Throwback Thursday: home

Originally written April 13, 2007.

The power lines sketch across the darkening sky-
I watch them- standing motionless over the vacant field of green-
As I pull into the driveway and find myself home.

It is in the smell and feel of the air- the warmth on my cheek.
In the familiar feel of the leather seats in my car and 
The way the pictures hang on the wall.

I’ll get bored and jump in my Explorer-
I love the way my hands curve around the wheel and 
The power I feel when I’m rocking out- 60 mph on LBJ highway-
Singing to the road and the skies and the heavens and
Flying free

And there’s a bit of home in my daddy’s brisket-
The meat which Texans dream of at night-
I eat it with the barbeque sauce we smuggle down from Oklahoma every chance we get
And sigh with happiness.

The grass in our front yard- always green and wet and soft- even in July
The roses out back bloom and bloom- pink and red and yellow and orange
The sun beaming down and making me sweat-
The tree overhanging the sidewalk- guarding us on our ways.

Sometimes I climb to the top of it- no, not even the top- 
And I can look out over south to where downtown Dallas 
Shines and spins like a jewel in the night

The silence- the utter stillness of my room-
Christmas lights tracing the ceiling-
Grandma’s paintings of winter/fall/spring cover the walls-
Dried roses arching by the window and
My high school homecoming mums hang proudly by the door-
Whispering that this is the way it was- this is the part of you that
You can’t leave behind.

And who would want to?
After all.

And I can call up my Indian sister and head out-
For some lunch- for shopping- doesn’t really matter-
We talk and laugh and sing and dance and
Act ridiculous- in a way no other person really sees.

Afterwards we can go to the Starbucks just a little ways down from our old high school-
The one that everyone hangs out at. 
And we can sit outside and sip our drinks-
Watch the birds gather around the intersection like Hitchcock’s nightmares came real
In the setting sun. 

And this is the place where my heart truly rests
This is truly home.

BRB, just over here processing my mild trauma

Yesterday, while I was driving to meet some friends for breakfast at IHOP, an ice pack on my left knee (which I had injured in an unnameable way when I stood up in a movie theater a few days earlier) my car “hit” something and spun out of control. As I was careening out of control and frantically trying to stop my car’s swerving, I cursed loudly in a way that would certainly make my Extremely Lutheran parents raise an eyebrow, convinced that I had caused this situation myself by hitting the wall on the side of the highway. It was the phone to blame, I was sure; the phone that had betrayed me by guiding me to the wrong IHOP. My quick second of looking at directions was my doom, and any second now I was going to hit another car and hurt someone, hurt myself, hurt everything.

I miraculously, did not hurt anyone else or anything, but came to a stop on the side of the highway, bumping the front right of my car into the wall with a sickening crunch. And then everything was dreadfully still as I stared ahead, shocked. The sound of the true crime podcast to which I had been listening played from the floor, where my phone had fallen in all the hubbub. I shakily picked it up and turned it off and called my husband, who was still at home sleeping in the bed I never should have left that morning. It took a few minutes to register that the strange yellow things in the corner of my eyes were the side airbags, now covering each front window. They never touched me and I never touched them until I crawled out from under them to the edge of the road; they hung uselessly, like especially hideous pool floats with a strange resemblance to cheese.

I don’t really remember what I said to John in that first call, as cars behind me honked irefully as they drove on by. I had had the good fortune to pull over immediately in front of a merge lane. I said things I can’t remember into the phone that had caused this whole mess to begin with as I started to sob, shakily turning on the hazard lights. I thought about moving up further out of the way of the merge lane, but it quickly became clear that my car was going nowhere; though the engine turned on, my tentative foot on the gas evoked nothing but a complaining roar. Carrying only my phone and my keys, I crawled over the drink holders and out the passenger side door in an effort to not be turned into the IHOP® pancakes I had so been looking forward to eating that day.

