Friday, October 2, 2009

Fall is Falling


Pardon my sickness. It's been a long week. During my time as a captive to my cold, I have been watching much local news. (I've exhausted my Netflix queue for the time being.) All local news casts have been reporting the "optimal time" to view the changing leaves in Tennessee.

I have been fretting over the weather for our wedding for a while now. We are winging it, not renting tents and faithfully believing that Tennessee's notoriously temperamental weather will subside and give us a crisp and clear fall evening. I know that's a tall order, but I believe it can happen.

Forecasts are calling early November the best time to see the glorious fall colors that the Cumberland Plateau is known for. I am looking forward to serene afternoon in front of Lake Standing Stone, riotous colors reflecting back from its waters.

It's only 37 days away, you know.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

I Used to Have an Engagement Ring and I Don't Have a Ring for This Wedding

You can see it in this picture! That's my mannish-looking hand fanning out some George W. Bush playing cards at a Michelle Obama rally in Gainesville, FL.

I love that little ring. It was not expensive. It is not some superior designer-quality show piece. It is a silver and blue topaz (my birthstone) and a little bit big on my finger.

When we had come off the road (we had spent much of the fall of 2008 selling merch at political rallies across the country), we sorely needed a vacation. We decided on Alligator Point, FL because it is super-remote and very laid back. We rented a little house on an aquatic preserve and spent our days fishing and shelling. It was lovely.

A few days into our vacation, we went to Angelo and Son's, a huge seafood house in the middle of nowhere perched above the Ochlockonee Bay. I was busily stuffing my face with my second plate of raw oysters and dipping into my third painkiller cocktail when The Boy said he was stepping out for a brief smoke.

I couldn't have asked for a more beautiful day. We had spent the morning fishing, the afternoon walking on a totally deserted beach chasing great blue herons. At Angelo's, we had chosen a comfortable table on the expansive balcony overlooking the Bay. As I sat there alone and waiting for him to reurn, I was perfectly happy (this almost never happens), satiated and getting a bit tipsy from the rum.

He came back to the table and sat down. He pulled a small silver box out of his pocket, saying "I got you something." This Boy really likes to surprise me and I was delighted by a small gift during our perfect early-bird dinner. I opened the box to find the ring inside. I put it on; it slid about my finger loosely. I admired it, telling him what a lovely and thoughtful choice he had made.

We sat there in silence, warm breeze blowing off the ocean, both of us staring at the ring. "Do you like it," he asked?

"I do very much. Its very pretty," I said. More silence.

"I've never bought anyone a ring before," he confessed. We smiled at each other. We looked over the water, quickly finishing out drinks. We paid our waitress and left the restaurant holding hands. Walking across the street, we decided to get a bottle of wine at the bait shop. We picked up a few more live shrimp for the evening's fishing, too. When we got back to our house, he got down on his knee and asked me to marry him. I knelt down and said yes. We both smiled and promptly started to forgot about our convoluted pasts. It was good.

Months later, when we were integrating our households, the ring was damaged during furniture moving. My large sofa slipped coming through the living room door, crushing my hand and trapping my ring finger (with ring) between the itself and the door frame.

The ring was badly bent, the stone loose. I haven't worn it since. I still feel it on my finger everyday. I attempt to move the phantom ring around the designated finger with my left thumb. I don't have a ring or a band for the wedding. Neither does The Boy.

Somehow, I don't think it matters.

Decided: Cupcake Toppers


I know I am late on the whole cupcake vs. wedding cake biz. I find the idea of spending more than $350.00 on a single cake that probably will not be rad, totally ridiculous. Spending sooo much on a cake would invariably make me hate it from the get go and I would never be happy with its decoration anyway (I think I've been to Cakewrecks too much.). I want a variety of sweets at this shindig, too. So, I chose cupcakes (amongst other delights) for our reception.
Did I tell you I'm making all the cupcakes? No? I'm making all the food too. It is one of the few wedding-related tasks that is in no way unfun or overwhelming to me. I don't think I am going overboard on this at all. We anticipate hosting from 60-70 people. I have a lot of help cooking and baking. We are cooking for 100. I think its pretty easy- its not unlike cooking for a large dinner party.
Some of the details, like cupcake toppers, fall under this domain. I chose garden gnomes for some of the cupcakes on weird miniature deer for the others. I am pleased with my decision and think it aligns perfectly with the forest-y we are working with.
I need other little topper thingies for some other items. Any ideas?

Monday, September 28, 2009

OMFG

I have a long and abiding love for Mallo Cups. They are delicious, delicate creatures of marshmallow, chocolate and toasted coconut. I would eat them every day if I could and have made a four-pack my dinner on many occassions.

But I did not know I could acquire a "giant" Mallo Cup.

Perhaps this Mercury in retrograde business is over. I have moved forward and seen the light.

Its white and flowing and slightly chunky. Yay!

Big Baby Jesus I Can't Wait!


Perhaps you know the rest? No? That's alrighty.


Today, in a few short hours, I meet my personal trainer. See, I have not gotten in shape at all for this wedding. I have chosen to eat croissants and continued to cocktail like its the Days of Wine and Roses. I fancy that I will somehow be able to magically drop 27 lbs in the next 42 days. I fantasize about my imagined weight loss as I eat Pillsbury Crescent Rolls and Philly Chili.
But today! Today! I meet Coach Ris. She will whip my fatty arms and flabby psyche into shape over the next few weeks.
I need the help desperately. I wake up in the morning and the first thought I have is, "Wow. Can't wait to come home and go to sleep."
I need stamina, energy and some tightening. The Coach will make sure this happens. She is invested in my wedding day like few people are. She is also my officiant, wedding planner and DJ. We slay the wedding dragon together.
And I can't wait!
(Clearly this is not posting correctly. Who runs on like that?)

It's Too Big. It's Too Wide. It Won't Fit.


I am in love, love, love.

DI(WHY)?! or Five Invitations Walk Into a Bar...


I still have five invitations sitting in my home. They should have been mailed six weeks ago and yet, they languish on top of an old radio in my living room. One of them is going all the way to London. And, I have two invitations to still make.

Why haven't I sent/made them? Simple. DI(WHY) Overload (I smell a new blog, heh).

DI(WHY) Overload is what happens when one embarks on a seemingly simple crafting experience only to become bogged down in tiny DIY-details. Disdain and apathy ensue. Pretty soon said craft is in a pile in another room.

And this is what has happened to me and those last seven sad invitations. My somewhat plain DIY invites consist of 16 steps. That's right, sugar. 16 steps. It takes 15 minutes to make one invitation.

For weeks now, the inivation making supplies have been in a ridiculous pile on the kitchen table. I have routinely flung food in that area, set things (dishes, catnip, dirty towels) on the invites, and just generally treated the area as a toxic waste site for wedding details. I am bad.

But I am trying to come around. Some people will be getting the invitation a few weeks before the wedding. Perhaps that's better than not getting one at all?