The Raven Lunatic

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Amy A

Amy A
Birthday
December 01
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An independent journalist and content writer, focusing on health care (rehab and senior issues), domestic travel, the arts and parenting issues. Writer of "The Raven Lunatic" newspaper column, which runs in multiple Indiana newspapers.

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JANUARY 6, 2012 12:18PM

Wedding Vows for the Long-Term Marrieds

Rate: 36 Flag

When you marry in your teens or twenties, there’s a magical quality to the ceremony. The white dress, the special music, the old brides dabbing their eyes with linen handkerchiefs only used for such a day.  In front of each other, you recite your vows while your friends and relatives watch, tearfully or tragically. You break the glass or light the candle or drink the wine.

And then the real work begins.

The idea of getting remarried, or at least updating vows, might be of value to the long-term married.

We’re going on three decades, and like that old Honda in the garage, we need a tune-up and possibly a new fan belt. We’ve been faithful, obeyed each other in sickness and health, yada yada yada.

We need vows for a new time in our lives.  And I wouldn’t mind going to Vegas and reciting them in front of an Elvis impersonator, but that’s just me.

For Him:

I, State Your Name, continue to take thee to be my wedded wife, despite reservations that defy common sense.

To have and to hold from this day forward, or until the Mayan calendar ends,

For better, for when you mate my socks, or make refried beans for dinner,

For worse, such as when your elderly parents and your brother with his bourbon bottle visit for days on end and eat hundreds of dollars worth of food,

 For richer, for poorer, until Social Security and Medicare kick in,

In sickness with your constant hot flashes or in health on those days when your hormones aren’t raging and you actually behave somewhat human,

To love you even when you constantly ask me  inane questions about football or when you mess up the remote on the big tv every time or forget to write down how much you spent for  groceries in the checkbook

And to cherish you until death do us part and you cremate me and take my insurance money and go to Hawaii for a month.

Thereto I plight thee my troth for at least another thirty years

For Her

I, State Your Name, continue to take thee as my wedded husband, even though I really don’t like Sports Center or you running the channels constantly with the remote I can’t understand

To have and to hold from this day forward or until global warming sucks all the air and water from our universe

For better, on those nights when we can read side by side while listening to Riverwalk Jazz,

Or worse, when we have to drive somewhere we are obligated to go, but it is dark and neither of us can see well,

For richer, when we were able to travel to London and Paris and pretend like we are of Royal Blood even if we are on a tour bus with 30 other Baby Boomers.

For poorer, when we sit at the kitchen table and try to figure out how to pay all the bills  because I lost a good job three years ago and now started my own business.

In sickness, when you are crabby because you have a minor cold, and in health, when you are so happy you’ll take all the recycling stuff to the dump by yourself on Saturday morning

Thereto I plight thee my troth for another three decades or so of bad puns and silliness and staying up too late

For Him

I will dig in my dresser drawer for that simple gold band we bought at Service Merchandise for around fifty dollars, and I’ll look at it once in awhile and remember that I am married.

For her

I’ll wear my wedding ring, also purchased at Service Merchandise for around thirty dollars, to business functions where I want people to know I’m still married. 

Voice of deceased minister who married this couple, though he's been in the St. Peter's Lutheran Cemetery for fifteen years.

By the power vested in me by the State of Indiana and the Lutheran Church, I pronounce that I’ll be damned you stayed married for almost thirty years, and you seem good to go.

I now pronounce you Old Married People.

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Comments

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Haw haw hawwww...b-b-booo..blblb-b-booooohooooooohoooooooo... amen.
Ahh AmyBea.. I don't know if it was the Mayan calendar or the crabbiness but I tell you what. my dream is to get married in front of one of those Evlis impersonators too.