A white van was parked up a bit on the side of the lane – a man who certainly didn’t look like a murderer, despite his questionable choice of transportation, came walking up to me to ask if I was okay. He had been behind me and saw it all; he called the police. I never got his name. I should have got his name. How ungrateful a person must I be to never get his name. I hope I thanked him. I think I did. I tend to thank even people who are awful to me (a trait common in my Southern background), so it would be strangely out of character for me to do so. I texted my friend at IHOP to assure her I was alive and gave her my regrets; I could not imagine going and being around people after this. I wanted to go crawl in a hole full of blankets and cats and rest there until I was old and grey.

A crew of firefighters arrived soon and asked me if I was okay. I thought I was okay. Nothing seemed to hurt that hadn’t hurt before. They were so kind, so earnest in their tan and yellow uniforms. At least I think they were tan and yellow. It’s hard to remember because everything is sort of jumbled up in my brain from all the adrenaline and tears and the terrible feeling of guilt. They placed out orange cones around my poor injured Ford Escape; that, along with the bright red fire engine, finally stopped the chorus of annoyed honks from cars driving past.

One of the firefighters looked like Eddie Redmayne. If I had been in my right mind, I likely would have told him so; I have a habit of making pop culture references and awful jokes while nervous in an effort to alleviate all sorts of tension. I wonder what they thought when they saw me there, the green haired girl in the yellow polka dot shoes, by the bright green car with the RCHAEL license plate and copious bumper stickers with references to cats, Kermit the frog, Shakespeare, Harry Potter, Democratic candidates, and English queens. I had the bizarre thought that if my car was totaled, which I feared it might be, I would have to start my bumper sticker collection all over. My husband always avoids driving my car because he said the stickers are embarrassing. How strange it was that I did not have any bumper stickers representing where I went to school or law school; I should remedy this in the future.

I texted my parents to let them know what had happened and that I was okay, because as a very grown-up 31-year-old, I desperately wanted to see them and have them tell me all was well. They, sitting in their Sunday school class at church in Texas, were apparently surprised and alarmed, but in their usual unflappable way, avoided the use of any exclamation points in their response. My message to the 1.5 years and counting group chat of Shakespeare friends to let them know I would miss rehearsal later due to lack of car and needing to hide in a couch for the rest of my life was greeted with considerably more exclamation points and much sympathy. I once again felt incredibly grateful for my community of  kindred nerd spirits.

As the firefighters stood uselessly around me, waiting for the state police to arrive, the unnamed witness wished me well and left. My law school education must have been absent at that time from my brain, strewn on the road like the pieces of my car, or I would have certainly asked his name, gotten his number, obtained his license plate, anything. I don’t even really remember what he looked like. I remember the firefighter who looked like Eddie Redmayne but I don’t remember the face of the man who actually could have helped me in my insurance claim.

Although my husband had reminded me to take photos of my car right away, I did not, only taking pictures with my mind. I could see into the black innards of the front corner of my car; a white-blue container of fluid was dripping slightly, but the firefighters didn’t ask me to move, so I assumed it must have been something fairly innocuous, and not something that would lead to a firey explosion of Hollywood death. They reminded me to take anything out of the car I would want in the next few days, as I was not likely to see it for a while once it was towed away. I crawled in and grabbed my purse, my cell phone charger, the peanut m&ms I had been snacking on beforehand, and my wedding veil, stuffed into a box in the backseat, ready to mail to a bride borrowing it as part of one of my grand schemes.

I went back to the side of the highway and stood there, feeling vaguely like some sort of twisted Mrs. Havisham, with my tears and shabby surroundings and my wedding veil in a box. An ambulance arrived but quickly drove past in what I can only assume was a drive-by examination. If they had stopped, perhaps I would have had to pay an exorbitantly large bill, even if there was nothing wrong with me (and there wasn’t, besides the sobbing jags). How fortunate that they did not stop and force me to confront the brokenness of the American health industry yet again.

I texted John and asked him to come; I needed him there. I asked the firefighters for my exact location, claiming my brain was too jumbled to remember, although really, my brain is a sieve for highway numbers and directions, and although I can get many places without directions, I could hardly ever communicate such directions to you in any sort of meaningful way, but it’s not like they needed to know quite how much of a spaz I really was at that exact moment in time.

