Monday, October 3, 2011

The English Wedding I Went To

As promised, my review of English weddings.
First of all, this was swanky and small. Molto small - I'm thinking: 50 guests?
Swanky in its venue - the lovely Shrigley Hall near Manchester. It's not a baronial manse as I had envisioned - it's the estate built by new money *blech! p-tooey!* of some sort of industrialist or other. Maybe a mill owner. And a child labor exploiter.
Regardless - it's gorgeous and a terrific spot for weddings as your floral bill will be next to nothing!
I learned that "Buck's Fizz' is the beverage of choice following the ceremony. It was given to guests as we departed the ceremony into the courtyard. Said courtyard was endearingly laid with flagstones. (But if those flagstones wreck your $150 Anne Klein heels, it's hideous.)
"Buck's Fizz" is a mimosa. I told everyone that they should start calling them mimosas, because it is  prettier than saying "Buck's Fizz". Really. The person who came up with "Buck's Fizz" should have been sacked.
The dinner was delicious. Amazing how good food can contribute to the atmosphere. I think it should be broadcast on CNN -  since having tasty food at a wedding is obviously a revolutionary idea.
Then we have the speeches. Forget soggy, maudlin oratories: the naughtier the better as far as British wedding speeches are concerned! Think : Four Weddings and A Funeral.
And happily, tradition has it that only the gentlemen speak. Praise Jesus, is all I have to say.
So - long story short: Canadian weddings fall short (I'm tempted to say "suck") and British weddings excel (meaning, if you're less-evolved: they RAWK.)

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Metro-necks (A vent. Move along, nothing to see here!)

FYI, a southern gentleman does not speak of the deuce he just laid, especially in mixed company. The last person to be interested in your BMs was your mom, and she's dead.
A southern gentleman's table manners do not make one wonder if he's just been let out of the state penn. The southern gentleman, when encountering an inedible bit, does not take out the offending bit, look at it, and invite inquiry before placing it on the plate for display.
Expressions like "it was black-rigged" and "I'm doing black work out here" (when not doing embroidery) do not make you appear tolerant. You can't just substitute the word "black" for the N-word. And no, using the N-word is NOT part of our treasured southern heritage.
A southern gentleman is comfortable in all situations, and you, my friend, are not. Your discomfort in situations where you perceive someone to have more than you is palpable.
A southern gentleman is well-educated. "Nuff said.
So, dear friend, I believe you are southern. You are a man, and you are capable of gentlemanly behaviours at times. But you're not a gentleman. The best I can do here is give you the title "Metro-neck" - for rednecks who aspire.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Is There Anything Zoloft Can't Do?

Lately I have been pondering the thought of approaching a 'dear friend' (not her real relationship to me) with the notion that she might *just might* benefit from psychoactive (is that what you call them?) medication.
I've considered how I might introduce the idea that medicine might help my friend's extreme irritability and mood swings - before she alienates everyone on the planet, or worse, before her interns at the university devise a way to kill her and dispose of the body. (There is all of that acid in Graphicstudio , after all - for etching engraving plates and stuff. )
But an incident that occurred very recently gave me another tactic in my campaign to shove Zoloft down this person's throat.
Had I not been taking Zoloft and its special friend in the cocktail, seroquel, I would still be screaming at my husband, instead of going to the computer and writing this.
This is what happened:
We're doing spring chores. I'm anxious to start on my special little outdoor space and R has been giving me advice. So today I asked him, regarding my space: "So we have to power clean first, then sand?" and the man went off.
With arms practically waving in the air, I heard all about what he has to do, what he should be doing. what he can't do but really wants to, and how many times does he have to tell me that you POWERWASH first and then sand? And do I want to have a thousand jobs unfinished because we. don't.concentrate??????!!!!!!!!"
So I calmly replied, "I had forgotten I asked you yesterday. Sorry I got your panties in a wad, but thanks for answering my question, and all that extra stuff, too."
I wish I had thought to call him 'Princess' in the bargain. To call him deserving would be an understatement.
My point is, had I not been taking my wonderful drug cocktail I probably would've said this to him instead: "Fuck off, you paternalistic piece of shit! You're not my fucking DAD! Why can't you answer a simple fucking question without going berserk??!!!Jesus Christ!" And we'd still be fighting.
Now I'm typing and he's mowing and all will be fine.
Granted, it's not as immediately satisfying as reeling off a stream off highly deserved profanity, but I think it might be more productive, in the long run, to our happy marriage. I'm very familiar with the term (but not the concept of ) "taking the higher road" , but happy to report that taking the medicine makes taking the higher road easier.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Canadian weddings are dreadful

