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9.30.2015

Bridesmaids

 
"Marjorie Binford Woods's 1942 manual Your Wedding: How to Plan and Enjoy It is very blunt about the [bridesmaids'] role. Though she felt eight girls was enough (more looked like the Rockettes), they had better be decorative."                                                                                                                       -Carol McD. Wallace, All Dressed in White

WELL I'VE GOT TEN. BRIDESMAIDS FOR DAYS.

To be fair, half of them are my sisters. But still, I had to stop myself from asking more. Introverts don't have a lot of friends, but the ones they have are real special. As in, maybe we frame pictures of our friends and keep them on our desk in college, and maybe some rude people make fun of us for being so sappy and sentimental.

Whatever, guys. What, you don't have feelings?!

Needless to say, these ladies are all awesome and impressive and lovely and wonderful and supportive; and consequently, I spent hours and hours searching for gifts I hoped they would like. I did my best to Leslie Knope it. And even though I'm not talented enough to embroider pillows with their faces, I found a small, one-size-fits-all gift to bind them together as bridesladies and one silly little gift that reflects their interests or our friendship OR BOTH. However, it may have backfired a little bit, as I am now left with a bag of plastic lizards and emotional exhaustion. You wouldn't think picking out gifts for ten people would be so taxing, but it's like if everyone you knew had their birthday on the same day.

...Or like Christmas, I guess.


Image via

9.29.2015

The Name Game



Ugh. The name change question. Uggghhhh.

Groaning is as far as I've gotten. I've been very productive, as you can see.

Here are some things I will not want to do after the wedding:
  • Write thank you notes
  • Change my name
  • Anything else except loll about in my wedding dress. I think I'm going to just make that my around-the-house outfit. Give us something to chat about when the UPS lady asks me to sign for a package.
Other people 'round about the interwebs have discussed The Last Name Question far more intelligently than I ever could, so I won't. However, we've already received monogrammed cups, so I should probably make some sort of decision about it.

Here's my beef: Since Bill is joining my family just as much as I'm joining his, isn't it strange to choose just one of our names? Why don't we both change our names and start a new family legacy?

THE ANSWER IS that Bill is a landowner. He owns a square foot of land in Scotland and I'm worried they might take it away from him if he rejects his family name.* I don't want to seem shallow, but I need this. Marrying into the landed gentry is my only hope of improving my social standing.

Also, the Dalzell family is very into their Scottish heritage. They've charted their ancestry back centuries.  Their coat of arms hangs in their dining room.** I was scolded last year for wearing green instead of orange on St. Patrick's Day. Basically, it's a pretty big deal. So fair or not, expected or not, he's keeping his name. Now they're offering me their last name along with all the history (and land!) that goes with it, and I am very grateful.

My family isn't very German. We rarely eat brats and we don't care for kraut. We don't pronounce Muller the German way. I don't own even a speck of Deutschland. But is that any reason to abandon a perfectly fine name I've grown quite attached to over the years? I could just keep it, but if I ever had the opportunity to publish seriously I wouldn't use it anyway, as another Carrie Muller already exists - a Canadian writer who published one children's book about smelly pirates (which, let's be honest, could easily be confused with some of the things I write).

It's not that Bill has a bad last name. This isn't like my high school health teacher, Mrs. Mello, who almost didn't marry her husband because her first name is Marcia. I sort of wouldn't mind introducing myself as C-Dazzle (and this is my husband, B-Money. Charmed, I'm sure). I could wear neon pink lipstick and a visor and make people call me Dizzy.

I know nobody will think that Bill owns me if I take his last name. But still, couverture is the root of the tradition, and it's hard for me to get past as a Feminist Lady. Of course, feminism doesn't dictate that I have to keep my name or hyphenate or think up a new name entirely. Feminism doesn't tell me anything, except that I can do whateva I want with my own name.

I think what really freaks me out is the "Mrs." of it all. The title is the real problem, which can easily be remedied by forcing everyone to address me as "Your Grace" instead, in which case last names wouldn't be an issue at all.

OR I COULD FORGET ABOUT LAST NAMES ENTIRELY AND JUST GO BY A SINGLE NAME. BUT ONE THAT ISN'T VERY COMMON, LIKE...YIPPO.