A police officer arrived soon, at which point the firefighters left as quickly as they came; handing over custody of the whole mess, I guess. The officer offered a seat in his car for me; I accepted and walked back. My headlight cover stood nearby, sitting on the pavement like a giant’s contact lens.  I gave my report and answered the questions numbly, no I couldn’t remember how fast I was driving at the time, yes, I somehow managed to not hit anyone.

The police officer got out to walk along the road and look for evidence of the initial impact; I sat there in his car and looked at the machinery, the equipment in the back, the video camera facing forward. I remembered my peanut m&ms and chewed on them slowly until he came back. There was no sign that I had hit any wall except the wall I had run up against at the end. This was confusing. What did it mean? It only occurred to me later while talking to my husband that I might not have hit anything at all; the car might have gone out of control due to a tire blowout instead. I was indignant when I heard this (I literally just got those tires replaced in January) but also strangely comforted; if it was the tire that was my doom, rather than the phone, than I could truly say that this was not my fault and not the result of my stupidity, instead of blaming it all humorously on an anthropomorphic device in an effort to displace my overwhelming feeling of despair and anger at myself. The officer gave me his card, told me what to do, said that since there was no damage to anyone or anything but my own car, he would not give me a ticket or charge me with anything. I nodded and tried to listen and take it all in. He joked a few times to try to comfort me.

John finally arrived and parked shortly after the tow truck arrived. Fortunately, he was there to get me and take me away; I had not wanted to sit in the tow truck with a stranger and try to make awkward small talk. Instead I saw John and started sobbing again. I asked for some Starbucks through tears, then changed my mind and wanted diner food, and then changed and went back to coffee, as I wanted to go home and cuddle my cats and not see anyone else ever again. John patiently listened to this all, telling me he would take me anywhere I wanted and get me anything there. His credit card would not work at Starbucks, so I had to pay for both of our drinks and my ridiculous pink heart cookie with sprinkles. One of the baristas was also named Rachel/Rachael and had green hair. I felt strangely comforted. Although my emotions felt like they had been torn and bedraggled, no one was not alive due to my misadventure, the world was still spinning on its axis, I was okay, and I was alive. And that would have to be enough for now.

Horriblicious: Drag Me to Purgatory

Sometimes I come up with ridiculous sounding sequel names for the books I'm writing for funzies.

So for "Most Horrible," I'm thinking "MOAR HORRIBLE" or "HORRIBLER." "2 Horrible 2 quit?"

For "Namely" (Haven't come up with a proper tagline yet, and realistically, if i sell it to a publisher, they might change the name anyway, but go with it), I'm thinking "Namely: BABIES!?" (For this joke to make sense, you should know that it would be about picking surnames for kids, because that's a whole other issue from marital surnames and it's actually even more controversial in many ways, but also there are a lot of really interesting cultural and historical things to talk about it. )

Suggestions from my Facebook friends have included: Most Horriblest, Annus Horribilis, Horribler 2: Electric Boogaloo.

What's Going On, Rachael?

/shuffles into sight/

So. Uh. Hi website followers! If I have any, anyway, after abandoning my website for over a year. I have actually been posting regular updates on the Namely/By Any Other Name Facebook page , and I write all the time on my personal Facebook. I’ve been pretty busy! Just bad about updating.

So here’s what’s been going on since I last posted on this website.

I got married last June. My name is still Rachael Dickson and I have no intention of changing it. We had signs at our wedding joking about the founding of “Dickson Lorenzen LLP,” since we’re both lawyers, and now we have that sign up in our house! Oh yeah, we bought a house too, in Springfield, Virginia. We are very happy, me with all my writing and craft projects and theater shenanigans, and john with all his tool and fire related projects. The cats (Schrodinger and Ziggy Stardust) are happy too. We currently have a guest cat (Martok) living with us while his owners search for a place to live.

I have continued to work at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as an Examining Attorney and now have passed my two year anniversary there. That means I have full signatory authority and can perform all actions as an examiner without getting approval from a mentor first. It’s pretty awesome and makes my life easier.

