I imagined a backyard spring wedding, my mother smiling, my dad on my arm walking down the aisle. Weโd dance to Ray Charlesโ โYou Are My Sunshineโ at the reception. Call it denial, or naivete, or even egoism to think the world would bend to my wishes, but thatโs not how itโs working out.
The wedding is still in April and still in my parentsโ backyard. Mom will, hopefully, still be smiling, and all of our loved onesโmore than I expectedโwill be there. But Dad wonโt be.
The last time I saw him was Nov. 4โ30 years to the hour of my birthโin South Dakota, the state where he took his first breath and where, that day, he took his last.
He and Mom had flown to Rapid City from their home in Mississippi to celebrate his 95-year-old auntโs birthday, a family reunion of sorts.
Heโd been diagnosed with lung cancer in April, and bone cancer followed. But heโd been feeling all right, he said. So he toured his childhood town and took a last look at the Badlands. The night before the party, he couldnโt catch his breath. Mom called the ambulance. Then she called me and my sister. A plane seemed too slow. We left Reno by car that afternoon, across the salt flats of Utah and deer-ridden roads of Wyoming, arriving the next day.
We walked into the intensive care unit. Dad was hooked to a respirator, a tube down his throat, but conscious. His blue eyes opened wide as we entered. I told him we were there, and that weโd be there as long as he needed us to be. I told him I loved him. He mouthed it back. The nurse gave him something to help him sleep. He slept for eight days.
My fiance, Grant, came midweek, the comfort he provided reminding me why Iโm marrying him. On Nov. 4, we walked into the room, and he could no longer contribute to his oxygen. Three different doctors said there was nothing more to do. My mom, sister, Grant and I sat with him and let him go.
I find it hard to separate any talk of my wedding from my father. I know the day will be a happy one. I will be busy and elated to see so many close, though rarely seen, friends. Grant and I will announce our intentions for all to hear, a special shared intimacy among those we love most. But I will, unavoidably, miss Dad.
Wedding books and magazines provide etiquette advice on everything from seating charts to planning with divorced parents. But nowhere have I found any good advice on planning a wedding when someone as close as a parent recently died. The only thing I could find was this disastrous advice from WedNet.com:
โIf your father passed away unexpectedly six months ago, any mention of him will be extremely upsetting to those who were close to him. In the case of a recent death, allusions should be as private as possible, invisible to the bulk of the guests: for example, leaving flowers on the grave after the ceremony, carrying something special in your bouquet (such as rosemary, which represents rememberance; or a white butterfly, the symbol of everlasting life), or reading a poem that was a favorite of his, without mentioning him by name. Anything more specific or prominent is overdoing it, risking hysterics and altering the focus of the wedding. If the death is far into the past, more is allowable.โ
If etiquette says to hide my dadโs memory because it may make people uncomfortable, my inclination is to say, โScrew etiquette.โ The affair wonโt turn into a memorial service full of โhysterics.โ It will be a good day. But there is no wishing away the gaping absence of my father.

After the rehearsal dinner, his photos will be there on the slideshow screen, along with everyone else important in shaping my life. Iโll toast my mom and my dad at the reception. And when the officiant asks, โWho gives this woman?โ Iโd like Mom to say, โHer father and I do.โ
Thereโve been times Iโve thought of postponing the whole affair. I could hold it closer to Reno so that I could plan it all and not stress out my mom, who is upset enough these days. But Dad knew my wedding plans. He had a hand in them, with ideas for the yard, the food. He could picture it in his mind. To change it now seems somehow a betrayal. So no matter how many alternative scenarios I develop, I keep coming back to the original plan. In his backyard, on the grass he installed, on the brick he laid, in the home he shared with my mom, I think it will feel more like heโs with us.
Maybe I should have known.
Death is always an imminent possibility when someone is diagnosed with cancer, especially the fast-moving small-cell carcinoma kind my father had. But heโd caught it early, went through chemo and radiation treatments, never coughed. โA little tiredโ was his only complaint.
Grant and I were engaged in September and set the date for April. I knew it was possible Dad wouldnโt be with us, but I was unwilling, even subconsciously, to accept that.
My mom tried to prepare me. When she and Dad visited us in Reno for his 63rd birthday in early October, she suggested I move up the wedding date. Like maybe to Thanksgiving.
This seemed crazy to me. Surely Dad would last until April. It was only six months away. And how could I plan a wedding in one-monthโs time? Even if I did, it would be obvious that the rush was because we were afraid Dad was going to die. He wouldnโt want my wedding day to be about that. But then, I wouldnโt want a wedding day without him.
I asked him later that day, trying to be nonchalant, โWhat do you think of the wedding date? Do you think itโd be better if it was a bit earlier?โ
He looked at me with sad eyes across the kitchen counter.
โNo, honey. You know what? No one knows whatโs going to happen. Go ahead with your plans.โ
I donโt know how my wedding day will go. I think it will be an excellent party. But โbittersweetโ will, no doubt, be an often-used word.
Thereโs a prevailing idea that any mention of sorrow on a wedding day is in bad taste, or worse, bad luck. But real life shows us that joy and pain are often mixed. Itโs a good thing for a couple about to commit themselvesโthe same phrase used for mental patientsโto know. The bride and groom take each other across the spectrumโbetter or worse, sickness and health. I can love my husband and be happy for our marriage while also missing my father. I donโt think anyone expects me to pretend him away.
Thereโs no way around grief, unpopular as it may be. But through it, I see how much Dad has left me. True to clichรฉ, Iโve chosen my husband, in part, because he reminds me of my father. With a 34-year marriage, my parents have shown me what a lifetime of love looks like, so I know it when I see it.
Come ceremony time, Iโll take my momโs arm, and weโll give a little smile meant for each other and Dad. Weโll look down the aisle, and start walking toward what lies ahead.
