Saturday, August 7, 2004
The wedding day of our friends,
Corey and Laura. It started with a modestly early-morning Cincinnati wake-up,
since we had to drive to Chicago to attend the festivities. We were going to
shower at the hotel when we got there, so we went pretty much from bed to car.
After napping until Indianapolis, Christa was eager to discuss all the things
we could about our wedding. I’m certain we covered about everything. She was
also excited to see how Corey and Laura’s would turn out, now that she was so
up to date on wedding style. Neither one of us was fully prepared for what we
would find when we got there. I may have been slightly better disposed to
absorb and deal with it.
We arrived safely and checked in.
We cleaned and groomed. We went through the routine.
“Which shoes? Hair up or hair down?
Did you bring the gift? Did you remove the price tag?” Christa asked.
They come that fast, and you must
always be on alert. It is easy to misfire a response and get yourself in
trouble. Surprisingly, I did just that.
“Yes, I even gave the tissue paper
some pizzazz and signed the card for us,” I replied regarding the gift.
I
had demonstrated artistry and initiative.
“You signed my name!” she
exclaimed, stepping out from in front of the bathroom mirror.
I sensed danger, not sure of its
nature. “Of course. It’s from both of us,” I replied.
Reaffirmed
unity. I thought I had really accomplished something.
“No. Now it’s from you and your
fiancée, who didn’t care enough to sign the card herself. They are going to
hate me.”
Internal
alarms go off.
“I can…”
“It’s too late. Just remember that
I try and make my friends like you,” she replied, returning to the bathroom.
I was not sure whether she was
referring to my actions causing dislike—or whether her friends really didn’t
like me.
Are you getting the feeling that
this eventually became a fantastic stress-free day? How could you not? Let’s
continue, shall we?
We arrived at the church, meeting
and greeting friends along the way. We were seated.
“Do you like this church?” she
asked.
“Yes, it’s very nice,” I replied.
“Do you like it better than our
church?” she asked, not for knowledge but for reassurance.
“No,” I stated definitively.
First, don’t ever like someone
else’s something better than yours. No matter how obviously the statement
favors the alternative, you must stand by her. If her dream wedding isn’t your
dream wedding, then you’d better make it yours. If she favors it, Purple
Passion in Dixie Cups beats champagne hands down. This is a wedding-planning
helpful hint that really should be used every day of your life. When the
question starts with “Would you rather,” be sure to go with the option that
relates to her, and don’t spend too long thinking it over. She may compare
winning the lottery to eating her burnt grilled-cheese sandwich. Just reach for
the milk and dig in.
We made trivial small talk in our
pew. The ceremony began.
“Those bridesmaid dresses are just
like mine, only they’re scarlet instead of merlot, and they have spaghetti
straps and a slightly different design,” Christa said.
“They are not really the same
then,” I stated.
It is a bit selfish to want your
friends’ wedding to be lovely, yet have yours be slightly better. But remember—this
is war, perhaps a cold war, but a war nonetheless.
“But did you look at the bouquets?
That is the style I wanted, and there is no greenery, like I want. We need to
add flowers to ours,” she said.
The entrance of the bride was upon
us, so we whispered a bit.
“Ooh, that’s a good song. It’s not
my song, but that’s a good song. She looks beautiful. I like her dress. Do you
like her dress?” she asked.
“Yes, it looks lovely.”
“Better than mine?”
“I haven’t seen yours.”
“Good. I’m just testing you. She
has my bouquet too. Only mine will be slightly darker.”
We respectfully observed the rest
of the ceremony. I did notice that they had some churchly person presiding over
the whole thing. I wonder where that idea
came from. We exited the church, milled around, and did the send off. A
small group of friends headed to a bar to pass the time, prior to the cocktail
hour and reception. Christa and I engaged in small talk and regained a resting
heart rate. I believe we had remained competitive, thus far. We headed back to
the hotel for the cocktail hour.
As we approached the designated
room, we spotted the frame. Yes, the Pottery Barn with wide matting, perfect
for signatures frame. And they had
put it on an easel resting on the floor. Damn
you two. Apparently we aren’t the
only ones who get the Pottery Barn catalog, even though they print it with our
name on it. And they put a picture in the middle of it, of them. Of all the
people in the world, they chose themselves. Look at them all smiling and happy.
They are laughing at us.
“We are putting ours up on the
table, and we are going to use a black-and-white picture,” Christa said.
She had begun to reestablish the
subtle distinctions that would win the war. The frame had been resting on the
floor, leaning against our dining room wall for months. If we had only saved
the receipt, we could have proven we were the winners, the originals. We should
have dated and notarized our idea list, then had our patent attorney fax it to
their planning headquarters, back in April. That would have prevented such
blatant acts of infringement.
At that point, we needed a stiff
drink. I am going to say “we” a lot
during this passage, because “we” are a team, each with our own strengths and
weaknesses. And “we” share a desire to win this challenge of superior style and
uniqueness.
As I reached the bar, I saw a small
framed print of their specialty cocktails, with cute little names. Why are you punishing us, Oh Lord? We
were the ones with a specialty cocktail. Yes, a specialty cocktail. They have four. Not only are we copying, we
apparently aren’t very good at it, since we were only planning for one. I
almost refused to drink them, but quickly thought better of that plan.