In August, after having major trouble with my clinical depression (which I’ve had since high school, at least) for most of the summer, I tried an alternative treatment in desperation, and it worked! I’ve been on the Fisher-Wallace Stimulator since then and it has literally changed my life. That, combined with my previous depression and ADD meds, have made me more consistently happy, emotionally stable, and productive in the past 6 months than I can ever remember being before.

Partially as a result of depression treatment, I read Miracle Morning by Hal Elrod in September and have kept to a regular morning routine since then, which has actually been daily since the beginning of the year. Regular meditation, reading of helpful books, and journaling has brought a huge amount of peace and happiness to my life. In addition, the process of making and regularly reading affirmations and visualizations have really helped me focus on my goals for the future.

As a result of both the depression treatment and the miracle morning routine, I’ve been really focusing on my writing since October. I joined a local writers group that meets twice weekly at various coffee shops. We basically write and chat and have a grand old time (my flexible work schedule and ability to telework has really helped me with this!). I wrote a one-act play based on an idea I’d had for a long time. That play, Most Horrible (which is a prologue to Hamlet set in Purgatory), was produced for the Britches and Hose New Works Festival in January! I directed. I turned that play into a novel, writing it mostly in one month long sprint during National Novel Writing Month in November and finishing it up by the end of January.

I have now established a daily writing habit (usually accompanied with hot cocoa or coffee, often at the library if not with my writing group) and monthly writing goals, as NaNoWriMo helped me figure out that I do really well with ambitious but immediate goals to work toward. My January goal was to finish my novel. My February goal is to write a nonfiction proposal for a book on marital surname decisions. As part of that, I’ve also been working on my social media branding and revamping this website!

I’ve revamped this website in several ways - I switched the overall name from By Any Other Name (I actually let the URL lapse quite a while ago) to just Rachael Dickzen. As I’ve explained in my new “About Rachael,” page, I changed my name to Dickzen on Facebook just as a joke (my husband’s last name is Lorenzen, so I took the last three letters), but I enjoyed it so much that I’ve decided to use it as a pen name for writing from now on. It’s also got the practical effect of making me much easier to find, as there are tons of Dicksons out there and no other Dickzens, as far as I know.

I also changed “By Any Other Name” to “Namely” because almost every news article I’ve ever read about marital surname changes uses that line from Romeo and Juliet and I’m super sick of it now.

I also added a discussion of all the projects I’m working on under the About section. I keep busy! I plan to add a CV with a list of publications and such on here soon, so that I can use this website more as a marketing tool for the future. I’ve already been compiling such a list and bio for my book proposal, so I might as well keep using it! I’m also figuring out how to directly connect my social media to this website as well.

Anyway, that’s what’s going on. I’m doing really great and am very excited for the present and the future!

(Oh, P.S. my hair is green now. :D)

dickzen pic 2 13 2019.jpg

I've Started Calling Myself a Writer

Originally written and posted October 30, 2018 to Facebook.

Something I scribbled out this morning in a great hurry, as if it had to be written now or would walk away from me forever:

I have started calling myself a writer. And there is a great power in that.

It is a reminder to me of my dreams from when I was a child and my dreams now as an adult.

It is an answer to all the times my depression told me, “You can’t. You don’t have it within you to write that way. You will start and stop as you always do. You will fail.”

That answer is a simple, “Yes, I can. I will. I am.”

It is a rallying cry to action, to move forward every day, no matter how small that step may be, or how hard going the way it is.

It is a love song to myself and my potential.

I’ve started calling myself a writer.

Because I am.

Throwback Thursday: Thank You

More emo/attempted to be empowering poetry from 19-year-old me. Written July 9, 2007.