Now I see why men say, "Mr. Johnson is my father. Please, call me Jim." Or, at least, Jim Johnson says that.

Anyway. All this is to say that I haven't decided what I'm going to do, but I'm sort of pouty that I have to decide.

Glad we made so much progress today.


HEY MARRIED PEOPLE, WHAT DID YOU DO? UNMARRIED PEOPLE, WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS? YOU CAN COMMENT BELOW AND TELL ME WHAT TO DO OR JUST REMIND ME THAT THERE ARE PEOPLE WITH REAL PROBLEMS IN THE WORLD, YOUR CHOICE.


*My friend and her husband boggled their initials together to come up with a new last name. I suggested it to Bill, as our initials to make another Scottish name: MacBad (!). But for some reason he didn't go for it. I don't see why. Billy MacBad sounds like a cowboy. In a kilt.
**It has a naked man on it with the motto "I Dare" (to go bare).
    ...I added that last part.


Image via Haeck Design.

9.25.2015

Viva l'Italia!

Bill is in Italy this week for a big numismatic congress that only happens twice a decade. That's vince a century! I made that word up, but you get it.

He's just in time for the spaghetti harvest!

He's staying in Taormina, Sicily, where D.H. Lawrence and Truman Capote and Oscar Wilde spent time writing. He's more interested in seeing the ancient towns and hanging out with all his numismatist buds, but he did sent me a picture of Fontana Vecchia.

He's been looking forward to this trip for years; coincidentally, it happens to be two weeks before our wedding, so he's missing out on all my little last-minute panic attacks. "Oh - I wanted to make little personalized flags for people to wave during the recessional!" I cry to no one, slinking off the couch to the ground and lolling about in despair. "But there's no tiiiime!" 

I scoffed a little when people told me I'd be glad to have him out of my hair this week, but I'm actually finding it to be true in weird ways. Of course I miss Bill, but it is very helpful to leave the ironing board and the printer, the sewing machine and glue gun out and ready all the time. Usually I at least try to keep things tidy, and shove all the sequins and fabric and wrapping paper under the couch. This way, though, there's no barrier to working on projects; all the materials are within arm's reach at any given moment. I'm getting a lot more done, since it's either work on projects or step on them.

This really means that the rest of the time, I'm so lazy that walking ten steps to grab supplies makes me rethink my priorities.

Anyway. This week, things are skipping along! I've made a flower wand for my tiny niece to wave down the aisle and almost finished the dress (!!) and worked on a few other sekrit projects.

You'll seee!

Meanwhile, I'm trying to get Bill to bring me back some authentic Italian spaghetti, but apparently it would "get cold on the plane ride back" or something. Maybe some dried spaghetti, then, fresh-picked from the Italian spaghetti trees.



Image via

9.23.2015

Auntie Carrie's Beauty Tips



After months of trying out different products and remedies in my ongoing quest to look fresh and dewy as a summer morn, I would like to pass on my wisdom to you:

Wear yer dang sunscreen. Every day. I don't care if you're going outside or not, little missy. I worry every single day that there's skin cancer a-brewin' beneath this flawless facade, because I spent my youth in sunny California and only wore sunscreen sporadically. If I'd listened to my mother I'd be sittin' pretty with porcelain skin and nary a freckle in sight. LEARN FROM MY MISTAKES, DEAR LITTLE ONES.

Auntie Carrie Recommends: Zinc oxide. Yes, you'll look like a clown ghost, but you'll be the one laughing when you're eighty years old and have the skin of a toddler.

Drink yer dang water. If I've learned anything, it's that your skin is shriveling every second of every day. Our fate as humans is to shrinkle (that is, wrinkle and shrink) into tiny raisin-people. Such is nature, and she is cruel. You can fight your destiny, slow its progress with creams and retinoids, but you can never fully stop it. So you might as well just drink water because it plumps your skin up a little bit and also keeps you from getting headaches and hangovers.

Auntie Carrie Recommends: A fresh woodland stream. Or a Brita filter.

Grow yer dang hair out. Then cut it off. Make a long wig. Now you can do whatever you want to the remaining hair on your head: cut it, dye it, give it a perm. Experiment all you like; if you make a misstep, just slap on the wig and  nobody will know the difference.

