***********************************
Linking up with Wordless Wednesday and Sandee at Comedy Plus.
***********************************
Words for Wednesday was begun by Delores and has become a moveable feast of word or picture or music prompts to encourage us to write stories, poems, or whatever strikes our fancy.
This month, the prompts are being provided by C. Lee McKenzie.
enchanted
lavish
scurrying
bouquet
smash
anyway
and/or
champagne
caviar
candlelight
heart-shaped
flee
excitement
If i'm involved, you know it's not going to be an ENCHANTED wedding, there will be mess ups, mix ups, and general mayhem involved in some way.
That's okay, those are the things you remember, right? That's what makes for the EXCITEMENT.
The florist didn't get my updated list and sent flowers for 4 bridesmaids and one flower girl instead of 3 and 2. The BOUQUET, well, let's just say it looked better in pictures than in person and i wasn't sad to toss it at the end.
The limousine company made a boo-boo. They sent all the limos to the house instead of sending one to the reception venue to pick up the groom and groomsmen. The caterer at the venue, a friend of the family, was about to stuff all of them in the back of the catering van and bring them himself when the limo pulled up.
When we arrived at the church, the candles for the CANDLELIGHT wedding hadn't been lit. The groomsmen rounded up cigarette lighters from as many smokers as they could find and ran up and down the aisles getting the candles lit.
During the wedding, the lights were dimmed of course. What the nice lady who'd dimmed them didn't know what that she'd also accidentally turned off the organ. The sweet organist went to play the recessional and there was a flurry of lights flashing on and off all over the church as she looked for the right switch. The organist finally had to come out from behind the organ and cross to the piano, and everyone saw that she was wearing the most beautiful wedding worthy blouse imaginable and pedal-pusher pants with flip/flop shoes. Under normal circumstances, no one would have known as she'd have just been seen from behind the organ. Thinking back, she was dressed zoom-meeting-worthy before Zoom was even a thought in anyone's mind.
Our wedding wasn't LAVISH by extremely wealthy standards. My dress had been chosen off the discontinued rack (it was beautiful to me and that's all i cared about). CHAMPAGNE, yes, CAVIAR, no way. Everything in the wedding wasn't HEART-SHAPED, and this was in the day before you had to send your guests home with elaborate mementos.
The receiving line lacked bridesmaids, they'd decamped to the restroom and didn't know they were needed until we'd greeted just about everyone!
We didn't have a sit down dinner, just tons of finger-food served by waiters from the catering company SCURRYING among the people, or serve yourself some of the more elaborate dishes at the buffet.
This was also in the days before it was custom to SMASH the wedding cake into each other's faces. We held a piece of cake together and each took a bite at the same time. Sweetie got all cake, and i got all frosting, but since he's a bigger fan of cake than frosting, and i'm the opposite, that was just fine.
After dancing and eating and just enjoying a good time as much as we could with a photographer chasing us all over, Sweetie and i changed clothes, said good-bye, and slipped out. We'd hidden the car so it wasn't a sight to behold and we didn't have to FLEE.
That's going to be 37-years-ago this summer. A blink, really. Watching what people go through to plan weddings today, i'm glad we got it right the first time.
***********************************
Today is:
Curling Is Cool Day -- embrace the Olympic sport the whole family can play; sponsored by Wellcat Holidays
Defenders of the Motherland Day (formerly Red Army Day) -- Russia and some former Soviet Republics
Homeland Defenders' Day -- Kyrguzstan
Motherland Defenders' Day -- Transdniestria
Diesel Engine Day -- Rudolph Diesel received his patent in Germany on this day in 1893
Easy Divorce Day -- marking the passage, in 1915, of the Nevada law granting easy divorces after only a 6-month residency, the first such in the US
Inconvenience Yourself™ Day -- enrich your life by looking for ways to make a positive impact on the world, even if it inconveniences you
International Dog Biscuit Appreciation Day -- while i can't figure out who started this one, even Mr. Google says it's celebrated today
Iwo Jima Day -- commemoration of the US flag raising
National Banana Bread Day
National Day -- Brunei
National Rationalization Day
Pebbles Day -- Pebbles Flintstone was born this day around 10,000BC
Republic Day (Mashramani) -- Guyana
St. Milburga of Shropshire's Day (Patron of birds)
St. Polycarp of Smyrna's Day (Patron against dysentery and earache)
St. Serenus the Gardener's Day (Patron of bachelors, falsely accused people)
Teal Ribbon Day -- Australia (wear a teal ribbon, raise awareness of ovarian cancer)
Terminalia -- Ancient Roman Calendar (festival for Terminus, god of land boundary markers)
Birthdays Today:
Emily Blunt, 1983
Niecy Nash, 1970
Michael Dell, 1965
"Bobby" Bonilla, 1963
Howard Jones, 1955
Patricia Richardson, 1951
"Too Tall" Jones, 1951
John Sanford, 1944
Johnny Winter, 1944
Peter Fonda, 1939
Sylvia Chase, 1938
Donna J. Stone, 1933
Paul Tibbets, 1915
William L. Shirer, 1904
Victor Fleming, 1889
W.E.B. DuBois, 1868
Emma Hart Willard, 1787
George Frederic Handel, 1685
Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, 1646
Samuel Pepys, 1633
Debuting/Premiering Today:
"Fortune and Men's Eyes"(Play), 1967
"Pinocchio"(Disney Cartoon), 1940