I was nerdy-
Round glasses, long hair that went everywhere
Braces and chubby legs- my nose always in a book
Long dark thin t-shirts- couldn’t get me in pink
My face- a ruddy bumpy mess with early acne at the age of 10

You glanced askance at me on the bus-
Perfect hair, made-up fifth grade eyes-
Your trendy clothes, active party life
Made you –higher- than me- 
Made you –better- than me-
Or so you thought, as you condescended to smile at me once in a while
Like a dog on the street

Thank you 
for reminding me 
that I never belonged

Learned my social skills from books and public television
Got better with age-
Used to think the best way to like a guy was to insult them all the time
Punch them in the arm- make up teasing songs about them
While secretly I pined and longed for a hug or a kiss-
Thinking it’d make me happy somehow

You laughed at my antics- seeing right through them
And teased me about every guy I liked in junior high
Spread the rumors, thought it was a game
Joked with your friends about how silly I was
Not like rejection wasn’t hard enough without ridicule

Thank you 
for reminding me
that I never belonged

I was a fat seventh-grader
Trying to fit in without the necessary clothes
Or the money to buy it with
Stole my mom’s old hippie shirts and
All my sister’s stuff I could get away with-
Wanting so badly to be the girl with a certain style

You- wearing your new outfit, best earrings, trendy jeans-
told me I looked ridiculous
Said each new thing was absurd
I wrung my hands- pretended I didn’t hear
But hopeless- cried later-
Thinking that I’d
Never be beautiful
Never be anyone to notice
Never be possible to love

Thank you 
for reminding me 
that I never belonged

Now- full-grown college girl-
Hair cut short dyed red
I have the knowledge of 
How to dress, what to do
What to say, who to talk to

But most importantly though-
Now 
I know
That none of it really matters-

Yet even now 

When you stand in the pictures you take with all your friends
At the party you never even thought about inviting me to-

When you laugh at the memory of high school drama without
Ever trying to understand what actually happened-

When you decide not to stay in touch because of so and so
And this and that and
All the things we hoped to leave behind

When you figure I’m not worth getting to know 

It’s easy to revert
And go back to the little girl
Wanting so badly just to belong

But I try not to and bury that loneliness deep

Except to remember how it feels- 
as a reminder to try not to hurt another
and do what I can to heal wounds and 
help others move on-

And in the end, I’m stronger for it, I guess-
Stronger for the bruises and blows you dealt-

Strong enough
To let them go

And strong enough
To let your words fade-
By and by

Thank you 
for reminding me 
that I never belonged

You Can't Take Your Spouse's Name in Quebec

"In marriage, both spouses retain their respective names, and exercise their respective civil rights under those names." Article 393 of the Civil Code of Quebec

Since 1981, women in Quebec have been banned from legally taking their husband's  name. According to Marie-Hélène Dubé, a Montreal lawyer who specializes in family law, in an article published in the Global News, “The reason this law was adopted was to put an end to huge social pressure on women upon marrying to take the husband’s name." Dubé justified the harshness of the law by stating, "The reality is if the rule is too flexible, women can be subject to pressures … where they can be forced to do something that they don’t really want to do."

According to the Directeur de l'etat civil Quebec's website, "The law permits a person to apply for a change of given name or surname under certain conditions. Such a change is granted only if a serious reason, within the meaning of the Ci'vil Code of Québec, has been shown. Important: Under the Civil Code of Québec, both spouses retain their respective names in marriage and exercise civil rights under those names. Consequently, if a married woman wants to adopt her spouse's surname, the Directeur de l'état civil will authorize that change of name only in an exceptional situation."'

Names can be changed in Quebec in two ways:

1. A child's name change can be authorized by the court in the case of abandonment by a parent, in the case of deprivation of parental authority, or in the case of a change of filiation, such as through an adoption.

2. A person can also apply to the Directeur de l'état civil for a name change. The website gives a few examples of reasons to apply for a change of name, including: "The use, for five years or more, of a surname or given name not entered on the act of birth; A name of foreign origin, too difficult to pronounce or write in its original form; Serious prejudice or psychological suffering caused by the use of the name; A name that invites ridicule or that is infamous (marked by disgrace, shame or humiliation); or the intention to add to the surname of a child under 18 the surname of the father or mother, or a part of it if it is a compound surname."

This is a difficult process, as illustrated by Saleema Webster in an article in Chatelaine: "There are circumstances in which a name change is allowed: parental abandonment, other reasons of inconvenience. I checked every box, adding that it would be a hardship not to have the same name as the rest of my new family. ...Eventually, I had to provide a letter from a psychologist supporting my claim of emotional hardship, and in a process that took over a year and hundreds of dollars, I was granted a legal name change, from Saleema Nawaz to Saleema Webster." (This article also includes a humorous story with a slight twist on the standard "people assume you have your husband's name" story you hear so often in America, in which a doctor in Quebec was incredibly confused by the author and her husband sharing a last name).

