JUNE
WEDDINGS
From
the book Spider’s Big
Catch
As
June wraps its arms around us like
the warm hug of a favorite aunt,
I begin to think about weddings.
I've been a musician for thirty years,
and I've played at scores of weddings
and receptions, sometimes more than
once for the same person. It was
a way to make a living—the
money was good and there was usually
decent food.
As
a wedding soloist, I’d
sit off to the side, watching brides
in white dresses and grooms in rented
tuxedos promise to love each other
forever. But somehow, I couldn’t
shake a sadness that always hung
over me as I watched, knowing that
one in every two marriages will fail.
I
can’t explain it, but over
the years, I developed an eye for
knowing whether a couple was going
to make it or not. There was just
something about the way the bride
and groom related to each other—the
look in their eyes and their body
language—that offered clues
as to how their marriage was going
to turn out.
Then one afternoon, while our band
was playing for a large reception
in a small town ballroom, I casually
looked across the vast sea of people.
My glance moved from table to table,
until I saw the bride and groom,
sitting alone in a corner. They were
sitting in total ease, holding hands,
saying nothing.
Her
flowing white dress and his tuxedo
seemed out of place, but their
happiness and comfort with each other
was totally apparent. There was no
question that those two people belonged
together. They would’ve been
sitting there in those same two chairs,
still holding hands in exactly the
same way, if they’d been wearing
blue jeans and overalls at someone
else’s reception.
They
were at a party, to be sure—a
big, loud party. But the party was
really for the benefit of everyone
else in attendance. They were totally
comfortable just sitting in their
corner, out of the limelight, watching
the people they loved having a good
time.
As
cynical as I’d become over
the years, something struck me at
that moment as I watched that couple.
I realized that weddings actually
represent the triumph of the human
spirit. Every marriage is a public
statement by two people, letting
the whole world know that together,
they choose to believe that their
union will be the one-in-two that
lasts.
When
thought of in that way, every wedding
really symbolizes a victory
of hope—in the face of all
odds. Sure, it’ll take all
their courage and strength to succeed,
but no matter what, couples continue
to try.
They
know the statistics are against
them—but they look straight
into the eyes of the odds makers
and say, “So what?”
And why not? Throughout history,
people have staked their fortunes,
and sometimes their very lives, on
less than a 50-50 chance.
Maybe
that’s why we hold so
many weddings in the month of June.
It’s a month that can be unpredictable—full
of warmth and promise one minute,
and then suddenly becoming stormy
and filled with uncertainty.
As
for me, since seeing that couple,
holding hands at their reception,
I’ve begun singing my wedding
solos with a renewed hope—embodied
by two people at the altar, vowing
to face their future together, in
spite of overwhelming odds.
Copyright©2004 Gary
E. Anderson. All rights reserved.
Gary
Anderson is a freelance writer,
editor, ghostwriter, and manuscript
analyst, living on a small Iowa farm.
He’s published more than 500
articles and four books. He’s
also ghosted a dozen books, edited
more than 30 full-length manuscripts,
produced seven newsletters, and has
done more than 800 manuscript reviews
for various publishers around the
nation. If you need writing or editing
help, visit Gary’s website
at www.abciowa.com.
E-mail Gary Anderson at abciowa@alpinecom.net