Today in History:
Emperor Diocletian orders the general persecution of Christians, 303
Traditional date for the publication of the Gutenberg Bible, the first Western book printed with movable type, 1455
France begins its fifth "holy war" against the Huguenots, 1574
Baron von Steuben arrives at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania to help to train the Continental Army, 1778
The first US raw-cotton-to-cloth mill is founded, in Waltham, Massachusetts, 1813
The first US pharmaceutical college is organized, the College of Apothecaries in Philidelphia, 1821
Santa Anna begins his siege of the Alamo, 1836
John Newman leaves the Anglican Church and is welcomed into the Roman Catholic Church, 1846
In Mexico, American troops under General Zachary Taylor defeat Mexican General Antonio López de Santa Anna, 1847
Great Britain formally recognises the independence of the Boers in the area between the Orange and Vaal rivers, signing the Bloemfontein Convention with the Orange Free State, 1854
The London Times publishes the world's first classified ad, 1886
Charles Martin Hall, assisted by his sister Julia Brainerd Hall, produced the first samples of man-made aluminum, 1886
The French/Italian Riviera is struck by an earthquake that leaves 2,000 dead, 1887
The Tootsie Roll is introduced by Leo Hirshfield, 1896
In France, Emile Zola is imprisoned for writing his "J'accuse" letter accusing the government of anti-Semitism and wrongly jailing Alfred Dreyfus, 1898
The Cuban state of Guantanamo is leased to the US, 1903
The US acquires control of the Panama Canal Zone for $10 million, 1904
The Rotary Club International is founded in Chicago, 1905
Russian Tsar Nicholas II dissolves the Diet of Finland, 1909
The US state of Nevada enacts a convenient divorce law, 1915
The February Revolution begins in Russia, 1917
Plutonium is first produced and isolated by Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, 1941
The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is founded, 1847
The first mass inoculation with the Salk vaccine begins in Pittsburgh, 1954
First meeting of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO), 1955
The United States Environmental Protection Agency announces its intent to buy out and evacuate the dioxin-contaminated community of Times Beach, Missouri, 1983
Supernova 1987a is seen in the Large Magellanic Cloud, 1987
A small fire occurs in the Russian Space station, Mir, 1997
An avalanche destroys the Austrian village of Galtür, killing 31, 1999
Unknown criminals pour more than 2.5 million liters of diesel oil and other hydrocarbons into the river Lambro, in Northern Italy, causing an environmental disaster, 2010
The journal Nature Human Behaviorpublishes a study of the discovery of the oldest Australian rock art, a 17,300-year-old painting of a kangaroo in the Kimberly region of Western Australia, 2021
I feel like eating a delicious cake now. For once forget about the calories. Lol! Have a wonderful day!
ReplyDeleteI always eat my cake down to the last crumb :-)
ReplyDeleteHave a Fondant Fancytastic week 👍
1st of March - isn't it?
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
Great sign for Mardi Gras. Party on!
ReplyDeleteKing cakes are beautiful and fun.
ReplyDeleteLove that sign. It's perfect.
ReplyDeleteThank you for joining the Wordless Wednesday Blog Hop.
Have a fabulous Wordless Wednesday. Big hug, my friend. ♥
I would love some king cake. I will stop by later to see what you wrote. XO
ReplyDeletedawg bizcuit day !!!! ???? what a bout cat treetz day; ore cat grazz day, ore cat nip day !! ☺☺♥♥♥
ReplyDeleteMardi Gras King Cake? I bet it is delicious! Have a sweet day and yes we actually watched a lot of curling this year!
ReplyDeleteLove the sign!
ReplyDeleteGreat sign ~ those King Cakes are such fun and a wonderful tradition ~ Xo
ReplyDeleteWishing you lots of laughter in your days,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)
Hard to believe it's almost King Cake time!
ReplyDeleteYes, for Mardis Gras, one must have cake!
ReplyDeleteAll that matters is that you are both still in love. I always say I can tell if a marriage is going to last by how they do the cake. Smushing it into someone's face is a total lack of respect and the marriage probably won't last. We will be 30 years in October. :) XO
ReplyDeleteI love your story and I agree the best weddings are often the more informal ones. I really dislike that new tradition of smashing wedding cake into each others faces! When did that begin and why has it continued? It looks awful and is a shocking waste of cake in my opinion.
ReplyDeleteI love the wedding story. I dislike that smashing the face with wedding cake. I think it is tacky but that is me. when our oldest was small she had a wonderful teacher as did her two cousins. The nice teachers son married a gal, trouble ensued. The police came! Poor Mrs. Brekke. She was such a nice lady. Our friend Kathy witnessed our wedding in the back of a church hall. She said she had been to glamourous weddings that the Holy Spirit did not attend but he was alive and well at our wedding. Made us so happy. A former prison chaplain married us. After he took in his own church. I might add. heeheehee....he was the uncle of a friend of my husband's. 38 years this May 3rd. Simplicity worked well for us. Our middle girl planend her wedding in 52 days by herself. My husband kept saying I feel Jesus presence don't you? YEP HE was center stage all day - five years this Dec 2. Our girl would be a terrific wedding planner. I sure love the Mardi Gras sign too. Wonderufl post as always. THANK YOU HUGS across the miles
ReplyDelete