sovay: (Default)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2013-12-04 01:46 am

I have to see you home, though neither of us knows where on earth it is

Rabbit, rabbit. The first of the month was Sunday, but my time has been doing its best to disappear since then.

This is the week by whose end I will be married. Will have been married for a day, even, counting from the afternoon on Thursday. I do not know if that should be a strange sentence to write; it isn't one I spent most of my life expecting. From the point last September when Rob looked up at me in the light from the lamp on the computer case that doubled as his side table and said, "You realize we're probably going to get married," however, it has felt in some ways like an ordinary thing. (It wasn't a proposal. We proposed to one another in March, with books and the cat-emblem rings we have been wearing on our right hands ever since. It was the recognition that we weren't talking about vows and rituals and children's names just for the pipe-dream fun of it; it was the thing I knew he was going to say as soon as he went silent in a particular way, around two in the morning. We joke that the telepathy only works when it's funny, but it's proven to have a few other applications as well. I said I'd thought of it. We decided to winter out first. We made it through the winter.) I am surprised only insofar as I am marrying anyone, because it was not a goal of my childhood or a settled fact of my adult life; I considered it much more likely that I would never find anyone whose habits of life and mind interlocked permanently with mine, or if I did, it might not be a marriage. Past that particular act of acceptance, I am not at all surprised that it's Rob.

I haven't been writing about the wedding much, partly because I haven't wanted to make this journal a catalogue of logistics. There has been a great deal more last-minute than we hoped or planned for, matching the things that have been no trouble at all. The poles for the chuppah are borrowed, beautifully turned, and lead-weight; I wrenched my back badly tonight fetching them out of the storeroom of their current owner, who carved them decades ago as a wedding present for another couple. The cloth was embroidered by my namesake great-grandmother over ninety years ago and rested quietly in the cedar chest from which my mother unpacked and offered it weeks ago; the design is of poppies and my father is fashioning small soft clamps that will hold it to the poles without strain on the threads. The kiddush cup is old silver and belonged to my grandfather, but we need to purchase wine tomorrow. Our wedding clothes are the green velvet dress and the black velvet jacket we've owned for years, supplemented with a pair of new pants on Rob's side and a pair of new boots on mine; the ketubah arrived this morning and was discovered to be the victim of an inexplicable snafu on the artist's end which we are hoping our calligrapher can amend or at least cope with. We are picking up the marriage license before we meet Rob's mother at the airport. We are waiting on the rings. What really matters is that everyone we asked to the wedding will be there, and that we are saying to one another what it matters most to us to say. Rob's father is officiating for his side, the rabbi whom we found through my singing teacher for mine. It's the last hour of Hanukkah, although we aren't putting that in the ketubah. Lights against the dark.

He had a haircut from the Mercury Theatre the first time I saw him; he was onstage in 1938 with a script in one hand and a bunch of flummoxed gestures in the other, Frank Cyrano in a sand-colored sweater vest racking his brain to determine whether the pizza some joker from Emperor Norton's had just ordered in was an anachronism or a swing-band-plausible prank. I looked like some LJ-icons of indeterminate gender who said positive things about the show later that night. We met in person in the green room of Arisia in 2010, when it was still being held in the hell-ziggurat on the Charles that dispensed free claustrophobia and social anxiety along with inconvenient scheduling; he had just come from being Dr. Alberts in a lab coat and appalling tie and I was trying to grab some snacking and breathing space in my one free hour between panels all day. We talked over LJ, intermittently and with appreciation of intelligence and art; I saw him in four more shows before we met in a context that wasn't after one of them. That was last January. The story since then is, in retrospect, a shockingly direct progression. I don't expect it to stop on Thursday.

Being married isn't an endpoint. It's a beginning, but it isn't a cold start: I don't know when we began our lives together, because an afternoon of conversation at a bookstore is the kind of glancing thing that might happen with anyone of sufficient interest and eighteen hours of sci-fi film is the kind of venturing thing that can happen with someone who really likes movies and forty-five days from hanging out to kissing is not the kind of thing that happened to me with anyone else in my life; we moved not effortlessly, but so naturally into one another's orbits that for months I kept expecting it to break, like a spell. Our first night together, we told the stories of how we had met in 1943: the flat with rain-cracked ceilings and the little wrought-iron balcony, the typewriter we shared, the Atlantic crossings; he heard me singing for the USO, the shy stranger with the sounding-blue eyes I saw splicing and editing the broadcasts. Both of us Odysseus and Penelope, meeting at the story of the bed we lay in. We fought and it didn't break; we were happy and it didn't, either. And it is not nothing that we are marrying—I wouldn't spend so much time organizing for nothing—but one of the reasons I think our wedding is not more of an event in the conventional sense is that it's confirming, affirming what we know about ourselves already: we matter to each other. We are choosing to recognize it with a ceremony we have built ourselves out of the traditions that speak to us, leaving all the rest aside (besides, if strippers really are a prerequisite for bachelor parties, we'd have both ended up at The Slutcracker and that would just have been an evening out), but it is not out of obligation: now this comes next. None of this last year and eleven months is what I thought would come next, except that it delighted me so that it did.

It has not been without pain; it has never been not worth it. If that's how a marriage works, I am all for it.
rosefox: Me on my wedding day, grinning and holding my bouquet. (bride)

[personal profile] rosefox 2013-12-04 07:44 am (UTC)(link)
It has not been without pain; it has never been not worth it. If that's how a marriage works, I am all for it.

