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Mrs. Pug, New York City/Half Moon Bay, CA Age and Occupation: 33, Lawyer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 32, ditto Engagement Date: July 2008 Wedding Date: March 2010 Venue: Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay About Me: The Mr. and I are two 30-somethings who enjoy tasty sweets of all kinds, our neighborhood wine store, and cuddling with our pug. NYC is where we live and the city we love, but we’re doing the deed out in Northern California. We are trying to keep the affair small, intimate, and manageable. Our motto is: the less people, the better! (I’m kidding.)
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Paradigms

January 7th, 2010 @ 1:46 pm by Mrs. Pug

After I not only accepted but also started to embrace the fact that we were going to have a more traditional ceremony, it brought a key question, on the minds of many, to smack front and center: Why marriage?

I am certainly not the first person to think about, mull over, and expound and this question. So let me do a quick rundown of the common points on each side.

Reasons for marriage: making a solemn commitment; celebration with friends and family, legal benefits; recognition by public of societally and legally accepted form of union; going with the flow; you get a big white dress and it’s fun; etc.

Reasons not for marriage: can do most of the above without artificial legal accoutrement created by the government to validate what should already be considered a valid union; participating in institution in which not everyone can choose to participate; etc.

For me, while I believe the “nay” reasons, I also believe the “yay” reasons and am therefore going forward with the marriage.

I am fully aware that I could have a commitment ceremony and celebration, as many people do, without the legal sanctification. So why am I doing the legal marriage? Am I doing it for the legal benefits? I guess in certain senses getting married does make things easier, both legally and socially. So I’m doing this just for legal and social convenience? Really? I mean, why do I truly need to get *legally* married?

The hard truth is that I don’t feel it is necessary for me, spiritually or emotionally, to get legally married. I mean, it would be great—I do think that it makes for a great celebration and I look forward to the sentimental avowal to entwine my life with Mr. Pug’s, but again, as a I mentioned, a marriage license is not a necessary component of a great party with friends and family, or to commit my love and life to Mr. Pug.

One can even argue that getting married isn’t all that advantageous. Many hetero married couples keep their own last names and are just fine, and you can buy homes and open joint checking accounts even if you’re not legally married. You can also designate in your will and by other methods as to who will be your beneficiaries.

So, I know the legal act is unnecessary, however, I am choosing to go ahead with it anyway. Why? This is tough, and it’s going to sound somewhat blithe—because it will make our lives easier in certain senses, and I have the privilege to do so.

It is very difficult for me to write that, because the key part is that “I have the privilege”—not everyone does. Not everyone has this privilege for reasons I cannot fathom. I am knowingly choosing what many see as an advantage even though some of my friends and acquaintances cannot choose the same course, and this creates a permanent contradiction that unfortunately I simply cannot solve for myself. But that is the nature of injustice. One can’t explain it away.

This is a difficult question, personal and unique to every person and couple. I don’t have an answer for anybody else out there, just for me (and mine wasn’t really a satisfactory answer, at that).

I don’t have a smooth, nice way to tie this post up. I’ll just end this post with a few small reminders that wedding beauty and inspiration can come from outside the heterosexual paradigm…

Paradigms :  wedding relationships 21 Jwpw 21_jwpw

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Paradigms :  wedding relationships Ebeww2i ebeww2i

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Paradigms :  wedding relationships Ellen P ellen_p

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Paradigms :  wedding relationships 5017 5017

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The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.

-MLK Jr.

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39 Responses to “Paradigms”

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1.
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Member
CHK (message)  597 posts, Busy bee

AWESOME post. “I have the priviledge” is a simultaneously great, and awful way for anything to be. I strongly, strongly, STRONGLY disagree with the statement that ONLY heterosexual couples should have that priviledge. It makes no sense to me why anyone would prevent two people to committing to each other. And like you I have a hard time reconciling taking advantage of an inequal priviledge. Yet I’m doing a marriage. And I think in the end it will just make my convictions for eaqual rights stronger.

 
2.
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Bee
Ms Potato Chips (message)  1,193 posts, Bumble bee

Awesome post. Martha Stewart Weddings featured a gay couple for the first time in their Winter issue. May be a step in the right direction.

 
3.
Gilneas
Member
Gilneas (message)  1,393 posts, Bumble bee

This is an apt post for today as NJ is currently voting on allowing Gay Marriage. Keep your fingers crossed for us. I, too, wish there was a way I could make more of a stand against this issue, but we NEED to be legally married because I need health insurance. It’s tough.

 
4.
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Bee
Miss Spaniel (message)  6,792 posts, Bee Keeper

This is a fabulous post. I had many of the same concerns when we decided to get married… the truth is I think the rights afforded by marriage are valuable, and that’s why I think everyone should be able to have them with the partner of their choice (and that’s why I will also take them for myself).

 
5.
Mrs. Mouse
Bee
Mrs. Mouse (message)  5,844 posts, Bee Keeper

Aww, thanks for writing this post. I love the photos you shared. I like posts like this because I think they make Weddingbee feel like a more inclusive place.

 
6.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Pencils (message)  1,027 posts, Bumble bee

I love this post. I’ve been having similar thoughts as of late as well- why get married? I think that’s the point though for the argument for marriage equality- there shouldn’t have to be a reason- if two people want to get hitched they should be able to, no questions asked! i think that’s why its so hard to answer the question- though I think you did a great job doing so. Love the pics as well. Thanks for this Miss Pug!

