Now, there are too many versions of this story floating around, and no, this is not an attempt to get the story straight. In reality, after almost 7 years of wedlock, we have successfully been molded into Mommy & Daddy! No more Boy meets Girl, Girl meets Boy, struck with lightening, Love’s first bite…and the sorts-You get the picture. Until, one day, our bundle of joy comes galloping, and invariably utters those few words: “Daddy, how did you meet Mommy…?” And, trust me, it is only second worse to, “Mommy, where do babies come from”???
A strategy has to be in place to tackle these “tit-bits” of childish candor and innocence. Some of the more prudent ones, I mean couples, would probably have their “stories” ready for just this moment; and without further adieu leap into the intricate & finely tuned fairy-tale “Picture” that was their “Wedding”. They have their Albums neatly stacked, the family portraits all glittering with Joy and Happiness; and the minds of the little ones aptly put to rest; or, in some cases, fueled with adorable fantasies of a glorious “Love Story” building its course…; and, suddenly the Boy in her class, with a chipped tooth but cute smile, who decided to grab her hand merely to push, has a “crush” on my little girl.
Is this how it all begins? Or, do we unscrupulously build its course ourselves? I can still recall the first time when a boy grabbed my hand and blurted those 3 big words during a friendly game of “hide and go seek” with our neighborhood kids. I was 10 at the time, and the only response he could scrunch out of me was me jerking him off. But, alas, the seeds had been sown; the land had been ploughed; the sun was shining bright, the streams were gushing through the ditches, the air filled with cherubic scents of the willow woods; and, for a long time, it seemed the world was festooned with “seasons of mists and mellow fruitfulness…*”; until many years later, I find myself reticently reciting “our story" to our latest set of acquaintances!
It was not until a few days ago that I was struck with this daunting paradigm of shifting behavior. I stumbled upon a book I had read sometime in my teens, and feeling ‘more than ordinarily dull this morning’ decided to replenish the memories with a fresh dose of cynicism inevitable at my age- the title of the book, “The Convenient Marriage”* (go figure!). A few pages into it, and I was really enjoying myself; the plot was simple, the dialogues witty, the characters jumped to life with their funny anomalies: the heroine, 17, with eye-brows that refuse to arch and relinquished hopes of getting any taller or hiding her stammer, valiantly 'deals' her way into a prosperous marriage to a wealthy Earl*, who, at age 35, is a man of the world in business and with ‘such wanton pieces of pretty femininity’.
And, thus, began my journey to my present. So it wasn’t a charade; it wasn’t the “union” to guff about; there weren’t any foreboding or speculations as to whose royal blood (or “commoner”) will grace the country of its future heirloom; no circus of paparazzi adorned the Spanish steps of Rome ; nor there were “millions” to be made. ( I mean, who could but the Kardashians!!) Nevertheless, a journey well besought with a few funny notes, stories to be told, and laughs to be had…of how the groom went chasing his missing luggage on his wedding day; or how everyone scattered about not knowing what to say in a tongue spoken by all, but the family of the Groom!
To be continued....
- John Keats’ The Autumn, composed in 1819.
- A Georgian romantic novel set in 1776, written by Georgette Heyer; published in 1934.
- An Earl is a member of the nobility. For further reading, look up http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl