'd reacted to the cultural and emotional pressures of the pre-engaged state. So we talked about the ways we redeem ourselves through planning a wedding and building a life together, and she finally let go. So today's post is not just for the pre-engaged. It's for all of us who need to forgive ourselves, to finally laugh at ourselves, and get back to the hard work of loving ourselves, crazy behavior and all.

The word mortify has its roots in the word death. Over the ages it has meant “to kill” and “to bring about death,” and now it has been reigned in significantly to mean “to humble or embarrass.” Never have I understood this word better than the moment Brian and I officially entered “The Pre-Engaged State,” a profoundly awkward space that we inhabited for about eleven months.

I remember the exact moment I knew Brian was it. I was nestled in a pit of sand and we were talking about what we like to cook. I gazed up at the sky and felt something inside of my chest click into place, like a lock. Now he tells me that he sensed something had changed, and had thought to himself, "Oh, thank God. She’s crossed over too."

I started thinking about getting married far too soon for somebody who was not long off of a difficult divorce and who should have been worried about rebound. But my head was no match for my heart, so think I did. And dream. And surf websites. And open a secret file in my computer where I kept pictures of engagement rings. I might have sent one or two to my sister, in case Brian ever sought technical assistance. I might have spun the pantone wedding color wheel once or (a million times) twice. I registered on The Kn*t with a fictional wedding date. I mooned over Snippet & Ink. I made a virtual fool of myself, but no one was there to see. This went on for two years, and as our relationship grew better and better (not to mention older), I felt less foolish about it.

We traveled thousands of miles and had a Christmas together at my parents’, then two. I met his mom and stepdad, father and stepmom. I got to know and love his sons, and them me. Then we were at the beach and talked about whether it would be a nice place for a wedding. I told him about an idea for invitations—for someone who might be getting married. On our third Christmas together, our divorces were behind us, our relationship was thriving and (without ever talking to him), I became convinced he was going to seek my parents' blessing when we visited them over the holiday. Thus, I gave myself permission to (secretly) unleash my inner Bride, and using the excuse that they don’t have all the good wedding stuff in Kenya, I bought every single bridal magazine I could find. While Christmas shopping, I also sneaked into the local David’s Bridal to try on some dresses—just for fun.

While at David's Bridal, I felt sheepish, but excited and giddy. I tried on dresses, and juiced it up with the sales girl. I stretched the truth, and said Brian and I were getting engaged over the holidays. But I told the truth about our names, and I signed the guestbook and registered my favorites on a wish list, too happy about that short, cute little affordable dress to think to change a digit in my home phone number. By the time Brian arrived (a few days after I did), I had hidden the magazines under the bed. I didn’t want him to feel pressured, or let on that I had intuited his secret.

Then, two nights after my stealth visit to David's Bridal, as we all worked in my mom’s fragrant kitchen preparing a huge family meal, the phone rang and Brian answered.

“Hello, this is David’s Bridal. We’re calling to do a customer service follow up with Manya who was here visiting us this week. Would she be available?”

Brian summoned me to the phone with a quizzical look; “Honey? David’s Bridal for you? You were there this week?” Unfortunately, the woman on the other end overheard the endearment and after he said, “She’s coming” gushed, “Oooooh, you must be Brian! Congratulations on your upcoming Nuptials!”

As he handed me the phone, he whispered, “You marrying someone named Brian?” My heart stopped for a minute, but in the bustle of a Christmas kitchen I recovered by saying, “What? God, these telemarketers will say anything to get you on the phone these days!” During dinner my cheeks burned, but the light was dim, and I was wearing a turtleneck. By the time pie rolled around, all seemed forgotten.

He gave me a tiny box for Christmas that contained a beautiful…(!)… pair of diamond earrings; I bravely mustered the enthusiasm that the lavish gift deserved. A few days later, when it was time for Brian and the boys to go, my excitement had chilled like a post-Christmas house. Unless he had dragged my parents into the spidery basement where the water heater lives—and that is not how he rolls—Brian clearly had not asked for my hand. I took comfort in the knowledge that my inner Bridal frenzy was, at least, my secret.