Auntie Carrie Recommends: Scissors + this course

All cosmetics have ridiculously long names. Seriously, it's crazy.

Auntie Carrie Recommends: Shorten yer names. That foundation isn't a member of the Hungarian royal family.

You will never find the perfect lipstick/primer/eye shadow/blush. As soon as you find one you sorta-kinda-maybe like, it will either be discontinued, reformulated, or found to cause cancer and the night blindness.

Auntie Carrie Recommends: Acceptance. Mourn that perfect lipstick and move on. We all must leave this world sometime, and makeup is no different. C'est la vie.




Image via Daly Beauty.

9.16.2015

I went running. It was not pleasant.



I ran for a full six minutes this morning.

Not continuously. But all within a fifteen-minute period, so...count it!

Overall, I hear positive things about running, usually from more-or-less smug people who think kale is a food group all its own. Apparently it's good for your heart, among other things. And apparently it's not in fact normal to feel winded after opening the fridge door. But that's not why I went running. I didn't do it to feel accomplished, or because the endorphins made me feel super great, or because my doctor laughed when he told me I have runner's knee. "It's not just runners who get it," he said with a smirk. I wasn't even running because something was chasing me.

Well, actually, I guess I was being chased, in a way. By society.

I went running because I've gained a few pounds since getting engaged, and I had a three-weeks-before-the-wedding panic that I probably should have lost weight for the wedding. As if it's my solemn duty as a Bride to be thin and beautiful.

Some other ways I've fulfilled this duty:

  • Spent so much money on makeup and so much time learning how to put it on. I spent several hours the other night reading about how to choose the right blush for your skin tone. Why do I require so much practice? Because makeup isn't fun for me the way it is for many women, so I never bothered learning about it until I had a Wedding to prepare for. 
  • Considered waxing, which I have never done before and which I think is frankly insane, just for the wedding day.
  • Considered fake tanning.
  • Considered spending $60 on a haircut when my hair is going to be up anyway and I've been cutting my own hair since high school. 
  • Almost paid $30+ for teeth whitening strips. 
  • Used a special deodorant that physically traps the sweat inside your glands - which, how can that be healthy?! - because I'm sweatier than your average bear, and brides can't have pit stains, right?
  • Hard-core dieted for six non-consecutive weeks over the past year. Ended each round by hunger-sobbing in the shower.
  • Snarled at girls at the farmer's market last weekend because they were cute and pretty and able to put together outfits and I felt so. much. less. than.

None of these things is all that bad on its own (except the snarling and the hunger-sobbing); it's just the fact that I wouldn't care about or consider doing any of them - much less all of them at the same time - if I weren't Getting Married and having pictures taken of me by a professional photographer whom we're paying several thousands of dollars to capture the way we are now, on our one and only most precious wedding day. Won't all that money be wasted if our professional photographer is taking pictures of an ugly chubster?

Dudes, it's hard to remember sometimes that I shouldn't care about all that. That's not what weddings are about, but that's definitely how they're sold. We're shown in magazines and blogs that they're about aesthetics, and the people involved are part of that. It's strange to look at friends' weddings on Facebook, see How It's Done, and then do the opposite. It's tough, when friends and family are asking whether I'm going to have my makeup and hair done by a professional, to say, "Nope. I'm just gonna use my face." I always feel like I have to add a disclaimer: "Will this face be good enough, do you think? Should I order a new one before the wedding?" I don't mean to be snarky; they don't ask it as a subtle hint that I need professional help (I hope!). But the very question and the fact that a makeup artist is expected makes me feel abnormal or lacking because I don't want pampering. I just don't like it. It involves a lot of strangers touching me.

Self-esteem and looks and weight are obviously very complicated and intertwined and nearly impossible to navigate. Even though we seem to be moving away somewhat from the scary-skinny ideal, the idea of a healthy woman is still a tiny, tanned girl in a neon sports bra, beaming and sweat-free even though she just finished a 10k warmup before her actual workout and she's feelin' great, you guys!!! Somehow she always has a pert blonde ponytail. And also she's on a mountain.

