Happily Hers

Jade and Lizzie against the world

Secret wedding March 26, 2008

Our wedding should be a joyous occasion. We should shout it out to the world.

I had a moment today when I felt sad that we hadn’t shared our news with more people.

I was at work, and someone had posted a series of quick videos for a coworker’s quick courthouse ceremony today.

Everyone was talking about it. How cute. How sweet. How they were saving money to go on a big trip to Greece, instead of wasting money on a lavish ceremony. A strategy I can appreciate.

The bride was wearing a red outfit, probably a dress. A very rare occurrence for her, just like me.

The difference between ceremonies here is that one bride is marrying a man, and the other bride is marrying a bride.

Nobody is wishing us well. Or looking at videos. Or happy for us.

Just the few people we choose to know about the wedding.

I feel like we’re keeping this big, exciting secret. Sometimes it feels really good. And sometimes it doesn’t.

I have mixed feelings about this, I guess. We’re not out at work in general, and I’m not sure I want to talk about my relationship with this wonderful woman.
It’s not hard to connect the dots if you try. I think we fool ourselves in thinking that not everyone knows.

As we’ve detailed previously, there are certain people we wouldn’t want at our wedding, anyway.

But it hurts just a little to keep something that is supposed to be joyous hidden. Like it’s a source of shame.

Maybe I find it difficult to talk about, but that’s something I’m trying to work through.

I’m not ashamed of loving a woman. I’m not ashamed of who I am. Whether I identify as lesbian or bi. 

 

Don’t want to talk March 17, 2008

After an incident with my aunt the other week, I suddenly don’t feel like talking with her.

I said it was OK that she told me what she was thinking, about my relationship with Jade, or our ceremony

But it wasn’t.

I thought I wanted honesty. I want to be honest myself, but when it comes down to it, I don’t like the disapproval.

I could have it a lot worse. My aunt still loves me, serves as a go-between for me and my dad if needed. Jade’s mom exudes disapproval every time they speak. But I think I just expected a little better from my aunt, the sister I never had.

Late at night, on my way home from work, I’ve been getting the urge to call my aunt and shoot the breeze, but then I remember I’m still mad at her. Not mad, disappointed. Disappointed in her the same way she’s disappointed in me. (more…)

 

I said it aloud February 28, 2008

I said it aloud the other day to a coworker invited to the wedding.

“I’m not even sure I can get my own wedding day off.”

Big lump in my throat, but he doesn’t bat an eye.  He’s obviously invited, and obviously knows, but it was the first time I’d talked directly about it to him. Jade was the one who asked him if he’d even come to our ceremony.

But it’s still hard to say that sort of thing for the first time.

And before Jade gets all fired up again, let me say, I do, in theory, have our wedding day off, only because it should, by then, be a normal day off for me. But I can’t get any other time off. Luckily, the next week we are going on a cruise for our honeymoon.

The problem is that we have to schedule our vacations in November, and we came up with the scheme to have a ceremony probably a little later than the vacation schedule was set. And then my weekends got changed after that, so I’ve been actively grumbling and waiting for the day for things to return to normal.

Should we have started planning a ceremony in December for late March? Probably not. Everything we’ve read, gay wedding or straight, says that’s insane. But we just wanted a small ceremony, no frills. Trust that to get out of hand, quickly.

Advice to anyone planning a lesbian wedding: do not plan your wedding in four months. Don’t believe the things you read? Fine. Believe us.

Anyway, back to coming out in the open with everyone … People aren’t stupid. Any of our coworkers that have been to our house (a lot of them for a housewarming last year) probably could figure things out. One very large bedroom and two much smaller bedrooms. One of which is obviously just a library with daybed and too small for adult human habitation and the other, while it could technically have someone actually living in it, is a game/computer room that we like to call the “Game Room Den of Sin.”

But we never talk about us being together. And most people never ask. Are they polite? Talking about us? I don’t know. I don’t think I want to know. People have known for a long time that we live together, but we could easily be the roommates we claim to be to strangers.

It’s not as if it would be a problem; there’s a healthy population of gay folk at work. We keep learning about more all the time. But we haven’t been all that comfortable with talking about it ourselves, so we don’t.

There’s another fellow at work that I view as a substitute father figure. Generous, handy, and the sweetest guy on earth. The idea of talking to him about us getting married petrifies me. Yet he still comes over and helped Jade install a thermostat recently, and last summer, installed a sprinkler system.

We used to wonder if we should tell him directly, but we imagined him getting red in the face and embarrassed. Yet he says he is honored to be invited to our ceremony.

I think the problem is more with ourselves than other people, in most cases. I guess I have to get used to that and get more comfortable with myself.

I’m still freaked out by the idea of kissing Jade in front of 20-30 people, but I’ll cross that bridge when I get there.

 

The missing parent February 26, 2008

Filed under: Coming Out, Staying In — Lizzie @ 9:57 am
Tags: , , , , , , , ,

A little bit more than a month to go until the big day.

Things are coming together well. We have lots of little details to iron out, but I’m not overly worried yet.

The house is likely to fill up with people staying here, and that’s going to cause more stress than I thought. I didn’t really believe we’d have all these people that actually wanted to come.

Most of our guests are from in town, and a few are not. The one person I’ll miss the most is my father.