 
7.
Goldilocks1107
Member
Goldilocks1107 (message)  2,504 posts, Sugar bee

I appreciate the openness of your post and it sums the situation up quite well for me as well. I have the privilege of marrying my best friend, whereas my brother currently does not have that opportunity when he finds “the one”, simply because he lives in a state that voted “no”. But, I love that he’s supportive of my marriage. Maybe it’s because he hasn’t found that special person yet, or maybe it’s just who he is.

 
8.
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Guest
Jaime

I never thought of marriage as a legal thing. Marriage is a covenant, not a legal certificate. Isn’t it more about making a lifelong commitment in front of those who are most important to the wedding couple? Government shouldn’t be mandating marriage, as it was originally set up as an institution of the church. I’m not sure when the switch occurred!
:)

 
9.
EAQ219
Member
EAQ219 (message)  1,448 posts, Bumble bee

Thanks for this post, Miss Pug. I share each and every one of your sentiments (and those of the above commenters.) Beautiful pictures, as well. For anyone to say that the couples you showed (or any other same-sex couples) don’t deserve the same rights/privileges, etc as hetero couples is just…ridiculous and, quite frankly, insulting. Thank you for being so open and honest in this and all of your posts.

 
10.
Miss French Fries
Bee
Miss French Fries (message)  2,218 posts, Buzzing bee

Thank you for such a thoughtful post. Beautifully put.

 
11.
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Bee
Miss Spaniel (message)  6,792 posts, Bee Keeper

@Jaime: Government doesn’t mandate marriage… but it sanctions it and accords it specific legal rights. As long as it does that, it discriminates against people that it denies entry to the institution.

 
12.
lkbphmd
Member
lkbphmd (message)  662 posts, Busy bee

This is a great post, I’m glad you wrote it. While I love all the pictures and the planning, there is so much more to marriage, and I think it is something that can be forgotten about from time to time. I told my FI long before he proposed that I felt no need to get married, and when he spoke so passionately about the why get married, I didn’t know how I could say no to that. Wouldn’t it be nice if everyone had the opportunity to make that decision for themselves?

 
13.
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Member
missvintage (message)  571 posts, Busy bee

Thank you for this post, and the lovely pictures.

 
14.
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Guest
Magdalena

Jaime, you’re totally right! It’s really weird to see people getting all bent out of shape about it. Like it just KILLS them that they can’t get a piece of paper. Do we really think that marriage is something a bureaucrat can call into being with a swipe of the pen? Something you can get by filling out a form?

Personally I would LOVE to just get married without having Uncle Sam involved. Why should he get a say? Unfortunately our venue requires everything to be all formalized with the government. And the ultra-conservative section of my family would go all kinds of crazy. :( Booooo, hissssss.

And if gay couples are allowed to get married, I should be allowed to marry both my FI AND Johnny Depp. Those are my two first choices, anyway. Because if the gender of the people getting married is arbitrary, then isn’t the number of people involved even more arbitrary? There’s actually a movement in Utah to expand marriage rights beyond gays and straights to multiple partners! Somebody give me a non-bigoted argument against polyandry, please ;)

 
15.
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Guest
emariel

@magdalena

marrying someone of the same gender is not the same as marrying more than one person. at all.

i would remind you that interracial marriage was not allowable by US law as late as 1967. i have certainly never heard that likened to polygamy.

gender is a circle to pencil in on a form, as are race, socioeconomic level, age and hair color. and NONE should matter in terms of legal unions.

 
16.
3pugmama
Member
3pugmama (message)  152 posts, Blushing bee

You have such a way with words, and such a generous heart in framing this touching (and touchy!) subject. That MLK quote brought a tear to my eye — are we enough for the task of equality?

 
17.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Hot Cocoa (message)  2,077 posts, Buzzing bee

This is an important and well-said post. And I love that we’re getting photo representation of different kinds of couples on WB again!

@Magdalena and @Jaime: Personally, I’m all for the State getting out of marriage. But since that’s not likely to happen anytime soon, as I wrote in a previous post, the reality is that the state decides, amongst other things, who you may marry, who may solemnize the marriage, and who must be present when the marriage takes place. And, of course, the state and federal governments also determine the rights, privileges, and immunities of marriage. All of this is to say that marriage, despite seeming incredibly private and intimate, is deeply political and incredibly significant in the day-to-day lives of those who do and do not have access to it.

http://www.weddingbee.com/2008/11/03/marriage-rights/

 
18.
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Member
olive25 (message)  235 posts, Helper bee

Totally agree! Thanks for sharing.

 
19.
Miss Pug
Bee
Miss Pug (message)  3,753 posts, Honey bee

this was an important post for me. it really makes me happy that most of you appreciated this post, and that it gave you the opportunity to share your feelings on the subject. i know it was wordy, so thanks for making it all the way through!

 
20.
skibobrown
Member
skibobrown (message)  1,902 posts, Buzzing bee

I love those pics that you found! I’m glad to be from a state where marriage is allowed for all people… although now I’m living on one of the states that just voted down gay marriage :-( We needed some of the legal protection of marriage, since FI is currently unemployed, we needed spousal health insurance. It upsets me that these sorts of benefits are not available to all people who are in a committed and loving relationship.

 
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Mrs. Pug
Mrs. Pug

Mrs. Pug, New York City/Half Moon Bay, CA Age and Occupation: 33, Lawyer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 32, ditto Engagement Date: July 2008 Wedding Date: March 2010 Venue: Ritz-Carlton, Half Moon Bay About Me: The Mr. and I are two 30-somethings who enjoy tasty sweets of all kinds, our neighborhood wine store, and cuddling with our pug. NYC is where we live and the city we love, but we’re doing the deed out in Northern California. We are trying to keep the affair small, intimate, and manageable. Our motto is: the less people, the better! (I’m kidding.)

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