Wednesday, August 27, 2008

I'm Going to Burn This Into My Brain. And I'll Need Your Help.

Dearest Bride-to-Be:

The 12-18 months of wedding planning will pass in a matter of hours or days. When it’s all said and done, the photos will be the primary artifact remaining. My wish for you—when you look back at those photos—is for you to think:
  • Look at how relaxed I was. Fully present in the moment. Basking in it. Soaking it in. I was not saturated in stress.
  • My shoes and dress were comfortable enough for dancing. My beauty radiated out of me; it was not applied to me.
  • I got to spend quality time with my friends and family. I was myself, not a show. In fact, I was my fullest expression of self.
  • I do not remember whether the invitations were letterpress or whether the flowers at the ceremony were the same ones at the reception.
  • The wedding favors or the fanciness of the food did not make memories. The sincerity did. The connection did. The time together did.
  • It did not matter whether every last detail conformed to the signature colors. Instead of saying, “What a beautiful bouquet,” the guests said, “What a beautiful love.”

This is my wish to you, dear brides, as you pore over wedding magazines and read daily blogs. Some of it matters. Most of it does not. Casting your net in the wrong direction will most surely mean you miss the things you most dearly want to catch.

May your wedding be just one sincere, authentic, happiest day in a long line of many.

(courtesy of Peonies and Polariods, stolen from Marathoning, Marrying, and Milestones).

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

This is exactly what we have been trying to tell you. Glad you've "gotten it" before more time passes. It's the marriage that counts (1st); then the celebration of your love (2nd). Mom