We are indeed home. We got here around 3:45 which is probably the earliest we've ever gotten home from a car trip. Mark had left the house in such good shape that there was nothing I needed to do beside unload and unpack. He had sent me a text with all of the things he'd done before he left and it was such a long and thorough list that I answered back, asking if perhaps he had given Maurice a bath as well, or perhaps pressure washed the house?
The thing that made me laugh was his comment that he hadn't gotten the mail because there were some vultures near the mailbox and he was scared of big ass birds.
I do not blame him. Probably a dead armadillo out there or something. I swear, I think a wildlife crossing has been established between our yard and the yard across the street and no one has thought to put up a warning sign.
We had such a good trip. There were a few moments that were difficult- the ride up to Cave Spring for one, and the full-on nightmare I had on early Monday morning before I woke up. I know why I had it and I know what triggered it but it was truly horrible.
The rest of the trip though was just lovely. The dogwoods and azaleas were starting to bloom and the red bud was in full glory, painting the side of the roads with a hazy pink. And as I said, the lodge at Fall Creek Falls was just perfect in so many ways. Having the wedding there was an inspired decision on the part of the groom.
Okay. Let's back up a little.
The Event was a surprise wedding.
I know. That's what I said when David, the groom-to-be, called us to tell us all about it a month or so ago. I mean, whatever you just said in response to "surprise wedding" is what I said too.
"Are you shitting me?" being the main expression I probably overused. Not to DAVID, but to Glen and a few others to whom I did tell about The Event.
The story in short is this: Fifty years ago this couple got married in a Day's Inn room in Thomasville, Georgia by a circuit court judge.
I wish I could find that poem. It was pretty good.
They got married because David was about to leave for Romania to play with musicians on a tour his mother (also a musician) had arranged behind the Iron Curtain. He was going to be gone for three weeks or so and Karen wanted them to be legally wed before he left.
And so they were.
And let me just say here that every hippie woman in Tallahassee had a baby that summer. There were quite a few marriages because that's what we did in those days.
History.
Not necessary. Deleted.
Trust me. Bonds were well and truly formed.
So when David invited us to this surprise wedding and explained it, I knew I had to be there, no matter what.
He had decided that after fifty years, he was going to give Karen the wedding that she deserved. And he wanted it to be a surprise.
As in, getting down on one knee, proposing, and then telling her (if she said yes!) that the wedding would be happening in less than seven hours. He had the entire thing planned out and with the help of his daughters and Karen's friends, no detail was left out.
Dress?
Check.
Hair and make-up?
Check.
Rings?
Check.
Venue?
Absolutely.
Flowers?
You bet.
Reception and meal?
Only the best.
Open bar?
Of course.
Officiant?
Got it covered.
Bridesmaids and groomsmen?
Oh yes.
String quartet for the wedding?
David is a renowned musician and so... of course.
Jazz band for the reception?
Ditto.
Everyone, including a seven-year old great grandson who knew and yet did not tell?
Unbelievably, yes.
And here's the thing that has given this entire endeavor even more meaning than having been married for fifty years and raising four daughters and having all of these grandchildren and great-grandchildren and a life that seems almost unbelievable- thirteen years ago they lost one of their daughters to a cruel cancer. A daughter so full of life and joy and strength and goodness and love and how does anyone survive that?
They did though.
Although they will never, ever truly recover, they survived. They are still here, still loving their family and each other.
Their daughter Becky's death occurred quite near their anniversary date and so they have not really celebrated the day they were wed for all those years. As David said in the invitation, it was too tender.
And I will admit that I had major doubts as to how this was going to work. What woman would want a wedding which she had absolutely no say in, up to and including what her wedding dress would look like?
I asked David if he didn't think it might be better if she had enough warning to eat least pick out the dress.
"No," he said. "Because if she had that much time, she would say no."
Fifty years? Plus being high school sweethearts and Jr. High sweethearts?
Why did I have a moment of doubt?
She said yes.
And the dress? Absolutely perfect and she was so beautiful. As was David, in his tux.
I will confess that I ate more red meat in one sitting than I have probably eaten in years and it was so good.
Her daughters and granddaughters were bridesmaids. They were beautiful. Her oldest daughter, the one whose birth I was at all those years ago is her absolute double. Which means to say- she is beautiful. She brought her newest granddaughter over to our table at the reception for us to admire and coo over. Ten months old, curious and serious and smiley and as pink-cheeked as you would want a baby to be.
And some of the grandsons were groomsmen. I had to take a picture of this guy who was the ring bearer.
That kid was cool.
David had managed to get in touch with so many people who have known and loved them over the years as well as family, of course. It was one joy after another. I was thrilled to see David's sisters, one of whom I had not seen since she was about ten years old. And I knew who she was immediately.
If any Event was ever perfect, this one might have been it. The smiles, the tears, the joy, the grand group of people who are on this planet because of Karen and Dave's love...well.
I would not have missed that for the world and thank god, I didn't.
I got almost ZERO pictures but here are two of the cutting of the cake. They were taken too far away but you can get the feeling of how it was.
The next morning we got to visit with David and Karen before we left and I kept grabbing Karen's hand and saying, "I love you so much," and she would say, "I love you so much," and I would cry.
"We've been there and back now, haven't we?" I asked her.
"We have," she said.
And I know that she has been so much farther than I have. Still, there was that moment of soul and heart knowing.
I really don't have words for the light I see coming from Karen now. It is as pure and bright as anything I have ever seen.
"I've learned to just go with it," she told me. And she laughed but she has. I can tell she has.
And really, what else can we do?
I am so grateful to David for asking us to be there. And actually, he and Glen have developed their own relationship over the past years which I love.
And on top of all of that, The Event gave me even deeper insight into how much I love and appreciate the man I have been married to for a mere 40 years.
Here's a picture a woman took for us when we had climbed down a rocky path the morning before the wedding to look at one of the falls in the park.
But that is how it goes. Things change. We change.
Even love changes.
But when and if it changes into a tested, even deeper understanding of what those vows mean, for better or for worse, though sickness and in health, and we can still make each other laugh and still want to hold each other tightly, and still want to hold each others' hands and still sometimes cry when we look into each other's eyes- well.
That is a sort of miracle.
Love...Ms. Moon


























