Home Is Where The Heart Is
A string quartet plays in the background as I listen to a famous New Age guru
perform a wedding ceremony on a Malibu cliff.
The guru is marrying two friends of mine who met in an acting class last year.
She turns to the groom and launches into a spiel about how from now on, he's
going to make the bride's "heart his home."
That's when I start to lose it. I feel the Malibu sun warming my shoulders and
melting all my cynicism into a pool of mush. I grip my girlfriend's hand for
support but she's doing worse than I am, wiping her teary eyes on a scarf.
"I'm not crying for them," she whispers. "I'm crying for me. No one's going to
make my heart their home."
"I know," I confess. "Someone might make my heart their apartment, but they'll
ruin the carpets and insist on a month-to-month lease."
We're giggling until we get some dirty looks and regain our composure.
The guru goes on about God and love and partnership and I'm still thinking
about home.
I'm thinking, in particular, about a guy who invited me to a dinner party
recently at his home. He's the kind of guy I'm popular with these days, in his
late thirties and desperate to get married to appease his mother or quelch any
uncomfortable rumors about his sexuality.
His apartment displayed the sort of Spartan living that makes a jail cell look
like a suite at the Ritz.
I happened to see his bedroom on an apartment tour. A mattress sat on the
floor, across from a TV teetering precariously on a milk crate. A lone, dingy
white sheet clung to the bed. I'm no Martha Stewart, but would it kill him to
get a top sheet? A plant? If he made my heart his home, would it start to look
a little like this?
The guru asks the bride to recite the vows she has written. They're beautiful.
"I'm so grateful you chose me, and that you choose me every day," she says,
gripping a bouquet of yellow flowers.
My friend squeezes my hand and I remember that other people crying always makes
me cry and now the whole place is a sniffling mess.
This is a big year for weddings, the Millenial year. My peers are starting to
marry off in droves. I'll be a bridesmaid in September and I already have the
seafoam green dress to prove it. I don't know how I feel about weddings,
although I'm always honored to be a part of them. My family's on the poor side
and I'm on the practical side so I can only imagine doing the Vegas thing
myself.
It's cooling off as the groom lifts the bride's veil and they kiss.
The last thing I want to be is the single, bitter wedding guest. What saves me
from that hideous plight is my total ambivalence about the whole thing. They
say girls fantasize about white dresses and flowers and a big production but I
only seem to yearn for the sweet excesses of a bachelor party.
The wedding guests move to outdoor tables and my friends and I talk about what
kind of wedding we'd like. They ask me if I'd like a Jewish wedding. I say a
date with a top sheet might be a good start, let's not get ahead of ourselves.
I strike up a conversation on the dance floor with a teacher from Dallas
because I'll do anything to not dance at weddings. He's nice. I wonder briefly
how he'd feel about making my heart his home. He makes his rental care his home
and leaves early to catch a flight back to Dallas. Even if you're not pining to
get married, weddings can make you needy and sappy and lonely, even for
teachers from Texas.
The bride gets up to sing her new husband, "My Funny Valentine." He loves it
when she sings and her voice is clear and controlled and perfect.
To comfort myself, I recall an elderly couple I once saw eating their early
bird specials in total silence, broken only by the defeated slurping of
vegetable beef soup.
Don't feel bad, I tell myself. One day it's flowers and vows, the next it's
couples counseling and a mini-van. One day it's grilled salmon and wedding
cake, the next it's vegetable beef soup.
Married people may be happier and they may not. There's all kinds of loneliness
and as many forms of contentment. I read Richard Cory. I know there's no way to
tell from the outside who is truly happy.
Somewhere, I imagine, the bride is carefully hanging up her dress and smoothing
it on the hanger. She's giggling every time she says the word "husband."
My friends and I climb into our car. The dirt road back to the freeway is long
and bumpy, and we dish about the teacher and sing from the back seat all the
way down.
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