OK, so it took a year and a half to post the actual wording of the wedding of my two wonderful friends Heidi Steiner and Andy Burkhardt, but historians tend to operate in centuries - so actually I'm moving pretty quickly. As I've said before, it was one of the great privileges of my life to officiate at their wedding. Heidi prepared the bracketing sections (clearly the best part) and I wrote the clumsily philosophical piece in the middle.
As the Canadian philosopher opined, "We are only what we feel," and we should all be so lucky to feel what they felt that day - and what they still feel for each other today. |
Steiner/Burkhardt
Wedding
Good
afternoon!
We have come
here today to celebrate the marriage of Heidi and Andy. They are delighted that
you have come to share in their joy on this special day, so thank you for
joining us. By your presence, you celebrate with them the love they have
discovered in each other. And you support their decision to commit themselves
to a lifelong relationship.
Who supports this woman in marriage to this man?
Father/Family:
I/We do.
Please be seated.
Heidi and
Andy, this afternoon you are surrounded by your family and friends, all of whom
have gathered to witness and share in the joy of this occasion. In marriage, we
give ourselves freely and generously into the hands of the one we love, and in
doing so, each of us receives the love and trust of the other as our most
precious gift.
New
experiences lie before you with opportunities to grow deeper in love with each
other. As you walk hand in hand into the future, cherish each moment as a gift
– a gift, given to strengthen the bond between you.
SCUDDER’S SERMON
We have come
together to celebrate the wedding of Heidi and Andy, but, come on, we all know
this is Heidi’s day. Andy’s job is to
sit there and be goofy and make Heidi look even more breath-taking. Our job is to make this day as wonderful –
and stress free – for Heidi as possible.
There are people who may have been using social media to convince Heidi
that they forgot the actual day of the wedding, but I don’t think that can be
proven in court.
So, Heidi is
the boss today. And I always obey authority. When she sent along favorite ceremony she
included a blank section that simply said Scudder’s Sermon. I protested that I had nothing to say, but
she told me that since I was getting paid the big bucks I had to earn it. She assigned me two chores.
First off, she
wanted me to say something about the two of them, which I am more than happy to
do since I love them both. I asked her
if she minded if I took a more philosophical approach, and she said knock
yourself out. Normally at this point my
default answer is to quote Marcus Aurelius, while my friends politely roll
their eyes. However, in this case, I’m
going to shoot even higher – and quote Neil Young. In one of his earliest songs Young proposed
that, “we are only what we feel.” That
is, while people such as Sanford Zale and Mike Lange will tell you it’s all
about the brain, in reality it’s all about the heart – and how we feel, which
Sarah Cohen could have told you anyway.
So, being a professor, I gave Heidi and Andy some homework. I asked them to, separately, answer three
questions:
1) how did you feel the first time you met the
other person?
2) how do you feel today?
3) how do you feel about the future?
They sent me
their answers via email, and I’m going to read them to you – after correcting
all of Andy’s spelling mistakes.
Andy – when he first met Heidi:
“I felt excited and anxious.
She was funny and pretty and I didn’t know exactly what to say. I talked to her about libraries and told her
she was good at foosball (she was OK).
We hung out at a conference and I got more excited talking and texting
with her. It was that excitement that
you get when everything is really new but it’s also really good. After that I went to Montpelier and we
watched what was to be the first of many Vikings’ losses together. And she didn’t ditch me after seeing my
picture in the Free Press after eating 50 chicken wings, so that has to count
for something too.”
Heidi – when she first met Andy:
“My first answer requires a smidge of background. When I was still in Michigan, getting ready
to move, I was trolling library blogs looking for new, smart people to pay
attention to. I ran into Andy’s blog,
looked at the About page, and saw he was in Vermont. I can still picture the moment and remember
thinking – “Whoa, he’s cute. Maybe I’ll
meet him someday.” So . . . the first
time I saw Andy, I felt nervous, clearly.