That is exactly how a good healthy marriage works, in my experience. May yours thrive.
ext_554207: (Default)

[identity profile] obzor-inolit.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 07:23 am (UTC)(link)
Sounds corny, but I have to say it: congratulations!
Such a beautiful post... your attitude just seems... absolutely right...

[identity profile] martianmooncrab.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 08:07 am (UTC)(link)
you are making hope... for both yourselves, and in a small way, the rest of us, because you shared.

[identity profile] jinian.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 08:20 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for posting this.

[identity profile] ashlyme.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 08:21 am (UTC)(link)
Mazel tov to you both, Sonya. I'll raise a glass to you tomorrow.

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 08:24 am (UTC)(link)
Thank you for shining that light into your past, and future.
thistleingrey: (Default)

[personal profile] thistleingrey 2013-12-04 05:09 pm (UTC)(link)
I wish you both very happy, tomorrow but today as well! (No jinxing, to be sure.) It's lovely to have the people you'd like to have there, and memory-full things, and that measure of light.

[identity profile] tithenai.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 09:01 am (UTC)(link)
Our first night together, we told the stories of how we had met in 1943: the flat with rain-cracked ceilings and the little wrought-iron balcony, the typewriter we shared, the Atlantic crossings; he heard me singing for the USO, the shy stranger with the sounding-blue eyes I saw splicing and editing the broadcasts. Both of us Odysseus and Penelope, meeting at the story of the bed we lay in.

I could taste this. I am so happy for you both.

[identity profile] nineweaving.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 09:56 am (UTC)(link)
So very beautiful. May all your pasts together be enfolded in the years to come.

Travel light.

Love,

Nine

[identity profile] hawkwing-lb.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I wish you joy.

[identity profile] moon-custafer.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 12:22 pm (UTC)(link)
I am both pleased and sympathetic that you had to use the words "ketubah" and "snafu" in the same sentence. Best of all wishes.

[identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 12:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Let there be light.
Let there be shadow too, and let the dapple fall
on seascape, and the jetsam, gathered up, becoming art.
Let there be the two of you, ongoing into family,
a blown glass float and an unexpected pinecone
in the tangled net of love, connection,
conversation, buoying up
the past and future twined, your great
grandmother who wove
and your great
grandchildren who will love
this story
on a day beyond the dark horizon,
a day that flows on winding sea-lanes
on from today
through storms and journeys, fogs and tidewrack,
treasure trove, halcyons, crisp fall mornings,
and the waves that run on and ever on and back,
the tides that splash your toes
and wear down granite cliffs
time flowing on and back, on
from today, and from the day you saw each other,
and from tomorrow and tomorrow and
delight.

[identity profile] snowy-owlet.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 01:19 pm (UTC)(link)
I wish you both such joy.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 02:04 pm (UTC)(link)
I can't help but appreciate this throwaway description, probably the least important thing in this entry, and yet it made me laugh:

the hell-ziggurat on the Charles that dispensed free claustrophobia and social anxiety along with inconvenient scheduling

I'm imagining the A-frame sign out front: free claustrophobia!!

Beyond that, this is just lovely. You weren't looking, but you found each other--what grace and good fortune there is in that. And I love how personal and meaningful so many of the appurtenances for your ceremony are.

Happy day ♥

[identity profile] cucumberseed.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 04:13 pm (UTC)(link)
That last paragraph is ...exactly.

Congratulations.

If that's how a marriage works, I am all for it.

**nod** I believe it is.

[identity profile] teddywolf.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 04:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Mazel tov to both of you. May your marriage remain full of love, may it last for as long as you both shall want, and may any fights be endurable--not to mention end in short order.

[identity profile] kenjari.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 04:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, that is kind of how it works.
May your wedding be awesome and everything that comes after even more so.

[identity profile] xjenavivex.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 05:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I am so happy for you.

[identity profile] rose-lemberg.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 06:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I am grinning and crying at the same time.

Zol zayn mit mazl un glik!
ext_118770: (joyful fox)

[identity profile] kerrickadrian.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 07:53 pm (UTC)(link)
This could almost be my partner and me. We keep looking over at each other and saying "We're so lucky. Everyone should have it this good." So it makes me happy to hear that you do! May all be to the good, and every blessing on the love you are building together, for always.

[identity profile] aphrabehn.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 08:54 pm (UTC)(link)
You are a beautiful writer. But beyond that I can feel you and Rob in every word. That is quite a feat. Congratulations!
gwynnega: (coffee poisoninjest)

[personal profile] gwynnega 2013-12-04 08:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I am so happy for you.

mazel tov

[identity profile] red-queen.livejournal.com 2013-12-04 10:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Beautifully written. May you continue as you have begun, with joy and delight and the not-breaking. I, too, am all for it.

[identity profile] stealthmuffin.livejournal.com 2013-12-05 11:01 am (UTC)(link)
This is lovely. So much joy to you.

[identity profile] strange-selkie.livejournal.com 2013-12-05 03:19 pm (UTC)(link)
It has not been without pain; it has never been not worth it. If that's how a marriage works, I am all for it.

I imagine it's different for everybody, but this is how it's been for us, and you always seemed to figure N and I were spot-on for one another. :)

Build something really good, and fill the gaps with all the blessings your friends have for you today. And remember what the great mage Leonard of Cohen said; "There is a crack in every thing; that's how the light gets in."

[identity profile] elisem.livejournal.com 2013-12-05 04:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Gladness.

[identity profile] between4walls.livejournal.com 2013-12-06 05:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Beautiful. All the best on your adventure, and may it continue joyous.