I have so many thoughts on this. I kind of get the idea of cutting down on social pressure, because seriously y'all, there is a ridiculous amount of social pressure for women to change their name, but at the same time, this law seems like it goes way too far in terms of taking away people's choice. So though I can understand how they got to this point, I highly disagree with it. Plenty of people seem to agree with me on this, including the Prime Minister of Canada and his wife. A National Post article noted that a directive that stated the Prime Minister's wife be known as "Sophie Grégoire Trudeau" was effectively giving a middle finger to Quebec's law, as "Since Trudeau and Grégoire married in 2005 in Montreal, she has had no right to share names with her husband — or their children, for that matter." (although I should note that I'm pretty sure there's no law in Canada that requires children to have their father's name).

The wording of the law is also very broad, "spouse" rather than husband or wife. I'd normally applaud the gender-neutral wording, but in this case, I think it means that homosexual couples are banned from taking each other's surnames upon marriage as well. And the same justifications for avoiding social pressure seem to not hold up in that situation. If you have two men marrying each other, there's theoretically no social pressure. If you have two women marrying each other, is there twice the pressure? And what sort of social pressure exists for genderqueer folks who don't identify as either male or female? I'm just so curious.

In any case, the justifications fall apart pretty quickly and you just have a situation where people are banned from making their own choices about their names post-marriage. And that's never cool. 

Changing Your Name Can Get Expensive and Time-Consuming

Refinery 29 published an article on this subject, looking specifically at the requirements for a woman changing her name in New York. 

"Capalad is hoping to use her maiden name as a middle name — a trend that's been steadily on the rise in the last decade. However, New York state recognizes a name change by marriage only if she tacks on her married name as a hyphenated double-barrel, or if she drops her maiden name altogether. Since Capalad is hoping to essentially change her middle name and last name, she is required to appear in civil court and petition in front of a judge. The court fees vary by location — with some courts upstate charging up to $300 for an appearance — so Capalad opted for the relatively cheaper Kings Civil Court in Brooklyn. This will still cost her $65 to go in front of the judge, not to mention the weeks spent to schedule a court date."

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It also takes a good look at some of the costs you might not initially think about:

"I feel like the real money loss is having to take time off work to do all of this," Capalad said. There are so many variables that affect how much time you need to get your name change request approved, so taking half-days or full days off work seems necessary. Since Capalad is self-employed, she has no annual leave to use for such trips. She estimates that she lost a total of 1.5 to two days of income between the civil court petition and the DMV visit.

What about those Name Change services popping up everywhere? 

"With services like Hitchswitch and MissNowMrs claiming to help with changing your name starting at $29, it's tempting to go with the seemingly most hassle-free option. However, these sites don't file the forms for you; rather, they send you a completed version of everything — which you could just download from the state agencies anyway — and supply the envelopes for you to mail. If you hate filling out paperwork, this is a great tool to use, but we suggest considering your situation and making the judgment call to deliver your application by post or in person."

It looks like these websites generally provide filled out paperwork for Social Security, IRS, Passports, Postal Services, Driver's License, and Voter Registration and customized notification letters for non-governmental agencies at the lowest cost option. 

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As I've already written about before, this is generally significantly easier and cheaper for women than it is for men, but it still can really add up! However, everyone has different experiences, and several of my friends on Facebook said that it wasn't an issue for them at all. 

"I only remember that in Kansas, one of the state offices had to snail-mail me something and the post office wouldn't deliver it because my name wasn't registered at that address so I had to deal with the post office on that. Otherwise I don't think it was that big of a pain, but also I was so stupid in love at the time that I would have walked to the ends of the earth for him." - Beth Lawton (former boss extraordinaire!)

