Don’t Try This at Home

No red­necks were harmed in the pro­duc­tion of this pho­to.

 

Let me tell you about the time I mar­ried my sis­ter Thing 1.

No, no—holster the Jeff Fox­wor­thy red­neck jokes. I grew up in Kansas, not the Ozarks. Thing 1 mar­ried some­one else; I just per­formed the cer­e­mo­ny.

This was a bit of a sur­prise to my extend­ed fam­i­ly, many of whom I hadn’t seen since my own wed­ding back in 1988. Most of them didn’t know I had been ordained.

Thing 1 had called me sev­er­al months ear­li­er to tell me she was engaged and asked if I would mar­ry her. “Sure!” I said with­out think­ing, which is my favorite way of speak­ing. I’d nev­er offi­ci­at­ed a wed­ding, and it nev­er occurred to me how ter­ri­fy­ing it might be to do my first wed­ding before my own fam­i­ly.

A week or so before the wed­ding, I pur­chased a minister’s wed­ding hand­book, with sam­ple cer­e­monies, vows, and so on. Thing 1 and Hub­by 1, her fiancé, said they’d mail me some Bible vers­es they want­ed includ­ed, and would I please throw in a lit­tle five-minute ser­mon? “Piece of cake!” I said.

Well, Thing 1 and Hub­by 1 got a lit­tle busy, and they didn’t send me the vers­es. Not that I nev­er pro­cras­ti­nate myself: At 3 a.m. the night before I left for Kansas, I sat at my com­put­er, star­ing at a blank screen and des­per­ate­ly rack­ing my brain for ser­mon ideas.

We arrived in Kansas City at 1:30 a.m. The rehearsal start­ed at 6:30 that evening, and we hadn’t even start­ed plan­ning the cer­e­mo­ny. Best Half and I went to Thing 1’s apart­ment at 5 p.m., sat down with her and Hub­by 1, and start­ed putting togeth­er the cer­e­mo­ny.

The whole thing must have been a lit­tle weird for my par­ents. It’s one thing for your chil­dren to par­tic­i­pate in one anoth­ers’ wed­dings. It’s quite anoth­er for your son to mar­ry your daugh­ter, espe­cial­ly when, to be blunt, he doesn’t know what he’s doing.

My moth­er had some­how got­ten the impres­sion that anoth­er min­is­ter (ide­al­ly, one who had done wed­dings before) was going to be involved. She was a lit­tle ner­vous when she real­ized I was fly­ing solo, so to speak.

She came into the room while we were work­ing on the cer­e­mo­ny and over­heard me say, “Do I ask every­one to stand before or after I pro­nounce them hus­band and wife?”

“Why don’t you ask the oth­er min­is­ter?” my moth­er inter­ject­ed.

“What oth­er min­is­ter?” I said.

Mom turned green.

“Hey, I’ve spo­ken at a cou­ple of funer­als,” I said. “A wed­ding’s hard­ly any dif­fer­ent. How hard can it be?”

My jokes didn’t help. Lat­er, when my moth­er popped in again and asked how it was going, I told her we were decid­ing what col­or war paint to use dur­ing the Native Amer­i­can part of the cer­e­mo­ny. I also said we were shoot­ing for the grand prize on America’s Fun­ni­est Home Videos.

She didn’t spank me, but I think she want­ed to.

I imag­ine her feel­ings were anal­o­gous to going to the hos­pi­tal for brain surgery and hav­ing your doc­tor arrive in your room with one of your own chil­dren. You note with hor­ror that your child, whom you clear­ly remem­ber being unable to cut his meat into bite-size pieces even as a teen, is wear­ing a sur­gi­cal mask.

“You’ve got to start some­time,” your doc­tor says to your child, point­ing at you. “Why don’t you try this one?”

The rehearsal, of course, was a dis­as­ter. One of the grooms­men didn’t show up, along with two oth­er peo­ple in the wed­ding par­ty. Every­one else wait­ed for me to direct things, which I would have been hap­py to do if I hadn’t left the wed­ding book and all my notes at Thing 1’s apart­ment.

Despite all that, I’d say the rehearsal exhib­it­ed all the state­ly dig­ni­ty of the run­ning of the bulls in Pam­plona.

God is mer­ci­ful, though; the wed­ding went off pret­ty smooth­ly. Best Half told me my voice only went up two octaves, and that from the back of the sanc­tu­ary she could hard­ly see my knees shak­ing at all. When Thing 1 came up the aisle with my father, I had to remind myself that preach­ers are not sup­posed to cry at wed­dings.

Hub­by 1 said he and Thing 1 were hon­ored to be the first[1] cou­ple I ever mar­ried. He was wrong, though: The hon­or was mine, all mine.

[1] And so far only.