I loathe them. They're uniformly awful, and if you want to torture me, I'm sure there are easier ways to do it.
Where I was raised in the south, one had a wedding within one's means. The time of day of the wedding dictated the level of formality and therefore, the cost. So if you're invited to a 2 pm wedding, you know that it's going to be quick. Kiss the bride, eat a piece of cake, make a toast, boom! You're out of there.
But most Canadian weddings, in keeping with their extreme level of inconvenience, are held early in the afternoon. The first time I attended one of those fiascos, I looked at the invitation. Start time for the wedding was 2 pm.  I thought to myself, "Oh, goodie - we'll be free by tea-time!"
Was I ever wrong!
Two pm is only the start of the ordeal. After the ceremony, which is usually short, the next item on the agenda is the reception, but you have to wait at least three hours. For pictures.
Now here is where you get into difficulty because the word "reception" means different things when you're speaking of a Canadian wedding. In some weddings, the envelope containing the invitation can be chock-full of inserts. There is the actual invitation to the ceremony, then there is the cocktail hour, then the dinner, then the dance. Some people can be invited to only one, some to all, some to two: it's not uncommon to have an invitation to the ceremony and an invitation to the dance following dinner, which can start as late as ten pm.
The dance section of the wedding (and the magic hour when you can finally leave) is usually late because of the painful custom of speeches during dinner. The level of torture can vary: if there's a big wedding party, you're in for it. The bridesmaids all like to make the same speeches about what good friends they are with the bride, and we have to hear all about their childhood memories and nervously laugh at the tons of private jokes.
I believed that those speeches - the ones that no one but the wedding couple can appreciate-should be given during the rehearsal dinner - but no. Everyone is privy to them, regardless of how meaningless it is or how much they have been inconvenienced by the special day already. A Canadian rehearsal dinner is just that - a dinner. I was really disappointed when Roger and I had our rehearsal dinner, but then I wasn't yet aware of the horribleness of Canadian weddings. A few years ago, R and I were at a wedding of a girl (who promptly divorced a year later) who had a wedding party of twenty. The only good going was the wine, and there was plenty of it. After the last wedding attendant gave her  speech, I was elated. "Yay! Maybe I can leave now!" But alas, no. Someone else got up to the podium clutching a sheaf of papers.
 I have to note that after drinking about a bottle of wine, you forget that you're not whispering. My wail of : "Oh, for the love of all that's holy! Have mercy!" was heard across the room and to this day I am a persona non grata in that family, to the point that when they see us out in public, I am invisible.
I am writing this because of the plethora of invites (I know. You'd think they would have gotten the message by now.) and "save the dates" that have been pouring in to our mailbox. The events happen to be on the peak weekends of summer, and if you live anywhere up north, you know that those precious weekends are few and far between.  But, as Roger mopefully said, "It's better if you don't go - if your heart isn't in it." to which I heartily agree!
I do have some more wedding fodder coming up: after September I will be able to report on how awful or how great English weddings are. You'll get the full report, believe me.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

The Girls Who Love Horses

Who are they - the girls who love horses?
Girls with dreams
Girls who work hard
Smart girls
Strong girls
"Girlie" girls
Big girls
Little girls
Old girls
Young girls
Girls who make their dreams come true
Girls who know who they are
Girls who have found their place in the world
Girls who say:
"Yes I will."
"You'll see."
"I'm not giving up."
Girls who love horses, love.

They love horses, and the horses love them.
2009 by Rosemary McEwin