I hate weddings, so I’m not sure why I agreed to go to one Saturday afternoon. But Kristen had invited me to go with her to several events in recent months and I’d declined them all. On a whim, I accepted this invitation, even though I wouldn’t know a soul there except my date.
The small country church was overflowing with a couple hundred people. I’d never been to this small rural community. I felt like an anthropologist trying to quietly disappear into the crowd of a tribe he was studying. But were they the aliens? Or was that me?
While we were on the way to the church, Kristen told me the couple’s story. The bride has never been married but has a 5-year-old daughter. The groom is the only son in a family that owns a couple of auto parts stores. The bride claims the pair had been dating “off and on” for awhile. The groom says it was just casual sex every now and then, but she got pregnant.
Angry parents were soon involved. The groom’s family insisted on an abortion. The bride’s family demanded a wedding. There were threats made all around. And now a semi-fancy wedding had been thrown together in just weeks.
I knew all of that going in — and Kristen told me everybody knew — but what I was about to see was a theatrical performance that defied all reality.

Smallest ray of hope can make us feel a change we need is coming
Modern life doesn’t have to be as complicated as we try to make it
Future reality starts in what we believe inside about who we are
Health risk and social costs make drinking alcohol a very poor risk
Irony: Libyan rebels now rounding up blacks, sticking them into jails
If I look closely at my old self, there’s a lot which is now dead
How do we know when to quit? Persistence may be futile choice
Few things scare humans like the prospect of living, dying alone
Objective reality has now become offensive in dysfunctional culture