Archive for the ‘Just Married’ Category

Ali and Matt Wed at Bucolic Berks County Horse Farm

Thursday, August 26th, 2010
Urban blog pic2 168x300 Ali and Matt Wed at Bucolic Berks County Horse FarmAli Grusha and Matt Jenco wed on a farm in Berks County
Officiated by Urbane Peachey, Officiant, Journeys of the Heart

June, 2010 included a memorable  wedding on a manicured horse farm in Berks County, Pennsylvania.   The ground of the spacious indoor riding stable was covered with carpets; lovely  sweeping white drapes created a centerpiece high above. The aroma of  a clean country  horse stable  enhanced the ambiance!

The bride, Ali Grusha , who works in pharmaceutical sales, is an enamored and skilled rider, along with her mother; both are horse specialists.   The farm included two Appaloosa and two brown quarter horses to which the bride was tightly attached.  

The first view that caught my eye as I arrived at the farm for the wedding was the beautiful bride, Ali, in her wedding dress being photographed while side-saddle on her favorite Appaloosa.  Both bride, Ali,  and groom, Matt Jenco, were bonded to a miniature Australian Shepherd dog, Colby; they required that the horses and dog should be named in the ceremony, and so they were.

Colby, the couple’s Shepherd dog lay quietly and observantly at the feet of the bride’s mother during the ceremony until he was called to present
the rings after the vows were spoken.  Colby presented and returned as directed to his designated place.

The ceremony praised the diverse interests of the couple.  For example, Matt, an engineer has an interest in farm equipment, has also gone scuba diving for ship wrecks in the Atlantic Ocean.

The ceremony gave dignified expression to the couple’s commitment in the open and playful ambiance of the farm.  I, as officiant, prepared and
presented a short reflection based on the couple’s love story, tracing the earliest meeting of the couple in a university public speaking class to the
bonding moment in the rolling hills of a Berks County farm.




Lindsey and Alex elope on a rainy summer Saturday

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Lindsey called on July 1 to scheduled their July 10 wedding.  I find elopements very romantic and this was to be no exception!  Since it was just going to be Alex, Lindsey and me, I selected one of my favorite private wedding spots, The Meadowbrook Wildlife Sanctuary in Rydal.  I went there several days prior and scoped out just the right clearing for a sweet wedding.   However, Mother Nature chose July 10 for a drenching respite from this summer's ongoing drought and so the wildlife sanctuary wedding was not to be.  Instead I prepared my own private wedding space, tending to it carefully so that it would be sweet and romantic as I waited for the arrival of my guests.  I saw the blue Prius pull up alongside our house and watched as this strikingly beautiful pair emerged from their car in the rain.

I spent a few minutes with them prior to the ceremony.  I turned my satellite radio station to the all love song station.  They told me they met in college over ten years ago and have been together ever since.  They opted for a sweet, low-key wedding deciding that instead of spending their money on the wedding, they would splurge and go to France on their honeymoon.  We may not have been in the bird sanctuary but the setting was lovely and the couple was glowing. 

They exchanged rings that were first blessed in a seashell container.

They are big fans of the Tour de France and always dreamed of seeing it and so they will!

Lindsey and Alex Wedding 006 300x225 Lindsey and Alex elope on a rainy summer SaturdayLindsey and Alex Wedding 010 300x225 Lindsey and Alex elope on a rainy summer SaturdayLindsey and Alex Wedding 0161 300x225 Lindsey and Alex elope on a rainy summer Saturday


Dana and Andrew get married at Holly Hedge!

Sunday, June 20th, 2010
GEDC25802 300x225 Dana and Andrew get married at Holly Hedge!It was a hot, sunny, spectacularly beautiful day today for the wedding of Dana Levatino and Andrew Slipyan.  Holly Hedge in New Hope is a gorgeous setting and with the weather cooperating, it was a joyous celebration.

Dana and Andrew have an especially interesting story. They actually had another wedding date set in the summer of 2009.  However, they recognized that they had some unresolved issues to address so they took the unusually courageous step of postponing their wedding so that they could do more work on their relationship.

They recognized that working on their relationship helped them to grow up and strengthend their bond.  That made today's wedding even more of a celebration.

Dana's gown was very beautiful:  strapless and sophisticated.  The bridesmaids wore lovely  gowns the color of which I called "eggplant" but I think they said that David's Bridal called the color "lapis."

They honored their parents and families who loved and supported them through the rough times.  Andrew wore the pocket watch that belonged to his late father, Phillip.

