Wednesday, June 7, 2017

Thoughts on Marriage (shared in our wedding ceremony on 6.4.17)

This has been a wonderful weekend of family and love.  It is a pleasure to be able to share it with you all.

What is marriage?  Why are we doing it?  A friend of ours openly asked us this question shortly after we were engaged, and it is not something that we are doing without thought.  But I don’t believe that marriage is necessary for two people to love one another.  

Often times there is an assumption in our culture that when two people are together for awhile, they should get married.  It’s just what we do.  When people get engaged, the normal response is usually a straightforward congratulations, expressions of joy or goodwill.  A happily-ever-after feeling.  But I don’t think  that’s really the entire story.  In fact some of the things that I think may be the most valuable about marriage, and the reasons why I find myself deciding to embark on it, are perhaps not the happily-ever-after trope that we tell ourselves.  They are reasons of growth, of strength, of exploration, of ever-deepening openness from a pledge of commitment.  

We have known one another for nearly 8 years, been together but apart for roughly 5 and half, and together together for 2.  In many ways, I suspect that little will change after today.  We will still search for a more and more graceful dance in our everyday lives, navigating stresses and joys, sickness and health, intimacy and independence, learning to read one another with greater subtlety and responding in more and more giving ways.  

It can be so easy to be alone.  We can do whatever we want, when we want to do it.  Nobody challenges us, pushes us to embrace another viewpoint or perspective.  We can work towards our personal goals unhindered and uncompromised, limited only by our self-awareness and self-control.  A closed system can be very efficient, safe, and comfortable.  

But as soon as we enter into a world with others, or with another, that changes.  We open ourselves to unknowns, to being challenged by another's ideas, viewpoints, and routines.  We find we may need to ask ourselves to question our own sense of value, of timing, of purpose.  We might still agree with ourselves in the end, but to upend our own preconditions and assumptions puts us in a vulnerable space, swinging from one known to another known through the open unknown space of trust.  The ego of stone is worn away more and more, perhaps even one day merging fully with the stream of water that challenged it, becoming it.  

Why go through this?  Why disrupt our balance of individuality and solitude?  Because the world is bigger than any one of us.  By opening myself to another, by allowing myself to give and take with another, I let go of holding on to myself.  Many people think of marriage as the end of certain freedoms.  They focus on the confines of commitment, as though it brings a static presence to life.  But I think it can be something else.  It is a presence that asks us to think again, to find patience, to see things in a new way, to listen more deeply, to give what we wish to have, and to ask ourselves more deeply what that is.  In the inner balance of ego and seeking more universal existence, I strangely find myself appreciating the liberating qualities that marriage can offer.  

Being married is a step further in that commitment.  No it is not a necessity, but internally I think that level of commitment makes a difference.  

And that we go through this ceremony with others is meaningful.  I admit to being a bit more on the eloping end of the spectrum, but I have come to appreciate the idea of sharing this experience with others.  Because just as I do not wish to be a closed system, neither should we be as a couple.  We are extended through the presence of our family and friends. We make these declarations of love with you and through you.  You are a part of guiding us through life.  It has become extremely clear how important you are, whether you are here in person, or with us in spirit.  


But all of these things don’t fall into place without someone that seems like the right life partner.  I’d probably still be enjoying my lonely existence were it not for his kindness, his thoughtfulness, his patience, his reflection, and honesty.   I am deeply grateful to be making this commitment with Andrew.  And grateful for the presence of so much love in our lives.  

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