A rollercoaster year

A love story isn’t a love story without some ups and downs, or twists and turns. So maybe that explains the rollercoaster ride my son and his new wife have been experiencing the past few months.

2020 has turned out to be a difficult year for anyone planning a wedding, but it has certainly made them memorable events.

Our youngest child has, according to his two siblings, “had it easy”! He benefitted from all the struggles they went through, reaping the rewards after their battles with parents over hard won freedoms, forbidden toys, curfews and parties, travel plans and even it seemed a stress-free wedding. That was how it looked back in February when planning was going well and the coronavirus was a troubling situation on the other side of the world.

After a weekend of finalising arrangements for the big day in July, he said, “I think it’s pretty much sorted.” His biggest concern was whether they had ordered enough barrels of beer. But none of us knew what was around the corner.

As the country edged into lockdown in March, we hoped it would be short and sharp and back to normal by the summer. But a couple of months in a postponement began to look inevitable. Later in the summer I spotted their flowery wedding invitation on my mother-in-law’s mantlepiece, with the July date crossed out and a September day added in. It seemed to sum up the year. A year of crossed out plans and rubbed out holidays, yet still not confident about adding in the new dates. None of us knew what was ahead.

Their hopes to see wedding numbers increased to the 140 they had invited were crushed and as September drew nearer we all realised 30 was going to be as high as it would go. The wedding couldn’t be exactly as they dreamed. There would be no singing in the service, the congregation would wear face masks and covid rules would need to be kept – but it would be their day. It would be special and intimate and their immediate family, plus a few friends would be there to join in that familiar response in the service, when they were asked if they would support them in their marriage in the years ahead, by saying: “We will!”

We were all looking forward to the wedding, but just a couple of days before, as many of us were en-route to begin preparations, local restrictions struck.

When you lose something precious the first time, you are really sad. You mourn the loss and eventually you move on. Then perhaps you find the lost something or buy a new one. But if you lose it again, does the pain get less or maybe you just don’t let yourself feel it so much the second time? Thinking, ‘well I lost it before and I got over it, so I will get over it again’.

I can’t imagine how they felt two days before their wedding when they heard about new local restrictions and weren’t sure if the whole day would fold. It was another body blow for them both – yet more disappointment – I didn’t know if they would be able to bounce back. I wanted to curl up in a ball and weep myself. This painful uncertainty was combined with the news that a good friend would not be able to attend as she had to isolate after a flatmate had tested positive.

And yet they were lucky. The next morning they discovered, to everyone’s great relief, that the day was able to go ahead legally and the reception was also allowed. We didn’t do everything as planned, but it was an amazing time. The sun came out, there were smiles and laughter, along with tears. Emotions ran high, after all the “will we won’t we” of the days before it’s not surprising.

The many friends and family who couldn’t attend joined in via zoom and even the speeches were filmed and shared later, while a couple of very talented photographers captured the most precious memories from the day and absent friends and family sent in hilarious video messages.

Life doesn’t always go as we’d planned and relationships are also full of ups and downs. However, it’s only through experiencing those very low times that we can appreciate the highs and the happiness. The groom’s brother recently announced that he’d much rather have a life with big highs and lows, despite the pain and even the fear, rather than live life on the level, never experiencing the depths of emotion from a leap in the dark or a mountain top view.

I am sure there will be many more rollercoaster climbs and dives ahead for the new Mr and Mrs Farmer, and for all of us – let’s try to enjoy the ride.

What about the weather?

Digging channels and building dams in the sand on the beach has always been a favourite pastime for our boys at the seaside. They also enjoyed tunnelling in a friend’s back garden, until the passage got so deep and long it was turning into a small mine. But the day before the wedding I wasn’t expecting to see them on their knees, plastered in mud, examining the route of a drainage channel diverting water around a marquee in the Shropshire hills…

If oaks grow strong in contrary winds and diamonds are made under pressure, then our son and his new wife have made a fine start to married life. Just five days before their wedding on Saturday they heard torrential rain had turned the field where the marquee would be pitched into mud. Their Festival style wedding reception was sounding more like Glastonbury every hour.

After an emergency journey from London to a very wet Shropshire to assess the damage they decided to go ahead in the hope the location could be salvaged. Two days before the wedding we arrived at the farm to help hoist the marquee and bang in pegs. The view of the Long Mynd hills was spectacular as the sun appeared at last. Although the forecast was mixed, there was hope.

Like every wedding there were a mountain of tasks to be tackled from arranging tables to cleaning toilets and stringing up lights. Later that night as we sat enjoying a home cooked meal we listened to the rain on the conservatory roof. Everyone was picturing the field and the marquee.

On Friday the sun came out and it was all hands on deck cleaning chairs, laying out plates and pouring water into jugs of flowers. The attention to detail and eco-friendly planning was evident in everything from the bamboo plates, each with a guest’s named soldered into it, to waxed wood cutlery bound with handmade pottery medallions with an initial on. The only thing we needed was for the weather to be kind. As forecast, the clouds gathered after lunch and the boys decided digging a trench around the marquee was essential to save it from being flooded. It wasn’t long before the ‘highly engineered’ trench was a fast flowing stream as the rain descended. The bride-to-be could be seen gazing out through a flap in the tent as water bounced off the canvas sides and ran in rivulets across the field. Everyone was praying for sun. But could it possibly dry out by the next day?

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It was time to leave for the church rehearsal. The digging brothers, who were the groom-to-be and a best man, were caked in mud from head to toe. All around their posse of digging friends leaning on spades began to laugh.
“I better wash my hands,” said one. His brother looked uncertainly down at his now brown jeans.
“Are we Ok going like this?”
Even if your father is the vicar, the answer is ‘No’.
Fresh clothes were borrowed from a faithful friend and they arrived at the church in slightly unconventional and ill fitting outfits, which included climbing trousers and board shorts.

We do believe in miracles. The morning of the wedding the sun was shining and the field had dried out enough to be transformed. A band of willing friends, along with the groom, his best men and ushers, charged around tossing grass clippings and hay in the air and generally having fun (without mud).

The field that was brown turned green and within a couple of hours it looked like the most wonderful country wedding reception venue.  Hay bales and fire pits were scattered around and pots of flowers and pretty lanterns lining paths of straw completed the scene.

Some hours later when the flower power Morris Minor chugged up beside the marquee and the new Mr & Mrs Farmer stepped out there were cheers and tears of joy as the bride saw the transformed scene for the first time.

 ‘Real love’ may be about weathering storms together, but sometimes that’s easier to see after the clouds have parted and the sun has broken through.

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Footnote: This blog isn’t aimed to thank everyone who helped make the day a success and there were so many of you! Neither can I cover all the highlights from moving and hilarious speeches to the service, the sermon and the flowers, but I must mention the members of Popup Opera who gave an amazing performance in the church – it was funny, it was beautiful and it was epic. Please do support this very special team and go to a performance soon https://www.popupopera.co.uk