"M[y name change] was super easy, too. I didn't do a traditional change (added another middle), so I read up on that beforehand and the recommendation was to do social security first. Reason being I read about people who did their license first and the license people argued and/or didn't format it as requested. When you do SS first, they can't argue. So I did that and it was a breeze. Bank and everything else was even easier. Facebook let me change my name, but I had to submit proof to add my maiden name, because they flagged it as inappropriate." - Elizabeth Miller

 

 

How Offbeat Bride Changed My Life

I remember the day that my sister Karen called me to tell me she was engaged. It was in late winter of my senior year of high school back in 2006; I clearly remember getting her call on my little flip cell phone. I picked up while walking from my old black jeep in the parking lot of my high school on my way to the band hall. I could not have been more excited. Everyone in my family already loved her fiance Steve and we knew they'd be a great married couple. 

At that point in my life, I had been to maybe two or three weddings of people in my congregation from church and one distant family member's wedding, but I'd never been directly involved in one in any way. I had no idea how any of these things worked, and I don't think my parents really knew either. I remember my mother bemusedly telling us about how their own wedding in 1977 involved a ceremony at a church and punch and cake at her parents' house afterward. She wore a handmade white lace dress. My dad wore a powder blue suit. Nothing like the average wedding today. 

I served as my sister's maid of honor and did what I could to help her, but to be honest, I didn't do much besides planning the bridal shower and the bachelorette party. I helped her put on her hose on her actual wedding day. But the bridal magazines that I started finding around the house triggered something in me- a desire to learn more about the entire industry and start dreaming about my own wedding. 

Those magazines and those dreams led me to Offbeat Bride somehow. I don't remember the exact sequence of events that got me there, but I started reading that wonderful website back in 2007 and have haunted it on a regular basis. When I had a boyfriend and was optimistic, it tended to be weekly to daily. When I was single or despondent and had to limit my exposure to such things or risk just getting depressed, I lowered my exposure, but I still visited often. When Offbeat Family launched, I started reading that, even though I didn't have a spouse or kids personally and didn't know if or when that would happen (it's now been folded into Offbeat Home). When Offbeat Home and Offbeat Empire launched, I started reading those too.

You see, Offbeat Bride isn't just any wedding website. It espouses an openness to other people, other ways of life, that was entirely new to me and completely fascinating. My family is wonderful and accepting and great, but I had really just never been exposed to some of these other subcultures or viewpoints before. I was a little Lutheran girl who grew up in the church in Texas. I didn't know anything about goths, or pagans, or polyamory, or steampunk, or atheism. These are all things I learned about by reading Offbeat Bride. While I thought I was just reading it as a guilty pleasure to read about other people's weddings, I really was learning how to be a better person. How to not just accept people, but to try to understand them. 

It really changed me. I learned that there were many beautiful, consensual ways to be in love and be married (or not) and be alive and that all of them were valid options. I learned how to decorate my first rental home off campus from Offbeat Home. I figured out how to interact with my nieces long-distance from Offbeat Family. When I was an online journalist and editor, I learned a lot about content planning, social media, and community management from Offbeat Empire. I even wrote a few stories for the sites; some under my own name, one or two under pseudonyms. 

10 years on into reading this one publisher's content on a regular basis, it's pretty awesome to look back and wonder what I would have been like without its influence on my life. I fully believe it's made me more open to other people and other possibilities than I would have been otherwise. That constant exposure to diversity and a loving, supportive community of people happy to wave their freak flag has honestly made me a better person. 

And it all started with my sister's wedding. That's one reason I won't let myself feel guilty about caring about my wedding or reading so much on this topic. It's so easy to say that these ceremonial parties we throw to celebrate the joining of people is all just a huge expense or a waste of time, but they, as every other ceremony, bring people together and make them bump up against each other in ways that cause both tension and delight. I know people who have found their own career calling while planning their own wedding, who met their significant others and spouses and weddings, who found new ways to express themselves as part of the process. 

Of course there are plenty who just don't have those experiences and that's fine too. But I like to study it. I like to learn. I like to know all the things. And I think part of that insatiable curiosity and love of other people's stories really can be directly traced back to my years and years of reading OBB. Thanks y'all. <3