"Just be healthy!" she chirps, but this type of craziness doesn't have anything to do with health. Nobody sees a bride walking up the aisle and says, "Ah, she's looking particularly robust!" This is about centuries of women being told on a daily basis to gain weight or lose weight, to change their bodies with corsets and shape-wear to fit the fashions, to buy this and that product so they will be presentable, to diet and diet, always to diet, not so they'll be healthy but so they'll be pleasing to look at. Admired. Loved.

All that pressure is just amplified for weddings. I think we forget how insane this all is because it's been normalized. A girl has to be pampered before her wedding because this is her big day! The one time she can feel like a freaking princess! Maybe it'll be easier if I don't think of myself as a Bride, beautiful and perfect and angelic, but as Carrie, some girl who's getting married. "Oh, the one who sweats?" they all say. "She has a bit of a pouch, right?" 

Why, yes I do. Maybe I should run more.

Hoo boy. Remember when this started out, how it seemed like it would be another light, funny post? Oof.

This isn't to say that women shouldn't pamper themselves whenever they want to or change how they look. Just that I don't particularly want to and I hate that I feel obligated to change myself for this one day.

It's also a reminder for me to think kindly about other people. Even if they look perfectly put-together and it fills me with rage.

So, for our wedding, I will wear makeup, but I don't want much and I'm doing it myself (read: having a friend do it). I am going to exercise, because these body image demons can't be expelled in the next three weeks. And also...the getting-winded-opening-the-fridge thing. But I'll try not to plank myself into tears of self-loathing or do anything too extreme, like go running again (I learned my lesson during minute four when I started to feel a slight twinge. "My runner's knee!" I cried, startling a duck on the nearby pond). I will try not to spiral into despair worrying that people will judge me if I have a little jiggle with my wiggle on the dance floor. I'm not going to whiten my teeth or tan my skin or spend any more money on beauty products. I am going to use that crazy gland-blocking deodorant temporarily, because it's just good manners not to dampen other people on the dance floor. But I refuse to diet anymore. Most people haven't seen me on a diet, and there's a reason for that. You might have seen me get a little moody if I'm PMSing or something, but when I'm on a diet, life is not worth living. I weep over bread. I'd throw myself on a slice of cake to shield it if a bomb went off. I am inconsolable. And nonsensical. And I hate it.

Meanwhile, if Bill manages to show up on the day of the wedding, conscious and wearing pants, he will already have exceeded expectations. The only questions he's been asked about his appearance are, "Is Carrie making you shave your beard?" and "Are you gonna wear a kilt?"

No to both. But just in case he does want to do a little primping:




 via 

9.10.2015

One Month!

via

Welp, here we are, September 10th, one month out. And I am thankfully, inexplicably, almost alarmingly calm about everything. It's stressing me out that I'm not more stressed. Because stress leads to motivation and action and ticking off all the little boxes that remain unchecked on our to-do list, whereas this wishy-washy, laissez-faire attitude is relaxing, but nothing gets done. (Stress also makes your hair fall out, but I can worry about that after everything's finished. I'll add "Get a wig" to the list. We'll get  around to it eventually.)

Other items on that list include a lot of things to finish. Finish all our little projects, finish the dress, finish fine-tuning the ceremony. Finish the playlist, finish figuring out logistics with the catering and venue, finish writing the very wordy programs. There's also a lot to buy, like tablecloths and hair spray and presents. Actually, if anyone would like hair spray as a present, let me know, because that would really cut down on my errands.

Then there's all the communication: emailing the photographer to update her on our plans. Giving the twenty or so people who haven't RSVP'd yet a breezy little phone call to see if they plan to make it. Calling the rehearsal dinner place to finalize the menu. I sent them an email a while ago to see if we could schedule a meeting and received a frantic reply that said, "We tried to contact you via Facebook but got no response. Would you consider having your event be unprivate?"

....Wot?

Also....wot??

I wonder who that other Carrie Muller is who received that Facebook message. Probably the Canadian author who wrote one children's book about a smelly pirate and who is the reason I'll need a pen name if I ever publish anything.

Anyway. I get tired thinking about it all, but it's reassuring that even if we only get a fraction of it done, one month from this very second we will be married.

"Hooray!" they all said.


9.04.2015

Guess What We Did Yesterday...


Bill had his chin lengthened!
And also we got that thing we need so we can legally get hitched.


We have to watch what we say from now on or we could end up prematurely married.