And I also hoped he was at least a little bit awesome. I can still relive a lot of the first night
we hung out in my head . . . what he was wearing, how I felt when he stood by
me . . . by the end of the night, I wished for the feeling to not only be me.”
Andy – how he feels now:
“I feel joyful and challenged. Heidi is really thoughtful, supportive, and
takes care of me in ways that I deeply appreciate and take joy in. She holds a different mirror up to me and
gives me a perspective that I wouldn’t normally see. It’s also challenging learning to accept
someone and understand someone for who they are and trying to figure out how to
support them in ways they need, not ways I need.”
Heidi – how she feels now:
“Today when I look at Andy the only word that really
describes the feel is: lucky. It’s such
a clichéd thing, but he makes my life so much better. It is hard to fathom where or who I would be
if it weren’t for Andy. My world is
bigger and I know myself better because of him.
He is supportive, thoughtful, kind, funny, and challenges me. I cannot imagine a better life than one I get
to spend with him.”
Andy – how he feels about the future:
“I feel confident about our future together. Heidi can get stuff [shit] done and can
execute a lot better than me. She’s
really good at planning, problem solving, remembering thing, and paying
attention to details. I think more “big
picture” and am willing to try a lot of things.
I’m really curious and like adventures.
I feel we balance each other out really well and can teach each other a
lot about ourselves. I know there are
going to be challenges and also really happy times, but ultimately I feel
really lucky being on her team and having her on mine.”
Heidi – how she feels about the future:
“When I think about Andy and our future, it feels
exciting. We’ll never know for sure
quite what’s next or where we’ll be living and doing in five years, but knowing
I will still be cooking and walking and exploring with Andy . . . that’s all I
want. It is exciting to know you are
getting the one thing you truly want . . . a life with the person you love most
in the world.”
Scudder’s Rules for a happy relationship:
Heidi’s second
directive was for me to say a few words about what it makes a successful
marriage. My initial thought was –
really? Me? Truthfully, who knows less about a happy
relationship than me?
But then I
thought about baseball. One of the great
truisms of baseball is that great players make lousy managers because they do
not understand how hard the game is.
Great managers tend to be career minor leaguers – second-string catchers
who couldn’t hit a curveball – who spent lots of time on the bench studying the
game. And then I thought – with that in
mind, really, who better to give advice on a happy relationship than me?
So, here are Scudder’s three rules for a happy
marriage:
First off, look at each other. This is who you are marrying. Not some idealized version of that person,
but that person. You should never marry
someone on potential – on what you think you can turn them into with a little
hard work. Heidi, you can shine him up a
bit – and, Andy, you might theoretically make Heidi root for the Vikings – but
you’re not going to change them that much.
And that’s OK. You fell in love
with that person. Cherish them.
Secondly, and even considering rule one, you will both change
– and your relationship will change. I
believe that marriages are made up of 10,000 small compromises, most made
unofficially and organically and made just to get through the day, especially
down the road when the kids arrive. They
are almost uniformly small, but they add up over the years. Sometimes long-term relationships end when
you suddenly look across the breakfast table and feel that you don’t know that
other person hogging the Pop-Tarts. And
sometimes one of you, on a particularly dark day, might even think – this isn’t
what I signed up for. Well, in a sense,
you didn’t. Years earlier, a much
younger version of you married a much younger version of your partner, and then
the compromises started. Actually, they’re not all that bad, and part of it is
the process of two people becoming one couple. Your relationship will change –
and it should. It should evolve, not
just survive. The key is to be part of
the evolution. Be actively involved in
your relationship – work at it – be a part of every one of those 10,000
compromises.
Thirdly, I’ll come back to the words of the great Canadian
philosopher Neil Young: we are only what we feel. Remember how you feel today. Never forget
that. When you’re sitting on the couch
arguing about the bills or wondering why it’s really necessary to watch a
two-win Vikings team lose another game or why you’re watching another
documentary on dinosaurs, remember how you make the other one feel, for good
and for bad – and always remember this day, and how you feel.
