I got married last year. Sorry, ladies. Off the market. Usually, at weddings Iโd attended in the past, Iโd always been more interested in the reception than the ceremony. Forget the sappy shit, letโs get it over with and get to the partying. But when itโs your own wedding, weirdly enough, the ceremony is the best part. Sara and I wrote our own vows, something that, to me, is totally essential. If youโre pledging your life to another person, and that pledge really comes from your heart, it should be in your own words.
I was nervous and jittery before the ceremony, on the verge of wetting the pants of my rented tux. I was also fairly certain I was going to cry like a baby. Either way, It was going to be a very wet ceremony. My hands were already as clammy as New England chowder.
That headshrinker crap about โmen have trouble expressing their emotionsโ has never really held with me. Iโm pretty goddamn demonstrativeโquick to laugh, quick to anger, quick to cry. I sputter and blubber like a broken sprinkler at Pixar movies and Otis Redding songs, so I told myself that if I felt the need, I would cry.
But during the ceremony, I felt no such need. Sara, much to her own consternation, cried. The bridesmaids, and at least one of my groomsmen, all the parents and aunties and sensitive, smiling folk on both sides of the aisle, shed joyful, sloppy tears.
But not me. I felt invigorated and strong, like what I was doing was righteous and just. I felt like a man. I felt like a champion. I felt like Muhammad Ali.
Iโm not trying to brag. Those strong emotions caught me totally by surprise. So much of the wedding industry is directed toward women. Brides are brought up to be fixated on their wedding day, reading magazines, fussing over details, spending exorbitant sums. The groom is just supposed to stand where heโs told to stand, repeat some words, hand over the ring, and look forward to the honeymoon night. The whole event is generally presented as a lacey, flowery occasion.
So it was surprising to me that, in the heat of the moment, the wedding ceremony felt like one of the most masculine things Iโve ever done.
Me and you and everyone we know
Itโs now six months later. How has my life changed since getting married? It didnโt change too much about day-to-day life for me and Sara. But my life has changed in at least one quantifiable way: I will never, ever be offended about not being invited to somebodyโs wedding. I donโt care if youโre my best friend or my grandmother, if you decide you donโt have room for me at your wedding, itโs totally cool. Iโll understand.
Your wedding is such a big deal, you want to invite everybody you know. But, unless youโre gold digging a Beatle, thatโs probably not feasible. You got to feed these people, liquor โem up, and pack โem on a dance floor. The whole thing gets pricey. So, if youโre working with a modest budget, like we were, youโve got to start cutting people.
This is a series of heartbreaking decisions. Our initial draft of guests was nearly 400 people. We had to trim that down to about a quarter of the size. We started moving people to a B-list.
Itโs very dehumanizing to divide your friends and family into tiers. Itโs like deciding who gets to go on the spaceship and who has to stay on the exploding planet. Who gets milked and who gets eaten. We kept the first cousins, but cut the second cousins. Some of these decisions were founded on faulty logic, but when youโre making tough decisions, you use whatever logic is available.
After we finally whittled the list down to a semi-manageable number, we sent out the invitations. A few people said they wouldnโt be able to make it. So I did something that might be considered tacky, but that I donโt regret in the least. Less than a month before the wedding, I started calling the B-list.
โHey, itโs Brad. โฆ Fine, yeah. I have a weird question. โฆ Uh, would you like to come to our wedding? โฆ Yeah, itโs next week. โฆ Crazy, huh? You probably would have preferred a real invitation, like, in the mail, but, uh, yeah.โ
Some of these guests graciously accepted the half-assed invite, and we were happy to have them there.
At a local bar, a few weeks after the wedding, I bumped into a good friend who we had cut.
โSo,โ he said, with a smirk, โwhere was my wedding invitation?โ
I launched into the same spiel I had already given to a few other people: โMan, Iโm sorry. We really wanted to invite you. You were on our original wish list guest listโโI said this even when it wasnโt trueโโBut we had to trim our original list down from nearly 400 to just 100 or so, and it was really rough, andโโ
He started laughing. โDude, itโs cool. Iโm just teasing. I know how it is. Iโm married.โ
