Saturday 22 November 2014

and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant..

..and whatever a sun will always sing is you

I carry your heart with me (I carry it in my heart)I am never without it (anywhere
I go you go,my dear; and whatever is done by only me is your doing,my darling)
I fear no fate (for you are my fate,my sweet)I want no world (for beautiful you are my world,my true)
and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant and whatever a sun will always sing is you

here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud and the sky of the sky of a tree called life; which grows
higher than the soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart

I carry your heart (I carry it in my heart)


Wedding planning was like a second job - so after work at the hospital, I would come home and juggle reading up for the next day's work with planning and co-ordinating the wedding. We had a good distribution of labour taking account our locations, with myself in Singapore and Daniel in Zurich: I did most of the planning, and Daniel did most of the legwork, although we did have to make Skype calls at punishing hours, seeing as to the time difference between where we were.

Because the wedding was really small, we did not have a large group of bridesmaids and groomsmen. I had a maid-of-honour, Liyana, and Daniel had a best man, Shank, and his wonderful friend Marco who was really kind to him when he tore his ACL, and that was about the size of the bridal party. 

I loved that it was so intimate, Shank and Liyana have seen both of us through many life events and our relationship, but it also meant that work was shared within a very small group. 

Right up to the night before the wedding, all four of us were running around trying to get things done - liaising with the transport, last-minute changes in itinerary, making the napkin holders (fresh rosemary and wire), putting together the programme booklets.. etc. etc.

By the time we were done with all of these, it was 11pm the night before the wedding.. that's also when we realised we hadn't memorized the poem we were to recite in turns, our individual prayers, and that I was meant to teach Daniel to sing his song for the next day.. we did not even have the lyrics, so we were re-playing the YouTube video on loop, trying to figure it out.

While everyone went to bed, excited for the next day, Daniel and I were at the hotel (I had an awesome bed with hospital-like controls, allowing us to raise the head/legs/both - so fun to play with!), testing each other, teaching each other, and laughing at each other. There was certainly a lot of laughing (I smile now just thinking about it!) and it was majorly fun :)

As can be expected, memorizing 4 things at that hour was not very effective, although I am glad we tried, and it made for a great memory. It was a sweet memory of the last moment of singlehood. ♥ 

I remember Daniel leaving at 1am, and I remember feeling sorry that he still had to cycle all the way home, while I was already in bed, although truth be told I was so excited that night I couldn't really sleep anyway. 

 This E.E. Cumming's poem was the first of our recitations. 

I carry your heart with me.. 
(I carry it in my heart)

..we had to ask for a programme booklet so we could actually recite it, but that was ok. In my mind, the wedding had begun, and I couldn't be happier ♥ 















Monday 17 November 2014

The Private Ceremony


The view on the way to our beautiful ceremony 

After the civil registration ended in the Stadthaus, it was time to make our way to Rapperswil, a quaint little town along the east side of Lake Zurich, for our private ceremony. A bus was chartered for the guests while Mirriam's godparents drove us to the venue. Perhaps it was excitement of the wedding day, or the anxiety from having to memorise our wedding prayer, but it was almost 5pm and I had forgotten to have both breakfast and lunch..

Liyana hard at work

We reached the wedding venue in Rapperswil ahead of our guests and I was so hungry that I helped myself to the Apéro first. It was going to be about another two hours before dinner would be served. When the guests finally arrived, Liyana (the maid-of-honour and sole bridesmaid), between the munchies, went around taking Polaroid pictures of our guests which were subsequently used to decorate the guest book. It was also around this time when Mirriam decided, for reasons I was only going to find out later, to scurry in circles around wedding venue. Thinking that it could be the pre-ceremony jitters, I decided that it was probably a good idea to stay close. It would appear that she eventually gave up scampering around the Schloss and we decided to go through again the wedding prayers that we had intended to commit to memory.

Mirriam composing herself

The private ceremony started with Mirriam performing her rendition of Elvis' "Love Me Tender". The song was not part of our agreed programme and so I found out that she had been avoiding me earlier because she had wanted to warm up her vocal cords for the surprise song. As usual, she sang beautifully, despite the fact that I foiled her warm up plans.

The handsome-as-a-movie star groom, sans spectacles!

..but then I couldn't see my prayer, and so the spectacles came back on

When she finally marched over to the front, I was not able to see her too clearly because my own vanity had compelled me to put away my glasses. Unfortunately, it turned out that we weren't able to recall the wedding prayer that we were supposed to have memorised, and I had to put on my glasses anyway as we read from the printout.

Sunday 9 November 2014

My Walk Down The Aisle

Getting their priorities right on the other end of the aisle ;)
Walking with my daddy  

Daniel and I had a little ceremony in a herb garden facing church bells, which we call our spiritual ceremony. It was the part of the wedding I was looking forward to the most.

Four trees provided a beautiful canopy, and marked the boundaries of the ceremonial grounds where we seated our guests. Our aisle was the pebbled path of the garden, and our flowers were the natural blossoms. The sun was out, the skies were blue, the air was cool, and the birds were singing. It was so perfect, so beautiful.

Daniel loves my voice, I think mostly because he loves me. Sometimes, out of the blue, I will get a text from him complimenting its beauty, even when he hasn't heard it at all that day. I find it very sweet of him, and also very amusing, to be thinking of my voice, and it is always a nice surprise to get such a message from the man I love.

As a gift to him, I wanted to surprise him with a song before I walked down the aisle. I chose the ballad, 'Love Me Tender', because it was romantic and pure, and expressed raw, vulnerable emotion. It was simple and unembellished, and I felt that was what love needed to be - simple, and unembellished.

Between the civil ceremony and our spiritual one, we had a little apero for our guests to refresh themselves and fill their stomachs. I was hoping then to be able to warm up my voice, and practice a little, so it would be perfect for him.. and I tried to sneak away. Quite unexpectedly, I found him following me around. He was so adorable though, heart-meltingly so, so in the end, I decided that it was more important that we were relaxed and happy together, than to stress out over making the song perfect and missing out on spending these funny, happy, romantic moments together.

When it came time to walk down the aisle, I closed my eyes, and took a deep breath to compose myself. I called on God to make everything just right. And then I trusted, and sang. ♥ 

"..Love me tender, 
   Love me true, 
   All my dreams fulfilled.
  For my darling I love you,
  And I always will.."

I remember feeling a wash of calmness after singing it, the same feeling I get when I have prayed with all my heart. I liked that it was directed at Daniel, but it did also have an effect on me. It reminded me of the Baha'i prayer for husbands, which starts curiously with a stanza for the wife, and reminded me how our actions for someone else have such a big impact on our own selves.

When I was done, I remember my dad saying to me "Well done.", and smiling. That meant a lot to me. Then he took my hand, the music softly playing, and we began our walk down the aisle.

The stony path was difficult to walk on, and I struggled to keep my balance without stepping on my dress as my heels pierced through the chips of stone. I remember having to hold quite tightly on to my dad's arm.

When I think of it now, it was such an interesting mix of feelings.. the terrifying feeling of falling into the stone and tripping on my train, the uneasiness of being photographed and wondering how to smile (a very awkward feeling), the melody of my wedding march music and its beautiful lyrics - this same song I had played over and over again while awaiting this momentous day - now playing for the moment itself,  the ecstasy of marrying the man of my dreams and the incredulousness of this being a reality, the love and smiling faces that surrounded us, and the peace that encompassed all these feelings, as if all my emotions belonged to a home of joy and peace.

Daniel and I have many magical moments, but I would say this was one of exceptional magic. I was so happy when I finally reached him.