As Brian packed his bags, I sat with him and cried a little and blamed it on the impending separation. I miss you already, I said as I swallowed my tears over the lump of disappointment in my throat. Oh, baby, me too, he said, as a roll of socks slipped out of his hands and rolled under the bed. He bent his 6’6” frame down and rummaged around under the bed, then cackled as he pulled out a glossy pile of magazines, “Oh dude, I think I just found somebody’s stash.”

Continue reading Mortification and the Pre-Engaged State

Sponsored Post

This summer, when we were lining up photographers to volunteer their time to shoot two LGBTQ weddings in New York for our Yay New York Event, we emailed a few non-New York APW Sponsors on a whim. I mean, we didn't really think anyone would want to take a day off work to travel to New York to work for us for free, right? WRONG. Two seconds after we sent that email, Callie of calin + bisous photo in Boston emailed us, "YES YES YES! I'M IN!." (That's a direct quote). (Hint: they travel affordably.)

And I was pretty excited to get to meet Callie, that's for sure. But then Yay New York happened, and Callie and her husband Alessandro showed up to shoot the girls' wedding, and I'm not even kidding you, it was like a revelation. To the point that when the exhausted staff stepped out onto the still warm sidewalk at 1:30 am after cleaning up, there was a pause, and then I said, "So Callie. WHAT WAS THAT?" And there was a immediate chorus of, "I knowwwwww...." (Fact: Callie does not know this story. I might have just embarrassed her.)

So what to say about calin + bisous photo of Boston? Well first, I should mention that she shoots weddings for just $2,000, which is almost criminally low, given how excellent she is. Leanne, one of the Yay New York Brides said, "Callie and San were just so easy breezy the whole day. We both felt initially self-conscious when we got there and saw all those photographers, but Callie instantly put us at ease. We didn't feel pressure to pose or act like anything but ourselves. Her energetic, easygoing charm was contagious. She did a great job of being creative with us (not the same shot in the same background just switching out the people) without making us do ridiculous things like hold props or do weird unnatural poses like some photographers tend to do these days. Plus, she was great at wrangling our very excited families after we may have had a little too much champagne. She was unobtrusive, but somehow always right there getting the shot."

Callie also is a trained cellist, she says, "Alright, I have another career besides photography. I love both so much that I can't call one my job. I'm also a cellist with a band called Flightless Buttress that tours on the east coast and plays in Cambridge very regularly. I am positive that both careers make me better at both careers." Maybe it's the music making her extra talented, but she's a gifted photographer who quietly shoots away, and then delivers the most amazing photos. But she and her husband are also these amazing PEOPLE, who will get in the mix with you, make you laugh, and generally just make you happy to be alive and want to be their best friends. Which is pretty good stuff, frankly.

I asked Callie to tell me why she likes working with APW couples, and she informed me that she actually has a whole business of only working with APW couples, and she loves it. BUT, she had more for me:

I love working with APW couples because they are so low key and happy. They don't care about bullsh*t; they never panic; they never even seem to stress out. They feed me; they make sure I'm okay; their families tell me I'm doing a great job. I could go on all day.

Recent experiences include: a running for sweetest dad on the earth; most "into it" groom that put shame to the whole "bridal" this "bridal" that (It should be groomal. Duh.); best dance parties ever, that we seem to always be invited to. And my personal favorite thing about APW couples: these couples find a perfect middle between two very distinct weddings of today—the very expensive, very formal weddings, or the adorable trendy weddings that sometimes include something I like to call "wedding dress up" (which brings into mind my favorite quote by Meg ever, "Your wedding is not a show"). APW couples have possibly trendy, possibly expensive, and always real, genuine parties to celebrate their love, their friends and their families.

