Every day when I log on to Instagram I’m inundated by images
of brides, wedding dresses, bouquets, boutonnieres, and engagement rings− ENDLESS engagement rings propped on splayed, manicured fingers, the diamonds glinting
under perfect light. And sometimes it makes me want to scream, because a lot
people are impressionable, especially young
women under twenty-five, and all these images do is insist that there is no
bigger dream than being gifted jewelery by a man. They exclaim that a wedding
is the ultimate finish line, and if you aren’t there yet, you’d better start
sprinting. And not just any wedding− it has to be a flower-showered,
materialistic, Instagram-worthy wedding that puts all the focus on the white
dress and the sparkly ring and very little on the actually significance of this
enormous commitment two people are making to each other.
And I hate it, not because I don’t believe in love (I do),
not because I have anything against jewellery or beautiful gowns (I don’t), but
because it cheapens and dilutes one of the biggest and bravest leaps of faith
two people can make together. Culturally, it is a centuries-old rite of
passage, and socially it represents a critical life change− hey,
there’s a reason medieval records often list marriages alongside births and deaths
as the only individual markers of the people who lived then.
Don’t get me wrong; I’m all for celebrations and fun. I
think weddings are a glorious way to express love and joy among those you care
for the most, and without those moments of light in our lives we might all drown
in the dark. But marriage is not a state to be entered into frivolously,
because let’s be honest, life is hard. A long life in fact is both a blessing and a
curse−
it’s an opportunity to grow and thrive as we watch others fade away, and most
days, it’s not Instagram friendly. Many of us will live long enough to outlive the ones we love, and between
those moments, we’ll all have our own personal struggles that push us to our
limits and threaten to break us completely. Things like illness, injury, death,
loss, betrayal, and bankruptcy, to name a few. And amidst the whirlwind of
dress shopping, decoration Pinning, engagement photo-taking, bachelorette
planning, and seating chart-arranging, I think a lot of those realities get
buried under layers of tulle.
I’m not judging anyone who gets married in their early
twenties, or who gets wrapped up in the fairy tale− how can I when I was one of them? And in
some ways, when I see all these young would-be brides online, I envy their
hopefulness and still-lingering teenage sense of invincibility. I am painfully
jealous of that thrill of fresh experience. But sometimes I do wish that a
wiser person would step in and press the pause button for a second, and remind
them that a wedding is a lot bigger than the party. It’s not about one night,
it’s about a million nights spread out over countless years, during which
things rarely go according to plan. There will be decades fraught with undue
hardships that rock you to your core, and while you can rent tents in case it rains
on your wedding day, it takes a lot more than those plastic tarps to protect a
marriage.
Now, I don’t think all young people who get married are entirely ignorant
to this. In fact, I have met several who appear keenly aware of these
challenges and have simply found the person able to tackle those hurdles with
them. And they’re lucky. But there has to be a reason that marriages are
succeeding now at a lower rate than ever before, despite the fact that bridal
advertising is at an all-time high. And it might lie in the way that we
irresponsibly advertise weddings as some sort of glorified prom for young women,
even though the two occasions sit on opposite sides of the spectrum. While
graduation rightfully celebrates an ending− the conclusion of twelve years slogging
through the school system− a wedding is a beginning; the first day of an
eternal, arduous partnership that will test us more than all those final exams
ever did.
But we don’t say this to would-be brides and grooms; instead, we
encourage and celebrate their decision, regardless of how naively it was made,
and we seldom candidly illuminate the trials. We enthusiastically use terms
like “taking the plunge”, despite the fact that we would never actually encourage
anyone to leap into the ocean without first learning to swim.
And I get it; reality isn’t always fun, and sometimes we yearn to
believe in something magical− that true love conquers all. But deep down the
majority of us know that most things worth having rarely come easily, and this
is why I have such a problem with our modern, cultural approach: because marriage
can be that rare, beautiful, indomitable
gift, but it’s hard work too, and when it falls apart it is more than the
couple who suffers.
Don’t believe me? Alongside all the statistics demonstrating
the struggles that children of divorce face, and the impact it has on families,
researchers out of Harvard, USC and Brown have written about what they call “divorce
clustering” as a form of “social contagion”− or what we might colloquially
label a “domino effect”. During their study of divorce among peer groups, they
found that if your close friends or relatives experience such an estrangement,
your own odds of meeting the same fate skyrocket to a shocking 75%. The report
concludes by stating, that “divorce should be understood as a collective
phenomenon that extends far beyond those directly affected.”* Needless to say,
by hiding the difficulties of marriage behind a pretty lace curtain and refusing
to be transparent, we do young people and our society as a whole a disservice.
And I really feel that. Perhaps not in spite of but actually
because of my divorce, I have far more respect and admiration for the
institution of marriage now than I ever
did when I first casually approached it five years ago. Since then, I’ve
decided that if I’m ever fortunate enough to wed someone again, it will be with
my eyes wide open to exactly what the two of us will have to face; I
don’t want my partner to have any illusions about what to expect from a life
with me. While there are no guarantees for the future, the more honestly and realistically
we approach it, the more successfully we’ll cope. And I hate to sound so dull
and unromantic, but shouldn’t major life choices be approached with more sensibility
than sentimentality?
Because of this, I wish that all these sweet, eager young
women would realize that in the grand scheme of things, it really doesn’t matter what your engagement ring
looks like; it doesn’t matter if you
manage to have that perfect garden reception that Pinterest is always
advertising. And it doesn’t matter if all your friends are getting married
either, or how dreamy their proposals. Time will eventually peel those moments
away like layers of clothing, leaving behind nothing but all our bare, messy limitations.
The real treasure is finding someone who sees that flawed version of you, but wants
to try and forge a future together anyway; that life is a roller-coaster, and
if another human being decides you’re the one person they want beside them
during all those twists and turns and sudden drops that make your stomach flip…
well it’s tough to find a more valuable or irreplaceable gift than that. It
sure trumps a fabric and jewelry.
I’m not saying you can’t love weddings. I love weddings, and
I don’t think I’ll ever stop. There’s something so delicious about that
collective effervescence that occurs when we watch two people stand up together
and swear vows of adoration and fidelity. As a society we feed off that
happiness, and that’s a beautiful thing. But like many beautiful things, it
needs to be respected and valued too, approached with caution and reverence in
the same way we might plan an ascension of Mount Everest.
At the end of the day, it’s okay to love the dress, and it’s
okay to love the ring. You can even love picking out those perfect table
settings for your guests. But don’t forget that starry-eyed party will always
be waiting; whether you get married at twenty or forty, Pinterest will still be
there to tell you how to plan it. So for everyone’s sake, but especially your
own, take a moment and look away from that pretty picture. After all, real life
happens outside the frame.
*McVeigh, T. (2010). "If Your Friends Get Divorced You Could Be Next". The Observer. Retrieved from: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2010/jul/04/divorce-friends-contagious-academic-study. Oct. 6, 2017.
*McVeigh, T. (2010). "If Your Friends Get Divorced You Could Be Next". The Observer. Retrieved from: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2010/jul/04/divorce-friends-contagious-academic-study. Oct. 6, 2017.
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