From mbenson@appseq.oracle.com Fri May 18 16:05:10 1990
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Date: Fri, 18 May 90 13:04:29 -0700
From: Michelle Benson <mbenson@appseq.oracle.com>
Message-Id: <9005182004.AA27541@appseq.oracle.com>
To: arandomnonexistantmailid@appseq.oracle.com
Subject: FYAmusement
Status: RO


I took the liberty of deleting all of the forwarding info.  Please
forgive me if you have already received this.

Enjoy!
Michelle

    It's copied without permission from Robert Fulghum's book "It Was on
    Fire..."

    _______________________________________________________________________

    I have married more than a thousand times.  Officiated as the minister
    at a whole lot of weddings and usually managed to get so involved in
    each occasion that it felt like I was the one getting married.  Still,
    I always look forward to marrying again, because most weddings are such
    comedies.

    Not that they are intended as such.  But since weddings are high state
    occasions involving amateurs under pressure, everything NEVER goes
    right.  Weddings seem to be magnets for mishap and for whatever
    craziness lurks in family closets.  In more ways than one, weddings
    bring out the ding-dong in everybody involved.

    I will tell you the quintessential wedding tale.  One of disaster.
    Surprisingly, it has a happy ending, though you may be in doubt, as I
    was, as the story unfolds.

    The central figure in this drama was the mother of the bride (MOTB).
    Not the bride and groom or minister.  Mother.  Usually a polite,
    reasonable, intelligent, and sane human being, Mother was mentally
    unhinged by the announcement of her daughter's betrothal.  I don't mean
    she was unhappy, as is often the case.  To the contrary.  She was
    overcome with joy.  And just about succeeded in overcoming everybody
    else with her joy before the dust settled.

    Nobody knew it, but this lady had been waiting with a script for a
    production that would have met with Cecil B. DeMille's approval.  A
    royal wedding fit for a princess bride.  And since it was her money, it
    was hard to say no.  The father of the bride began to pray for an
    elopement.  His prayers were not to be answered.

    She had seven months to work, and no detail was left to chance or human
    error.  Everything that could be engraved was engraved.  There were
    teas and showers and dinners.  The bride and groom I met with only
    three times.  The MOTB called me weekly, and was in my office as often
    as the cleaning lady.  (The caterer called me to ask if this was really
    a wedding, or an invasion he was involved in.  "Invasion," I told him.)

    An eighteen-piece brass and wind ensemble was engaged.  (The church
    organ simply would not do - too "churchy.")  The bride's desires for
    home furnishings were registered in stores as far east as New York and
    as far south as Atlanta.  Not only were the bridesmaid's outfits made
    to order, but the tuxedos for the groom and his men were bought - not
    rented, mind you.  Bought.  If all that wasn't enough, the engagement
    ring was returned to the jeweler for a larger stone, quietly subsidized
    by the MOTB.  When I say the lady came unhinged, I mean UNHINGED.

    Looking back, it seems now that the rehearsal and dinner on the evening
    before the great event were not unlike what took place in Napoleon's
    camp the night before Waterloo.  Nothing had been left to chance.
    Nothing could prevent a victory on the coming day.  Nobody would EVER
    forget this wedding.  (Just as nobody ever forgot Waterloo.  For the
    same reason, as it turned out.)

    The juggernaut of fate rolled down the road, and the final hour came.
    Guests in formal attire packed the church.  Enough candles were lit to
    bring daylight back to the evening.  In the choir loft the orchestra
    gushed great music.  And the mighty MOTB coasted down the aisle with
    the grandeur of an opera diva at the premier performance.  Never did the
    mother of the bride take her seat with more satisfaction.  She had done
    it.  She glowed, beamed, smiled, and sighed.

    The music softened, and nine - count them, nine - chiffon-draped
    bridesmaids lockstepped down the long aisle while the befrocked groom
    and his men marched stolidly into place.

    Finally, oh so finally, the wedding march thundered from the orchestra.
    Here comes the bride.  Proceeded by four enthusiastic mini-princesses
    chunking flower petals, and two dwarfish ringbearers - one for each
    ring.  The congregation rose and turned in anticipation.