My father and I can’t talk about my relationship with Jade directly. I suspect I can talk about it to my stepmother — I asked her if they wanted an invitation — but I don’t know when I would do that where my dad wouldn’t be around too.

Jade just talked about the struggles with her mother, so I guess I should feel grateful that things aren’t worse.

Dad and I are buddies. I was his girl, and I helped him mow the lawn, wash his car and even helped him do stuff to his car, though I was just the “hold this” or “bleed this brake” girl.

As an adult, he makes sure to tell me how proud he is of me. I’m financially independent, I’ve never caused him any trouble, and I have a good, professional job that pays well.

I knew that someday, when I came out to Dad, that I would still be his girl, that he would still love me and not hold it against me.

I rehearsed what I would say to him when I got up the courage: “Dad, you want me to be happy. You know how long I wasn’t happy, right? Now I am happy. Love isn’t about gender.”

But I got the wind taken out of me. I waited too long, though how long that was, I don’t know. I think my family has known for a while, probably since my father and stepmother came to visit in 2005.

And we never talked about it. I was uncomfortable with the thought of disappointing my father, or making him upset. I’ve never been a burden to him, never disappointed him. I’ve prided myself in thinking that I’m the good child. (more…)

 

The difference … February 23, 2008

The difference between the straight bride and the lesbian bride.

Straight girl: “Ooh, look at my ring! Isn’t it sparkly?”

Lesbian girl: Silent. No fancy ring. No public acknowledgment. No coos and oohs and aahs.

We were at a New Year’s party full of coworkers. Two of them had recently gotten engaged and they spent quality time thrusting their hands under the noses of other people.

I sat adjacently, quietly, giving a quick glance at the rocks. One woman’s diamond was larger than the other woman’s, but they were both pretty gracious about it. Another woman proudly showed her own engagement ring, now coupled with the wedding band she wears, having been married within the last year or two.

This wedding club is like a club we’re not invited to, although I think some of the exclusion is self-imposed.

We’re not out at work, at least not widely. A few select people know, and I’m sure more people think they know. But it’s never talked about. Politely not talked about. People at our workplace tend to put on blinders.

So here we are, hearing other women cooing over expensive, sparkly rocks, and we can’t talk about our upcoming ceremony. We don’t have fancy rings to show for it, either.

We’re frugal, as I’ll keep repeating. A couple of years ago, we bought each other rings that were unspoken commitments to each other, I think. Jade kept insisting on calling them our going-steady rings. Which irritated the crap out of me.

But we were a little loathe to call them engagement rings because that word was scary. We didn’t know whether we’d have a ceremony, and while the domestic partnership issue had come up, it came up so early that it was too scary too, and we promptly ran away with it.

I’m not a girl that wears a lot of jewelry, but I wanted a pretty ring to connect me to my girl. So we started ring shopping.

We went to different jewelry stores, trying to figure out what we wanted. We sort of wanted to match, and Jade doesn’t like the bloody toll diamonds have taken on people, and so she had ruled them out. And I like sapphires. To complicate matters, my fingers are large, fat and chunky; in fact, my ring finger will fit my father’s old wedding band. So it’s pretty hard to just get a ring in my size.

We still weren’t comfortable telling random clerks that we were buying each other rings. “Are you getting married? What’s the occasion?”

In the end, one of us would pick out a ring and the other would pay for it. Nothing was said, but the clerks surely must’ve drawn their conclusions without our help.

rings

We quietly started wearing our rings (which did turn out to have tiny diamonds in them). My dying grandmother saw it in her hospital room and said slurringly, “Are you engaged?” And it pained me to lie to her for the first time in my life, to tell her no, that “sometimes you just have to buy pretty things for yourself, because you can’t wait for someone else to do it.”

We also didn’t wait to figure out what we should call the rings, or where we thought the relationship would end up.

Now the wedding date is looming close, and we still can’t talk about it with many people. We still can’t wave our hands with giggling glee.

I’m not sure I would have wanted to. I don’t like a lot of attention. I think my hands are ugly, anyway. Would I start waving a hand with a ring I’ve worn for a year and a half?

It just doesn’t seem fair, though, to keep quiet. It’s self-imposed, I know, but how would people react if we were open about it? No matter what people might say, I still don’t think that most people would’ve been comfortable with the whole notion of these lesbians acting just like normal folk, getting married and trying to cheapen the whole thought of that sacred commitment between a man and woman and god.

We have to make our own normality, and be comfortable with ourselves. Too bad that I don’t think the day has come when it’s really OK to be doing this.

We’ve met some *family* at the church we’ve been going to, and they all say they’re so happy to see us getting married. They barely know us, and yet they’re happier than my real family is, let’s say. Because we’re so much younger than these other gay folk, I wonder if it’s a generational thing. They might not have had the opportunity to get married openly like we do.

Maybe the next generation of kids coming up won’t think twice about gay marriage. Once all this nonsense about trying to legislate committed love gets sorted out, perhaps it won’t be an issue any more. Perhaps two women 20 years from now won’t have to think twice about getting married in a park. Or about buying rings. Or about buying dresses or flowers.

Our money is just as good now, but we’re not comfortable with ourselves, with other people. Salespeople still blink or bat an eye. It’s subtle, but it’s still there.