HUGGGGGGGG
Vegas Baby, Yeahhhh~~
My parents were married for over 75 years. I've been married twice...one for 28 years and the other for 18. I have my own theories about marriage. Promises made when young don't always match reality and some turn out to be a life sentence. Anyway, for those who make it over the years.....there has to be lots of love, forgiveness and humor. I think best friends make the best spouses.
It takes a good sense of humor to become old married people. You've got it covered.
I love it!

On New Year's Eve morning, my husband discovered that our dog had suffered from severe diarrhea in her crate overnight, but he let her walk through the kitchen, the dining room and the living room to get to the front door rather than putting her out the back. Later he spent the hours between 11 p.m. and 2 a.m. trying to fax in his Grand Canyon backcountry permit application. But we are still married because that was Saturday and our lawyer wasn't in the office till Tuesday, and by then a divorce just seemed like too much trouble.
This should be required reading for all long-term married people. Good stuff, Bea. And I love High Lonesome's comment.
~R~
Funny stuff! Anyone who has sustained a 20+ year commitment without killing or being killed is an accomplished person as far as I'm concerned. Putting aside child-rearing, marriage is the hardest human endeavor.
Sounds like your daily dose of reality - very entertaining.
Nice. Best friends make the best long term marrieds.

:-) / r

DO IT IN VEGAS!!!!
Ha! Very funny. It'll be 17 years for us in about a month. Love High Lonesome's comment too...
To the next three decades, Beamy and Herman. :o)
I had to laugh so hard! This is wonderful!
The bride and groom in the photograph above look so delighted, I think I'll go out and try marriage again! :D

Lezlie
Oh how fast I go a clickin' when there is some Bea snark and satire to be enjoyed! So....no mention in your vows of wheeling a crabby spouse around the Louvre? Also, that wedding re-up with Elvis sounds dreamy!
Awww! How sweet! If I were at the vow renewal ceremony, I'd definitely need a handkerchief! Congratulations and many, many more years of wedding bliss (or the closest thing to it) to you guys!
What about people who marry (not remarry) in their 60s? Guess what? It seem the same in many ways as when we married in our 20s, only better. Ya never know.
Oh My. I love this!! We just had our 26th and although some stuff is different so much is universal.
I hope you don't mind me saying you remind me of everything good in life, your writing has such an honest earthy appeal. I especially love the things you write about Herman and your family. You seem like the neighbors everyone would want to live next to.
I just read the thread HL's comment is priceless. We have all been there in one way or another, man or woman.
May I bestow on you the gift of amnesia, when forgiveness might be a bit of a stretch....
Hilarious, honest vows. Loved this. R
Service Merchandise! Such a deal. Realistically happy ever after!
Here's to a 100 more!! What do you mean, oh god no!! :D

Rated for Elvis Impersonators!!!!
And during our 38 years of marriage, I have discovered males do, indeed, go through andropause.
This is a riot. Thank you! In a couple months my husband and I will be celebrating (celebrating???) 35 years of, of, of -- gee, I'm going to have to think about this. I'll get back to you.
Yes, how about that sitting side by side reading and listening to jazz on the radio. Now, those are the very best times and well worth hanging in there for. great post.
Ha! As someone who has been married for 33 years all I can say is...perfecto!
Very clever, Bea/Amy -R-
Clever idea, well executed. I laughed, and I never laugh.
it's been 35 for us...hope you don't mind if I use this as a template.
This month we approach 30 year anniversary. These are mahvelous and come in very handy. There are a few more I planned to share. Together we've got the market cornered.
I refuse to agree to the Riverwalk Jazz. I'd rather "obey" with crossed fingers than agree to that!
They expected little and forgave much? =o)

Highly practical wedding vows! But staying the course means they were right for each other way back

rated
Stellar! Thanks from a Getting-Close-to-Middle-Aged Married Person.
Thereto I plight thee my troth for another three decades or so of bad puns and silliness and staying up too late... sounds like one of my lines.Exccellent post...
The topic of renewing vows seems to be coming up lately and this was the funniest and most real of all that I've read.