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Dear Breakup Girl,
So here's a really odd dilemma. My boyfriend of about a year just asked me
to marry him. Great, right? Well, yeah, except there were no bells and
whistles, no ring, no special moment, just--we had lunch, we did the dishes, he
asked me to marry him--you get the picture. And believe me, I am nothing if not
direct with this man--as soon as the subject of marriage came up, I told him I
wanted the full shebang, including an engagement ring. (We are both in our 40's
and have been married before, so it's not so obvious that I would want a
traditional engagement.) When we talked about it afterward, he asked if I were
disappointed that he didn't go the traditional route. I didn't say, uhhh, yeah,
but I did tell him I thought there was a reason people set special moments
aside in their lives--to say "this is a very important moment and I want
to make sure this lasts in my memory."
To present his side of the story: he said he was happy to do something
special when he presents me with the ring, but he was feeling that if he put
off asking just because he hadn't found the right ring, or had to save up to
buy it, or wait for the right moment to propose, that it would become an empty
ritual. He also said that his proposal was un-premeditated and he just went
with the impulse.
I said yes to his proposal, but I can't seem to shake the feeling that, if
he ignored my request about something this important to me--what's he going to
do when other important issues come along? I hate to say this, but I feel a
little like a special moment and memory has been stolen from me.
I'm not an overly demanding person and I generally don't stand on ceremony.
In fact, I used to be a lot like my boyfriend in that I ignored the way
ceremony can enrich our lives. I've learned that people need to mark passages
in their lives and that memories are what form the story of our lives. My
boyfriend is a great guy, very open and supportive, smart, trustworthy, willing
to learn and change--all in all, a wonderful person. And, most important, a
wonderful person who I love deeply. So how do you suggest I get the point
across without taking away from his feeling so happy about us? Thanks for
listening.
-- Could be Happier
Dear CBH,
Congratulations! Great! (Right!)
Don't get me wrong: I totally understand your
disappointment. You want the bended-knee ring-in-the-champagne Jumbotron
moment, you want the bended-knee ring-in-the-champagne Jumbotron moment. And
you didn't get it. That is pouty yucky foot-stompy bad.
But here's the thing: someone else could just as
easily have written and said, "Oh, Breakup Girl, it was soooo romantic: we
had lunch, did the dishes, and all of a sudden he just put the sponge down and
asked me to marry him. Just like that. No bells, no whistles, no nothing. I
loved the surprise, I loved the simplicity. It was like ... he had this impulse
he just couldn't control. It was like ... our love is way to big and powerful
to be contained in some contrived little ceremony. It was a very important
moment that I will remember forever."
You see? He did not do anything that was inherently,
objectively lame or a-romantic. And more important, I don't think he ignored
your request. His "side" sounds completely legit to me. He may have
had every intention of honoring your request, wanting to please you, knowing
that it meant something to you. But instead, he had a sudden dashing (if
dishwashing) romantic urge, he went with it.
So never mind him -- I want to know what you're
gonna do when other important issues come along. I'd suggest you be as open and
supportive and "willing to learn and change" as you describe your
fiance to be. You will and can have plenty of enriching ceremony; it just might
not always be as "traditional" as you may envision. I mean, how many
couples can celebrate, like, a mini anniversary every time they do the
dishes?
Love,
Breakup Girl
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