They say every girl dreams of her wedding day. Not me. The idea always struck me as odd. Why would I want to slowly walk down the center of a giant room, with everyone Iâve ever known watching me? And why would I want to wear a floor-length poofy gown â I donât even like gowns, let alone poofy ones â with a veil interfering with my eyesight? And why â why? â would I want to kiss the person I love in front of all our family and friends? Also, theyâre costly. Iâd rather travel, or put some money towards a house. Whenever someone told me they were getting married, Iâd think: That is lovely news. But it couldnât be me.
Or, at least, thatâs what I thought until I met someone. She was never big on marriage â and by extension, weddings â either. It was something neither of us thought we would do. Except when she asked me âHow about it?â on a beach in Ibiza one pastel-colored morning over glasses of orange juice, it was the easiest yes of my life. We never needed marriage as a commitment, but that almost made it more romantic, like a rebellion against ourselves. Itâs as if we were saying: itâs OK to break your own rules for the right person; itâs OK to surprise even yourself.
But then the wedding day started creeping up. âShould I wear a hat?â people joked good-naturedly, and Iâd feel my chest constrict as if there wasnât enough oxygen in the room. âWhat song are you going to play for the first dance?â theyâd ask (reason #10,792 why Iâve never wanted a wedding: everyone watching you do a weird, slow dance that youâd never do in any other scenario). Iâve never even liked the idea of a birthday party (throughout most of my twenties, I went to New York alone on my birthday), so the fact that Iâd agreed to get married started feeling increasingly ludicrous. Whenever I tried to envision the big day â me hurtling a bouquet into the sky, an uncle getting drunk with someone I went to school with, all that towering cake â I felt like I was picturing someone elseâs life. Nice in theory, but nothing to do with me.
Eventually, something had to give. I couldnât go along with whatever people thought I might go along with. Fortunately, my fiancé felt the same way. And so we agreed: there would be no guests. There would be no wedding dresses. There would be no aisle or âgiving awayâ of the bride (not sure how that works in a lesbian wedding anyway â do they push us forward at the same time?). Instead, we settled on eloping. On a beach in Formentera. Both of us in white bikinis and cowboy hats. Maybe afterwards weâd dunk ourselves in the sea water. Whatever felt right at the time. But crucially: no guests! No one watching us engage in this ceremony that is simultaneously the most well-established yet bizarre tradition in the world.