And so ends my
sermon. Now let’s get these two married.
DECLARATION OF INTENT
You come here
today to affirm your love for one another and formally acknowledge that which
your hearts already know…that your lives are meant to be shared as one, that
you are stronger together than you are apart, and that, for all the days yet to
come, you wish to share together all life’s joys and challenges, committed one
to the other.
Andy, do you promise Heidi that you will love her for
today and for all of your tomorrows? And that from this day forward, you will
faithfully walk beside her?
[I do]
Heidi, do you promise Andy that you will love him for
today and for all of your tomorrows? And that from this day forward, you will
faithfully walk beside him?
[I do]
INTRO TO WEDDING VOWS
Heidi and
Andy, you are about to exchange your marriage vows. These vows are an
expression of the promises you have chosen to make to each other. Marriage is
the uniting of two people and a journey towards the unity of two hearts. The
vows you share will thrive on the love that you have for each other and your
marriage will grow deeper as each of you grows older. As you journey through
life together, may you continue to trust each other, laugh together and speak
often to one another. And may your lives together be filled with joy, whether
in times of peace or chaos, trouble or good fortune.
Heidi, please
hand your bouquet to your maid of honor, face each other and join hands.
WEDDING VOWS
Andy, please repeat these vows to Heidi:
Heidi, I join my life to yours,
to be your partner in marriage and in life,
to love and to honor you,
to be honest and faithful to you,
to stand by you and care for you,
all the days of my life.
Heidi, please repeat these vows to Andy:
Andy, I join my life to yours,
to be your partner in marriage and in life,
to love and to honor you,
to be honest and faithful to you,
to stand by you and care for you,
all the days of my life.
Heidi and
Andy, as you walk through life together, remember that you are unique and
different from one another. Give your love openly and honestly. Do not try to
change each other, for your differences are what brought you together. Always
accept and respect what the other has to say -- and even if you do not agree,
take time to understand the other’s feelings and opinions. And remember that
each day is a new beginning. Be willing to follow and never be afraid to lead.
Maintain your capacity for wonder, spontaneity, humor, and sensitivity. Trust
your partner
and trust
yourself – for a marriage is a journey that leads to greater love.
EXCHANGE OF RINGS
May I have the
rings, Peter?
These wedding
rings symbolize the unbroken circle of love, signifying to all your union in
marriage As often as either of you look upon these rings you are about to
exchange, may you be reminded of this moment and the love and commitment you
have promised to one another.
Andy, please place the ring on Heidi’s finger and say
to her these words:
Heidi, with
this ring I take you as my wife and pledge my love and life to you.
Heidi, please place the ring on Andy’s finger and say
to her these words:
Andy, with
this ring I take you as my husband and pledge my love and life to you.
BEST WISHES
Andy and
Heidi, before I declare you husband and wife, I want to wish you both much love
and happiness as you begin this new journey. I give you my best wishes with the
following words.
The two of you
are now joined in one unbroken circle.
Wherever you go, may you always return to one another in your togetherness. May you two find in each
other the love for which all souls long.
To make your
marriage work will take love. Love should be the core of your marriage;
love is the reason you are here.
But it also
will take trust - to know in your
hearts that you want the best for each other.
It will take dedication to live by the vows you have
made. To stay open to one another, to learn and to grow together even when this
is not always easy to do.
It will take faith to keep your promises. To always
be willing to go forward to tomorrow, never really knowing what tomorrow will
bring.
And it will
take commitment - to hold true to
the journey you have both pledged to share together.
DECLARATION OF MARRIAGE
Andy and
Heidi, today you have promised your love to each other and sealed your promises
with the giving and receiving of rings. It is my joy and pleasure to declare
that you are now husband and wife.
Heidi, you may kiss the groom.
INTRODUCTION OF COUPLE
Ladies and
Gentlemen, it is my honor and privilege to introduce to you for the first time
Mr. and Mrs.
Andy and Heidi Burkhardt.
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