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 gownâI donât even like gowns, let alone poofy onesâwith a veil interfering with my eyesight? And whyâwhy?âwould 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 toward 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 marriageâand by extension, weddingsâeither. 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 okay to break your own rules for the right person; itâs okay 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 number 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 dayâme hurtling a bouquet into the sky, an uncle getting drunk with someone I went to school with, all that towering cakeâI 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 anywayâdo they push us forward at the same time?). Instead, we settled on eloping. On a beach in Formentera, Spain. Both of us in white bikinis and cowboy hats. Maybe afterward weâd dunk ourselves in the seawater. 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.