put a ring on it {life}

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It was a gloriously stunning day in November when I traveled with these two beautiful women from Virginia to Maryland to stand alongside their friends to be with them on their wedding day.

Maryland, not Virginia because Virginia doesn't perform same-sex weddings. But you know what? That's a story for another day.

We climbed in the car for our two-hour trip with one nervous bride driving and another (calmer) bride singing out the names of the churches as we passed them by. I couldn't get Beyonce's Single Ladies out of my head, and every so often someone would call out, "La la la la la, put a ring on it!"

When we got to the courthouse, we met with two friends of Terri's (the driving bride) who had come from New York to be with the ladies as witnesses. Jackie's (the calmer bride) best friend Holly, rode up with us in the car, scrolling through her iPad for more wedding-y songs for us to sing.

Snow Hill, Maryland (and how flipping cute a name is that for a town?) is the most quaint, just the sleepiest little town you've ever seen. It felt as if there was not a single other person left in the world when we got there and parked our car amid the brick building and antique shops. We got to the courthouse in plenty of time and we ushered ourselves inside with much fanfare and high spirits. Only to be stopped by a sign that said, "No Cameras Allowed."

Hmm.

The security guards, pictured above, must have gotten the biggest kick out of these six laughing women, blowing through the door, only to abruptly stop and look around in consternation. "Now ladies," one of them said, "Do you believe everything you read?"

They were great. And really, everyone was. We didn't, or at least I didn't, face this experience with trepidation exactly. These two women, all of us, had every right to be there and every right to get married. Their love counts as much as anyone else's, and more perhaps than those who don't fight as hard for it. But there is a hesitation nonetheless, I think. A sense of, "How will these people receive us?" It's damned unfair.

Everyone was lovely. The officiant was the least warm of everyone we met, but it was clear that she wasn't un-warm about Jackie and Terri. She just wasn't very warm!

After much corsage pinning and hugging in the hallway, we gathered in separate room for the service itself. I was so touched to see tulle-wrapped arch for the ladies to stand beneath; I'd pictured a soulless closet. Terri's son is living in Australia right now, and they'd planned to Facetime him during the ceremony so he could be a part of it. We started early (that grumpy officiant!), and finished fast (I even had to step in and say, "Don't you two have your own vows you want to say?" so they could recite the vows they'd brought with them.), and as soon as they sealed their marriage with a kiss and everything was over, Josh called.

Oh, he just missed it! But such happiness in the room as they all talked together. He was clearly so happy for his mom.

After some pictures, we all trooped to a restaurant for a celebratory lunch. All the pre-wedding tension had dissipated (those of us who have gotten married well know that feeling, I imagine) and we laughed and chatted our way through the afternoon. When we got up to part and head back home, it struck me how funny all weddings are. Bringing strangers together for a moment and people together for a lifetime.

Our drive back home, all of our worries behind us, was considerably more jolly. More singing too.

When we got back to Jackie and Terri's house, Jackie's mom had a champagne toast set up, and I think I got teary-eyed for the eleventy-billionth time that day. Seeing how happy Jackie's mom was for these two women in her life, well that was moving. Families can be funny about this, and Jackie and Terri deserve only the loving welcome any other newly wedded couple would get.

I'm not going to get soap boxy here (tempted though I may be), because this post is about a wedding and not the state of marriage in our county. But this I will say: I'm a strong believer in marriage. And love is love, no matter who it is that you fall in love with. Being included when two people formalize that love? Going to the chapel, when they went to get married? I have no words for what it meant to me to be there.

What greater thing is there for two human souls, than to feel that they are joined for life - to strengthen each other in all labour, to rest on each other in all sorrow, to minister to each other in all pain, to be one with each other in silent unspeakable memories at the moment of the last parting?
George Eliot

so, it actually snowed {life}

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The dogs approached the snow in three different ways. Thea: trepidation. Violet: patience. Lucy: total and complete spazz out.

The dogs approached the snow in three different ways. Thea: trepidation. Violet: patience. Lucy: total and complete spazz out.

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I should probably start this post with the pictures I took at the oceanfront Tuesday afternoon. No coat, milky sunshine, breeze picking up. But still. I was at the beach without a coat on on a Tuesday afternoon in late January taking pictures and completely doubting that this white stuff would ever show up.

It was 56º when I got in my car to drive home (we live about 18 miles from where I'd had a lunch meeting and had been snapping shots) and it was 39º when I pulled into my driveway. Once the temps dropped and the wind picked up, I started to actually believe.

I love snow. Apparently I don't need a kid at home to get excited to impending storms and arriving flakes and the hope for a snow day. (No snow day for Cal by the way. They got snow in RIchmond from this storm, but the General Assembly was still in session, so he had to work.)

It was an overnight storm for us with most of the snow coming while we slept. The best part of the night for me came right before bedtime, when Cal usually calls. His curfew is at 10:30, so he generally checks in each evening for a few minutes before heading to bed. We're usually really sleepy when he calls, and last night Neel was sound asleep!

I grabbed my phone and snuck over to Cal's room which looks out onto our street. As he and I chatted, the wind howled and the snow blew, all gently lit by the street lamp right outside his window. The only thing that would have made it more perfect would have been to have had Cal tucked in beside me, but he's so happy where he is. I was pretty okay just talking to him and watching the snow alone.

The medical school where Neel teaches and does his research was closed yesterday. He and I got up and took a quick, windy, chilly walk around the block (my fingers were fro-zen by the time we got home), and then we pretty much separated for the rest of the day, each to our own endeavors. Dinner, some wine, a movie, some dogs on the sofa. I joked in a comment on Erin's blog that if this is retirement, SIGN ME UP.

I only have one question. When's the next storm?