My Best Friend’s Wedding
Our cozy band of Little Women was going through a season of change, and I felt like dramatic Josephine March howling against the prospect of seeing those life leaves slowly turn. But, as it turned out, you were also not ready for that change. So, as our future Mohican husbands patiently waited for us to balance our sensibility with sense, you and I continued to have adventures beneath winter and spring skies.
These adventures were not always easy, and the summer before I married, the movie that best depicted our lives – that best depicted your strength – was Braveheart. You, the tall, redheaded, homeschooled girl, for one hundred days literally and figuratively wielded your Braveheart sword against cancer and screamed “Freedom!” For one hundred days, I watched you battle against something that was unseen and yet so strong. That bittersweet summer caused us both to grow, to change from girls to women, and in that sometimes painful metamorphosis, our sensibility was balanced with sense; the sense to know that life is short and should be grasped with every fiber in our beings.
To celebrate your triumph over cancer and to embrace our rapidly changing lives, we traveled across the pond to the UK. We rode the underground and strolled through Covent Gardens; we savored cream tea in the Cotswolds and hiked wind-lashed Scottish hills where the true Braveheart perhaps wielded his sword; we trailed along the Irish Sea to a town called Bray and then back again, but – of course – paused for mint ice-cream along the way. And in all of that splendor, in all of that adventure, something was missing.
Theywere missing.
The men who were brave enough, sensible enough, patient enough to wait to woo, were not along for the journey, and so that journey was incomplete. Our cozy band of Little Women was opening up to include men, and because we had finally attained that balance of Sense and Sensibility, we dropped our Pride and Prejudiceand let our Mohican men in, knowing that our life adventure and happiness would not quite be the same without them.
Embrace it, my sister, my friend.
Embrace the happiness, the adventure, and your baseball-playing Mohican.
I love you to life.
Jolina
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Leah
I love the literary connections you make in this piece. Especially Little Women as Jo March is probably my favorite character ever written. Great way to weave the literary into your story!
Jolina Petersheim
Oh, I just love Jo March, too! Such a fiesty gal! 🙂
Melissa Crytzer Fry
Such a talented writer you are, Miss Jolina. I loved this post and, as Leah says, the literary connections. I love the love you have for your friend and your husband. It shines through so clearly!
Jolina Petersheim
Aw, shucks, Melissa. You're sure sweet. 🙂 And I sure do love my husband and best friend. They have shaped my world.
Julia Munroe Martin
A great post — really lovely literary comparisions. Such an enjoyable read!
Jolina Petersheim
Thanks, Julia. All our lives it seems that Misty and I have been living through these characters!