On the photography note, this past summer of weddings blew my mind. I surprised myself, fully fell into a style I can call my own, and felt incredibly lucky to have so many people trust me during my first season of weddings. Thank you. I'll be back. I can't seem to get enough.

I feel the same way I do about small business as I did a year ago. Real people deserve real service. I go above and beyond because these guys go above and beyond for me. How could I not treat them as well as possible and work with them to give them everything they want?

So that is calin + bisous photo, people. And the photos. The photos. The photos themselves would be enough, except they come with a ball of amazing that I'm now lucky enough to call a friend. You'll love her. Promise.

PS. This post was written while listening to Callie's cello work with the Flightless Buttress. Go listen now. You're welcome.

We've had an intense week of discussion on APW. We've discussed second weddings, second weddings and loss, painful sex, and careers and relationships... and we've basked in the glee of the newest APW staff member Maddie, along with a crazy foggy beautiful wedding. So I'm thrilled to end the week with November Weddings and Anniversaries. Let's send huge love at the couples getting hitched and remember what it's all about with the anniversaries. Yay community!

Weddings:

Ruth and Tom, November 4th, 2011

Annie and Walt, November 5th, 2011; Blog: Nick and Nora Getting Married

Ben and Meg, November 9th, 2011

Nadine and Hunter, November 10th, 2011; Blog: Fox and Toad Design

Adria and Avi, November 12th, 2011; Blog: Meandering Ramblings...

Sophia (Denzi) and Tom, November 12th, 2011; Twitter: @sophiaplans

Hilary and Bob, November 19th, 2011; Twitter: @hcwoodward

Owen and Leigh Ann, November 19th, 2011 (Editors note: Congratulations from me you two!!)

Aimee and Dave, November 26th, 2011; Blog: The Honeymoon Diaries

Ashley and Courtnee, November 26th, 2011

And Anniversaries:

Mel and Ray, November 7th, 2009; Blog: Cupcake Friday Project

Cate and Nathaniel, November 8th, 2009; Blog: Project Subrosa; Twitter: @catesubrosa

Brett and Lisa (Giggles), November 14th, 2009; Blog: Random Giggles Continue reading November Weddings and Anniversaries

My maid of honor (MOH) and I have known each other for a number of years, as you'd probably assume.  And over the past few years, she has been dating Steve. Steve and I usually could get along fine, and we didn't have much trouble until a couple of years ago. My MOH and Steve moved in together with the MOH's son (her son has a different father and they share custody) around that time. Everything seemed fine at first until I started getting constant phone calls from my MOH. She'd be crying and telling me Steve was calling her and her son names, yelling and all around being nasty. As her friend, I'd try and give her advice and tell her to get out of the relationship and that she deserves better. She said she understood but didn't do anything about it. She was convinced she was obsessed with him, a few months later had a child with him and continued on the path she had been going since the beginning.  This was until she called me one day and asked me to help her get out of the relationship. After a long time spent convincing her, we decided to move her out of Steve's house. Police were involved as well as about five friends who shoved her things in boxes as quickly as possible to get her out. She moved into her mom's house and she still continued to talk to Steve. She tried to hide the fact she was dating Steve from me for a while and the cat eventually got out of the bag.
Now my question...  I know she'll want to bring Steve to my upcoming wedding. Steve has blamed the failure of the relationship partially on me and I'm sure he has a few nasty things he'd like to tell me. However, I don't believe this is going to deter him from coming to my wedding. The last time I saw him we were civil. But, his behavior at our wedding can either turn out alright or can turn out really badly. I have no idea. So, do I risk angering my friend (who will take offense to my request after she's spent a ton of time and money helping me with my wedding) and ask her to choose a different date? Or, do I risk it, make her happy upfront and see how it goes? I don't want him there. But, I also want my MOH at my wedding, and I'm afraid it would put a big dent in our friendship.

~J.

J., before I dive into your question, let me talk about bridal parties and dates. I'll meet you at the end of the post, okay?