Both bride and groom were beaming as they looked into each other's eyes and took their vows before friends and family.

In honor of their Jewish heritage, the ceremony ended with the traditional breaking of the glass.

Andrew and Dana will honeymoon in Hawaii.  Aloha!  Have a wonderful life.  I hope I have the privilege of watching it unfold.

GEDC25812 300x225 Dana and Andrew get married at Holly Hedge!

GEDC25832 300x225 Dana and Andrew get married at Holly Hedge!
 
Photos courtesy of Journeys of the Heart officiant Gabrielle Kaplan-Mayer.  Gabrielle is the author of The Creative Jewish Wedding Book


A ritual of your own

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

A ritual of your own

Miki Young(1) A ritual of your own by Miki Young, non-denominational officiant

There are some times that a bride and groom want to express something so unique that a traditional ritual just won't do. And what works best, is to create a non-denominational ritual that reflects the particular message and view of the wedding couple.

As non-denominational officiants we are not bound by the standard way of creating weddings. Instead we are able to create something more secular, or something more spiritual, or even a ceremony that integrates traditions in an interfaith way.  What is important is that each ritual reflects the wedding couple and the feeling they want to have for themselves and for their guests.

Creating a unique wedding ceremony ritual starts with a clear idea of what the ritual is supposed to represent. For example, does it
represent the bride and groom coming together as unique individuals and forming a sacred marital union?  Is it being used to expand interactive guest participation?  To honor parents? Or maybe to help families of the bride and groom feel like they have come together as one extended family?

One couple wanted to have a momento of their wedding ceremony.  We worked together to create a ritual in which every guest received a small stone to place, along with their blessing for the couple, into a clear bowl at the front of the room.  During the ceremony, the bride and groom placed sand into the stone-filled bowl, indicating how their individual souls were melding together and how important their family and friends were to their lives.  It was a beautiful ceremony and a beautiful reminder in their home.

In a similar ritual, instead of stones each guest received a flower to place into vase that sat on the table in the front of the room. 

The exquisitely filled vase provided a beautiful greeting for the bride and groom when they enter, knowing that their guests have all blessed their union.  As a continuation of that ritual, those flowers can also be used to encircle the couple when they say their vows or used in a presentation to each parent when the couple honors the legacy of love they have learned from their families.

Another ritual allows the parents to participate with their new in-laws by acknowledging that theirs families are joining together.
Parents stand on either side of a bowl or vase filled with water. Each couple receives a basket of different colored petals which they
place onto the water, visually bringing together their now combined family.

Rituals help us to express complex concepts with simple visuals. They allow us to engage in ways that go beyond words to the heart of the story. And so often the beauty of a wedding ceremony shines even brighter because of the rituals that are integrated within it.

 

It’s OK for the groom to get a little weepy

Saturday, April 24th, 2010

It's no surprise that the bride often steals the show on her wedding day. That's as it should be, some might say.

But I've found there to be another moment in the ceremony that leaves guests just a little breathless or perhaps more teary-eyed.

And that's when the groom sheds a tear or two!

And yes, it's been known to happen to the most stoic of grooms, the ones who swear they're not emotional, the ones who laughingly dismiss their bride's suggestion that they may need a hankie as we begin planning their wedding ceremony during our consultation. Some are so unabashedly in love with their brides and so deeply grateful for the connection they share that I get a glimpse of this emotion during our meeting. So if they become a little choked up during the ceremony, I'm not surprised. I can still remember one groom who actually leaned over to ask me if I had a tissue mid-ceremony because he couldn't keep the tears from streaming down his face.

But I can assure you that whatever awkwardness or discomfort he may have been feeling at such a show of emotion, the guests observing it were even more moved than before, more caught up in the richness of what they were witnessing.

For those guys who tend to "keep it together" or are more private about their feelings, to see them so overcome by the profound depths of what they're experiencing is a beautiful, heartfelt moment.

I'm not saying that every groom will be reduced to quiet, seemingly undignified blubbering on his wedding day (and let's face it, there's nothing undignified about it), but I'm just giving fair warning: Guys, there's something about seeing your minutes-to-be wife in her wedding dress standing before you pledging her entire being to the life you are building together that's staggering — staggeringly moving and beautiful.

So don't be afraid of a little waterworks. She's got the dress, after all, and after hearing all the comments about how gorgeous she looks once the ceremony is over, I can just bet that the second thing everyone else will be talking about is how absolutely touched they were when the groom began to cry.