    Ah, the bride.  She had been dressed for hours if not days.  No
    adrenalin was left in her body.  Left alone with her father in the
    reception hall of the church while the march of the maidens went on and
    on, she had walked along the tables laden with gourmet goodies and
    absentmindedly sampled first the little pink and yellow and green
    mints.  Then she picked through the silver bowls of mixed nuts and ate
    the pecans.  Followed by a cheeseball or two, some black olives, a
    handful of glazed almonds, a little sausage with a frilly toothpick
    stuck in it, a couple of shrimps blanketed in bacon, and a cracker
    piled with liver pate.  To wash this down - a glass of pink champagne.
    Her father gave it to her.  To calm her nerves.

    What you noticed as the bride stood in the doorway was not her dress,
    but her face.  White.  For what was coming down the aisle was a living
    grenade with the pin pulled out.

    The bride threw up.

    Just as she walked by her mother.

    And by "threw up," I don't mean a polite little ladylike *urp* into her
    handkerchief.  She puked.  There's just no nice word for it.  I mean,
    she hosed the front of the chancel - hitting two bridesmaids, the
    groom, a ringbearer, and me.

    I am quite sure of the details.  We have it all on videotape.  Three
    cameras' worth.  The MOTB had thought of everything.

    Having disgorged her hors d'oeuvres, champagne, and the last of her
    dignity, the bride went limp in her father's arms, while her groom sat
    down on the floor where he had been standing, too stunned to function.
    And the mother of the bride fainted, slumping over in rag-doll
    disarray.

    We had a fire drill then and there at the front of the church that only
    the Marx Brothers could have topped.  Groomsmen rushed about
    heroically, mini-princess flower girls squalled, bridesmaids sobbed,
    and people with weak stomachs headed for the exits.  All the while,
    unaware, the orchestra played on.  The bride had not only come, she was
    gone - into some other state of consciousness.  The smell of fresh
    retch drifted across the church and mixed with the smell of guttering
    candles.  Napoleon and Waterloo came back to mind.

    Only two people were seen smiling.  One was the mother of the groom.
    And the other was the father of the bride.

    What did we do?  Well, we went back to real life.  Guests were invited
    to adjourn to the reception hall, though they did not eat or drink as
    much as they might have in different circumstances.  The bride was
    consoled, cleaned up, fitted out with a bridemaid's dress, and hugged
    and kissed a lot by the revived groom.  (She'll always love him for
    that.  When he said "for better or worse," he meant it.)  The cast was
    reassembled where we left off, a single flute played a quiet air, the
    words were spoken and the deed was done.  Everybody cried, as people
    are supposed to do at weddings, mostly because the groom held the bride
    in his arms through the whole ceremony.  And no groom ever kissed his
    bride more tenderly than he.

    If one can hope for a wedding that it be memorable, then theirs was a
    raging success.  NOBODY who was there will EVER forget it.

    They lived as happily ever after as anyone does - happier than most, in
    fact.  They have been married about twelve years now, and have three
    lively children.



    But that's not the end of the story.  The best part is still to come.
    On the tenth anniversary of this disastrous affair, a party was held.
    Three TV sets were mustered, a feast was laid, and best friends
    invited.  (Remember, there were three video cameras at the scene of the
    accident, so all three films were shown at once.)  The event was
    hilarious, especially with the running commentary and the stop-action
    stuff that is a little gross when seen one frame at a time.  The part
    that got cheers and toasts was when the camera focused on the grin on
    the face of the father of the bride as he contemplates his wife as she
    is being revived.

    The reason I say this is the best part is not because of the party.
    But because of who organized it.  Of course.  The infamous MOTB.  The
    mother of the bride is still at it, but she's a lot looser these days.
    She not only forgave her husband and everybody else for their part in
    the debacle, she forgave herself.  And nobody laughed harder at the
    film than she.

    There's a word for what she has.  Grace.

    And that's why that same grinning man has been married to he for forty
    years.  And why her daughter loves her still.






