As someone who thrives on planning, order, and predictability, the past month has been one of the most challenging in my life and my relationship. The minute we found out that our venue was canceling all events before May 10th, in compliance with CDC guidelines, we drank some casual 2 PM whiskey and got to work doing what we do bestâplanning and finding solutions. We had lost control and we needed to get it back. Within less than two hours we had a new wedding date and an Excel spreadsheet with categorized action items. We didnât pause to think about how we would feel about this Plan B, only that it made us feel better to have one. We communicated to our guests that we decided that we would still get married on our original date as intended and would host the wedding we had been planning in 2021 on our one-year anniversary. We received responses of âWow, you planned that so fast!â and âI donât know how you have such a positive attitude about thisâ. It felt good, mainly because we didnât allow time for it to feel any other way.
We were overly hopeful, and admittedly naive, that our immediate family and wedding party would still be able to take part in a smaller ceremony. We even got excited. âLetâs have it at the park near our home where we walk our dog and took our engagement photosâhow romantic! Remember that beautiful party room overlooking the lake at our first apartment? Letâs reach out to themâhow romantic!â As the virus spread and the restrictions increased, that hope dwindled. The romantic notions faded and we began facing the reality that we now needed a Plan B for our Plan B.
There were a Lot of Tears
There were so. many. tears. A lot of âif this, then thatâ scenario conversations. A lot of âitâs not looking goodâ texts and phone calls from family and friends we hoped would still be able to make it to the ceremony. Mostly, it was a lot of grief. Grief for the wedding that we had been planning for almost a year. Grief for the expectations weâd carried our whole lives about what the day we got married would look like. Grief for the once-in-a-lifetime event that would be forever marked by a global pandemic. For me, that grief then led to guilt for being so upset over a wedding, when we are the lucky ones who have jobs that can be done remotely, healthcare, and a home where we could safely shelter in place. I was devastated and conflicted, leaving me overwhelmed and emotionally drained.
Then Gratitude
But then that grief and guilt created space for another emotionâgratitude. Gratitude for the people who said theyâd drive if they couldnât fly. Gratitude for the ones who offered to cook for a wedding celebration if restaurants werenât open. Gratitude for the amount of âI love yousâ and âIâm here for yousâ that we not only received from our friends and familyâbut from each other.
This experience and all of its uncertainty has caused a continued setting and resetting of expectations of what a ceremony and wedding look like and need to be.
I wish that I was having the wedding that we planned on the date we planned, but I canât have that. Iâd give anything to go back to the days when my biggest wedding concern was our guest count being above our venueâs capacity. Now, my biggest concern is whether or not my family and friends have the technological capability to watch my ceremony as a webcast. This is not the ceremony I imaginedâbut what else can I do? The state and country are on lockdown and thereâs nothing I can do to change that. While there may be extenuating circumstances that call for groups to gather, my marriage ceremony is not one of them. Once I accepted that, I was surprised that I started to feel less devastated. I felt lighter, more at peace.
A Change of Expectations
Itâs weird to think that Iâm getting married in 2020 but my wedding is in 2021. I donât know what the script is for a one-year anniversary wedding that was moved because of the Coronavirus, but Iâm positive one will be online soon enough. This year, we say âI Doâ. Next year, we say âWell, if we can survive our first year of marriage in the midst of a global pandemic, then we definitely STILL do.â Iâll still get to wear my wedding dress and my partner the dark green tailored suit that brings out his eyes. Weâll still have all of the little, personal touches we planned. Iâll still get my late night taco barâwhich is very important to me. Most importantly, we arenât losing the opportunity to celebrate our marriage and share our love with family and friends. We just have to wait a little longer to do it.
In writing this, I realize that Iâve actually moved through the seven stages of grief. First it was shock at how quickly the Coronavirus was spreading. Then it was denial that it would in any way impact our wedding, especially after it caused us to cancel our bachelorette and bachelor parties. There was no way it would get worse! It moved to guilt when we found ourselves so upset at how this was impacting our parties and wedding when we were constantly bombarded with reports about the increase in unemployment, illnesses, and deaths. Bargaining came when we said âOK, it postponed the wedding, but we can still have a ceremonyâ. If only we followed all of the rules and took the right precautions, itâd be fine. Depression came nextâand it came hard. There were so many tears and questions of âwell, whatâs the point of even having the ceremony ifâŚâ. It felt like we were trying to push a square peg through a round hole. Testing started slowly. We approached (most) questions with caution and care, finding and setting those new expectations. We also had fights, expecting the other to feel the same way we did about these new expectations. Now comes acceptance.
Hereâs to the future
What more meaningful way forward can there be than this? At a time when everything is changing and anxiety and depression are running rampant, we get to hit pause and spend a day focused on how much we love each other and the commitment we are making to building a future together. While nothing seems constant anymore, the love we have for each other and our desire to marry hasnât changed. We still get to do that, regardless of what is happening in the outside world. And in one year, we get to throw the most kick-ass one year anniversary celebration with our family and friends.
For a while, it felt like Coronavirus took my dream away. But now, I realize that my dream is still coming true. I get to marry my partner and have a beautiful wedding. Above all, Coronavirus didnât take away my ability to get marriedâand that is truly what it is all about. Iâve thought a lot about the fact that I am getting married and having my wedding on separate days, and I have not only accepted that, Iâm really excited for it.