As of today, Husband and I have been married for 25 years. This summer is all about sorting out the issues of college students, though, so we'll keep today's celebration down to dinner. And then in the fall, we'll go adventuring on a Mediterranean cruise on the Queen Mary.
We didn't have very much money 25 years ago, which is how all couples should start out, I think, and we paid for most of the wedding ourselves. I bought the dress for $400 and the hat for $15, we bought some flowers for around $375, ordered a cake and hired a photographer who was something like 125 years old.
A sister-in-law was an attendant, and one of my sisters was the maid of honor. The poor old photographer forgot to get a shot of my sister walking down the aisle, so my mother took matters into her firm hands and twisted. She badgered the photographer and his sickly wife for weeks until the man agreed to take a different photo of my sister, cut out the head, and paste it onto the body of the sister-in-law and then print out another proof for the photo album. The man's wife got hives from the whole ordeal and worried herself sick.
Anyway, the church pianist played the piano, and my sisters sang—"Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms" was their duet—and my brother-in-law performed the ceremony.
The wedding was in my parents' church, and the reception was in their front yard with neighbors contributing picnic tables and chairs. There was no music at the reception and certainly no dancing, and my mother made most of the food. After a couple of days in Chicago, we packed up a U-Haul and moved to Ridgewood, New Jersey where we started our lives from scratch.
We didn't have very much money 25 years ago, which is how all couples should start out, I think, and we paid for most of the wedding ourselves. I bought the dress for $400 and the hat for $15, we bought some flowers for around $375, ordered a cake and hired a photographer who was something like 125 years old.
A sister-in-law was an attendant, and one of my sisters was the maid of honor. The poor old photographer forgot to get a shot of my sister walking down the aisle, so my mother took matters into her firm hands and twisted. She badgered the photographer and his sickly wife for weeks until the man agreed to take a different photo of my sister, cut out the head, and paste it onto the body of the sister-in-law and then print out another proof for the photo album. The man's wife got hives from the whole ordeal and worried herself sick.
Anyway, the church pianist played the piano, and my sisters sang—"Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms" was their duet—and my brother-in-law performed the ceremony.
The wedding was in my parents' church, and the reception was in their front yard with neighbors contributing picnic tables and chairs. There was no music at the reception and certainly no dancing, and my mother made most of the food. After a couple of days in Chicago, we packed up a U-Haul and moved to Ridgewood, New Jersey where we started our lives from scratch.
Comments
Enjoy your celebrations - they sound lengthy and exciting!
Love you guys :)
Many congratulations and may you have many more.
Savannah sent me.
(No music or dancing? That's me out of a job!)
I had a mustache like your hubby's back in 1984 - it looked more like a catapillar. My first marriage took place about a year after yours.
Many, many congratulations!
I love the story of the wedding.
You've certainly come a long way in the past quarter of a century … just look at Daughter 1 about to start at Berkeley and Daughter 2 in college. Sheesh!
And now that the girls are "all growed up" you're playing in the orchestra and writing for your paper and you must be about the busiest person I know of. Hee hee.
I wonder what the next twenty five years will bring?
Whatever you get up to I hope it rains happiness on you.
Happy anniversary to you both!
xx
You'll both luv the Mediterranean. Take lots of pictures and enjoy your time together on your journey in life.