I always wanted a white wedding with just the right flowers,
the perfect dress, and Wagner’s bridal chorus ringing through the air as I
walked down the aisle of a beautiful church filled with loved ones. Just the
notion of planning such a wedding filled me with excitement and joy. I finally
had a chance to plan that wedding several years ago. The dress was lovely. The
flowers were stunning. I even made my own invitations. However, the marriage
wasn’t nearly as pleasant as everything that came before. It shattered many
expectations and the perfection of my wedding day quickly faded.
The courthouse where we were married. |
I still understand when friends spend months planning their
weddings, buried in magazines and invitation samples. Lavish weddings are
wonderful events that bring friends and family together for one of the best
purposes on earth: uniting two people in love. I could never argue with a celebration of love.
However, I learned a very important lesson about weddings between
my first and my last. It’s not the wedding that matters, it’s the marriage. My current marriage, solemnized in a courthouse without the least bit of satin or music,
is happy, healthy, and romantic. Who wouldn’t rather have a great marriage than
a perfect wedding day?
5 comments:
YES! Christy.... and lovely to hear your are in such a great partnership. As with everything, it is the context that matters most. If the marraige sucks, memories and feelings about the wedding are probably closely related.
I totally agree it is the relationship that matters not the ceremony. I'm not a big fan of big fancy weddings although I will confess to watching "Say Yes to the Dress" both the New York and Atlanta versions and some of the dresses are awesome.
But bottom line, I'd get married in a burlap sack and bare feet if that guaranteed me a great marriage.
Thanks, Deanne and Judith, for your comments! I'm glad to find some agreement about the fact that the true value of any wedding is measured only by the relationship that comes afterwards. Longevity and devotion is what most of us want out of that one beautiful day.
You nailed it, Christy! Great blog.
Christy, I agree. It's the marriage and not the wedding. I'm glad you've found happiness.
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