I turned from the bar, specialty
cocktails in hand.
“Is that a goddamned slideshow?”
I may have said that out loud.
Across the room, running ever so innocently on a TV monitor on a rolling cart,
was a slideshow with, you guessed it, pictures of them growing up and dating
each other. It made me sick. I bet, if I had walked over there, the slideshow
would have been accompanied by some wonderful, loving musical tracks, perhaps
some of their favorites. I wished I had eaten something unhealthier that day,
so I could run crossing patterns in front of the monitor, strategically passing
gas to deter anyone from the vicinity.
A couple of specialty cocktails
into socializing as well I can, we got the dimming-of-the-lights warning to
head to a different room for dinner and dancing. Two rooms? Aren’t you a couple of fancy britches? We walked up or
down a flight of stairs to arrive at the guest-tag table, where we learned we
were sitting at Atlanta, Georgia. Little boy and girl genius had named their
tables after places that meant something to them. Who reads these bridal magazines and only uses all the good ideas?
I bet they will type up a cute little explanation of Atlanta as well.
We moped over to our table, nodding
to a couple of people as we went. We arrived, and they had centerpieces of
flowers floating in a glass bowl with some accent candles. And look, an
explanation of Atlanta, Georgia. Apparently, it’s where they conceived of the
plan to have a wedding just like ours.
“That’s my centerpiece idea. We are
planning the same wedding. We have to postpone, because we need to change
everything,” Christa said.
We had hit bottom. No one wants to
attend the same wedding over again, and we weren’t going to give the contingent
of twenty-odd mutual friends a chance to do just that in six weeks.
“There is not a chance I am prolonging
the planning process,” I said.
“Then we should have gotten married
in July,” she replied.
“We are forty-three Knot checklist
items behind schedule now. There is no way we could have done this in July.”
“Then you better get me something
to drink.”
I headed over for some more
specialty cocktails. Then I saw it, an ice sculpture that Laura had designed,
that you poured drinks through to chill them. It was standing about five feet
tall on the bar.
I bowed and said, “Point given.”
We are not even going to try and
top that. I may be able to configure a beer bong to incorporate a cowbell
somehow, but I’m not touching the ice sculpture. How did we miss the section on mocking gestures of excessive grandeur? Now
it was our wedding, only better.
I returned to our seats with the
drinks. Christa had begun to recap all of the similarities to other members of
our table and was receiving kind words of encouragement. The problem was that,
even if other people didn’t remember, Christa would, and that was the issue.
At some point later in the evening,
they rolled the cake out onto the dance floor to do the ceremonial cutting. Could it possibly be white, stacked, with
ribbons around each layer, and flowers on it? Yes it could.
“That’s our cake,” she said.
“It is similar to the cake we
haven’t ordered yet but think we want,” I replied.
“We really have to start over. I
don’t want anything like this.”
“Seriously, if your dream wedding
is similar to hers, that is not a bad thing. You just have similar taste.”
“But she got to go first. Now it
looks like we are doing the same exact thing,” she said, frustrated.
“Our male friends won’t notice,
that I can promise you. The females have to know that you can’t plan a wedding
in six weeks, and some of your plans, if similar, had to have been already in
place at this point.” I tried to calm her.
“I don’t want our wedding to be
similar to anyone’s.”
This is the ideal: nothing like
anything that has ever been done, yet better than anything anyone has ever
seen, on your first try.
“You forget we have a secret
weapon,” I said, trying to be energetic.
“If you say anything about you
being a wonderful fiancée, it’s not the time.”
“No. It’s Mr. Puddy, but thanks for
your vote of confidence. People put our Save the Dates on their refrigerators,
because of the power of the Pu. We shall use this power to our advantage.”
“You’re not really helping any.”
She was frustrated. And I was
trying my best methods of distraction and diversion.
“If that DJ starts playing dance
music, I will walk right out of here!”
He did, but I stayed. We got our
dance on and eventually headed back to our room, as the reception closed down.
As we lay in bed, she reminded me again that she really wanted our wedding to
be unique. I told her that they can’t change theirs now, and we have six weeks
to make improvements. Mr. Puddy and I would hole up in the office and have some
intense strategy sessions. I guaranteed that everyone would know it was our
wedding. I told her that she had my heart, until it ceases to beat, and my soul
until the end of time. She liked that, and we made a note to include it in our
vows. I think she slept after that, although my specialty-cocktail-induced
slumber probably prevented me from registering any restlessness from her.
Postmortem: now that our day has
passed, we can reflect lovingly on both ceremonies. Corey and Laura had a
beautiful wedding and reception, as you would expect from two obviously stylish
and elegant people who unknowingly stole so many great ideas from us. However,
we did falsify our documents so that our ten-year anniversary party will be two
weeks before theirs. Suckers!
- Drew Lloyd
From "Will You?" to "I Do.": A Groom's Tale of Survival
- Drew Lloyd
From "Will You?" to "I Do.": A Groom's Tale of Survival
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