If a member of your bridal party wants to bring date you don't like... well, there's not a lot you can do about it. Wanna know the best way to shatter a friendship and break up your bridal party? Tell one bridesmaid they can't bring a date and let another bring one. OR, you can let the bridesmaid bring a date, but just not the one she wants. If any of the bridal party gets a plus one, they all get a plus one. Yes, even your single bridesmaids. Trust your friends to not bring someone inappropriate or who hates you. You can let them in on how busy they'll be the day of the wedding and how you think their date will be bored, but in the end, short of flat-out banning their date and causing a ruckus, you'll just have to accept the situation and move on. Look, as much as I dislike the idea of a bridesmaid bringing a date who is not friends with the couple to a wedding, the "no ring, no bring" rule for the bridal party I've seen batted around wedding boards is worse. For those unfamiliar (I hope you all are blessedly unfamiliar), it's the idea that unless they are married or engaged, bridesmaids and groomsmen aren't allowed to bring a date. Unless the date is a terrible human being, you are not going to notice they are there.  (If they are a terrible human being, keep reading to J's advice.) If the idea of this date eating your canapés just tears you up inside, have a talk with your friend and explain to them why you'd rather them not be there. Just be prepared for the conversation to turn uncomfortable; you not wanting their date there is actually a judgement on their relationship, and that will be upsetting. Besides, isn't dictating their clothes, shoes, jewelry and hairstyle enough? (Kidding! Mostly.)

Now.  Back to J.: Continue reading Ask Team Practical: Bridal Party Dates

This morning, we introduced the newest member of the APW staff, Submissions Editor Maddie. Now that you guys are through your whirlwind of excitement (Who am I kidding? You're still excited!), Maddie is here with her first post as a staff member. Long time readers will remember her lazy girl wedding two years ago, and now she's back, writing about what she learned. She's writing about how sometimes we do need to sacrifice dreams for our relationships and how instead of that being anti-feminist, it can end up being the most empowering thing we ever do.

Growing up with my ill-paired parents, I got used to hearing conflicting messages as a kid. My mom and dad (separated well before I was born) disapproved of most of each others' parenting lessons, but there was one they could agree on: Getting married one day would be a perfectly fine option for me, so long as it didn't compromise my bright, shiny future.

It's not that getting married was a bad thing exactly—it's just not something I was ever supposed to aspire to. I had much bigger fish to fry. And if fate would have it that I should get married, I was not to let it hinder my bright, shiny plans for success (to become Jodie Foster if my dad had it his way; Oprah Winfrey if my mom had hers). Furthermore, it was made very clear that if I were to get married, my success would have to be despite that relationship, and most certainly not because of it.

I'd be like that surfer girl who kept surfing even after she got bitten by a shark; marriage could set me back temporarily, but it would never prevent me from realizing my greatness. (Holy swollen ego, Batman.)

So when I married Michael two years ago, that was very much where I stood with regards to marriage. Sure, I was in favor of being with Michael forever—that was an easy promise. But committing to another person and committing to a lifelong partnership are two very different beasts. Still, armed with my parents ideologies, I trudged onward in my dedication to have my cake and eat it too. (Oh and I was going to eat lots of cake. I might even eat all the cake. Watch out world!)

And for the first year of our marriage, I did just that. Michael and I built up a casual existence in Connecticut, eventually adopting a dog, settling into a cute downtown apartment close to the commuter rail, and sometimes doing things together on the weekends. On the flip side, I had a completely independent life in New York City, where I commuted two hours each morning to a Soho office to work 10-hour days at my, ahem, dream job in the entertainment industry for $14 an hour. It was perfect. I wasn't compromising my goals for domesticity. I wasn't sacrificing my dreams for a man. And I most certainly wasn't letting my marriage prevent me from becoming Tina Fey (eat that, parents). Sisters, I was doing it for myself.

But.

I also wasn't sleeping. Or making any money. Or seeing my husband. Ever.

Around our one-year anniversary, I broke. Continue reading Wedding Graduates Return: Maddie