“Will all of
you witnessing these vows do everything in your power to support Alexandra and
Nate in their marriage?” the handsomely personable pastor asked at their
wedding last Friday night.
In unison we
all responded, “We will!”
Which got me
to wondering, how in the world, living worlds apart, am I going to do that? I
lost what little power I may have had over the bride when our Friday morning
play group dispersed and I could no longer withhold bagels, apple juice or
Barbie dolls. But what was I going to do, say no?
Meanwhile,
the handsomely personable pastor, who actually knew the beautiful bride, relayed
to us the story of Alex’s first triathlon. Having a bit of anxiety about being
out in the open seas, Alex wasn’t particularly happy about the swimming part of the event. But, stroke-by-stroke
she persevered, keeping her mind on the finish line which was marked by a green
buoy. And later, having survived the challenge, she told the handsomely personable pastor how Nate is her
green buoy in life. He is her safe place; the one who is always beside her when she’s
feeling scared or anxious or unsure. And also the one who is there to have and
to hold when she finishes the race.
This, of
course, elicited a collective pull at the heart strings.
It was a one-of-a-kind
wedding held at Race & Religious, a venue named for the cross streets on
which it has stood for almost 200 years. It was a one-of-a kind evening, with clear
skies and low humidity, an anomaly in New Orleans. And they were a one-of-a-kind couple; he from
north of Albany, she from west of Manhattan, who met at Tulane, fell in love,
got a dog, moved to Houston and boomeranged back to tie the knot in the place
where it all began.
The very
nature of New Orleans propagates a Big Easy kind of fun. The live music. The dive
bars. The killer cuisine. The southern drawls. The overt overindulgence. So,
even if my daughter didn’t live there, I wouldn’t have hesitated to travel the 1,300
miles for Alex’s wedding. Besides, I happen to like the bride; her parents,
Dianne and Tom; her sister, Ianthe; and the party they throw every year at
Christmas.
The night
before the wedding, the mother-of-the-bride’s sister and brother-in-law, who conveniently
live in New Orleans, hosted a crawfish boil in their backyard. Something I
would never in a million years endeavor to do. Henry and Cecilia have a hip and artsy style about them that perfectly complements their southernly
hospitable personalities, setting the tone for a fun-filled, fish-peeling, cross-talking
kind of a time. We drank bourbon slushies with the bridesmaids, grinned as the
groomsmen recovered from their night-befores, and befriended friends from myriad
walks of life. There were the lake house friends; Lisa and John (who kindly didn’t mock
my extra-cup-of-ice-on-the-side issues) and their wise and wonderful offspring, the beauteous
Becca who I may or may not have previously chatted with on my last food truck stint. There were
Dianne’s three sisters and representatives from each of their families who had traveled from places as far as North Dakota. There were the
Tulane friends; Blake and Dylan and Elizabeth who won my heart by remembering
my name. There was Emily from Teaneck who I hadn’t seen in years and years, and
of course, our next door neighbors, Ted and Kerri, part of the original
playgroup and the Christmas party elite.
As was expected, we made and retained friends at the wedding and the next day went to ultra-cool
Bacchanal – a bar where “food, music and culture collude,” with the amiable Anna
and her mother, Michelle. At this one-of-a-kind 9th Ward destination,
you enter through a wine store, choose your bottle, grab a plastic bucket, fill
it with ice, dunk your bottle in the bucket, pick up some glasses, find a seat in
the outdoor courtyard, listen to live music and drink to your heart’s content,
knowing that there’s always an Uber just around the bend. That afternoon we
consumed copious amounts of wine with Paul and Paula, who serendipitously joined our table and soon became fast Facebook friends with whom we shared life
stories and later an Uber to Frenchman Street for a night of jazz.
It’s been a
week since the wedding. Nate and Alex are far away on a honeymoon. Their parents
have returned to their lives and their bills. The guests are back at home, back
at work, back doing what it is we all do. And I guarantee, in the week that has passed, every single one of us has
thought about that wedding weekend more than once.
While most of my ruminations tend to revolve around raucous reveries, I gave plenty of sober consideration to the handsomely personable pastor and the promise we made to support Nate and Alex in their marriage.
While most of my ruminations tend to revolve around raucous reveries, I gave plenty of sober consideration to the handsomely personable pastor and the promise we made to support Nate and Alex in their marriage.
Which, in
turn, brought me back to the buoy.
Perhaps for Emily, her buoy is that baseball-loving boy with the country band name. For Kimmy, it may be the handsome dude she met at another wedding with another cast of characters. For Paula, it may be her namesake, minus the A. For Anna, it may be the one who gave her refuge from the rodents. For Rita, it may be that same ol’ guy she’s been with for 67 years.
But, not everyone has a significant other. And not everyone’s significant other is their buoy.
And so I got to thinking about other kinds of buoys. Maybe Becca’s buoy is her horse and the hurdles they’ve jumped together. Maybe Ianthe’s is the land on which she’s living and tilling. Maybe Molly’s is the inner-city kids she’s teaching. Maybe it’s a dog. Or a job. Or a song. Maybe it’s a Maverick. A bicycle. Or a sculpture. Maybe it’s a sister. Or a garden. Or a God.
And
maybe, just maybe, as friends and family gathered together for the very fun #kreweofcostello wedding, we were, each in our own unique way, a little buoy in a big sea of celebration for the bride and groom. To have and to hold from this day forward.
I love the idea of multiple buoys. I know I have many (just like the oceans and waterways). It depends where you're trying to get to which buoys you need.
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