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Gosh! I was soooo beyond stress!
by Grace Posa-Ibay
A story on remembering that the most
important thing during every wedding is the union and not the production.
Two weeks before July 7 -- I had everything taken cared of, met
with all the vendors and people, and had everything under control.
Or so I thought.
July 7, 2000 --- the hurricanes came that
week... two of them actually, and sort of hovered (and I mean hoooveerred)
over Luzon travelling at a mere 70 km/hour... that slow, so it took
the two storms a week to pass through the island.
As it is, syempre pa! Inulan yung wedding
namin... let's just say everything I planned didn't turn out the
way it did. I wanted a garden wedding, with flags waving across
the grass as I pass through in my white gown, and sun shining across
the horizon giving a mystical aura to me and the all white entourage.
Well ---IN YOUR DREAMS, MAN!
Hahahaha... It rained! And rained! And rained
some more! Tagaytay was enveloped in fog for 5 days... nawalan ng
current, so of course the whole Canyon Woods Resort was in darkness!
Walang aircon para sa mga galing US, kaya nainitan! Only the honeymoon
suites and the country club (where the reception was) have generators.
Gosh! It was sooo beyond stress! It was near horrifying! Walang
phones sa Canyon Woods (at walkie-talkie ang gamit ng staff)! And
cell phones of course were out of area coverage. We had to transfer
the early guests from their cottages to the honeymoons suites. We
were there the day before, and my parents-in-law were saying --
next time, don't get married in the Philippines. Mike was in a bad
bad mood, because of the rain and brown-out and heat. And oh brother!
That night? My cake, my wonderful wedding cakes! nilanggam ng sangkatutak!
Picture this -- we had to take out the ants from the icing using
only battery operated lamps... arrgh!
Canyon Woods said current might go on by nine
pm... we didn't wait -- we all transferred to the honeymoon suites,
which thankfully could accommodate a large number of people. Pero
wala pa ring kuryente hanggang kinabukasan... So I didn't get to
dress in the comforts of my own cottage. nah-ah! I had to go to
the spa/sauna room of the country club and change there... my gown,
no chance to have it laid out on a bed. Teddy? he had to make all
us up at the parlor bar of the country club. The wedding? It was
transferred to the back-up conference room! (good thing we had that!)...
Joel's flowers? maganda but I can see they suffered through the
rainy days... JJS musicians? poor guys! all they had going to canyon
woods was an owner-jeep, and five of them with all their big instruments
squeezed inside that tiny car... my heart went out to them!
Gosh... it was crazy, it was heartbreaking,
the whole preparation...
It was so foggy that day in Tagaytay people
said they could only see 5 meters in front of their car. We didn't
think our guests would make it... our pastor came in just in time
right before 4 pm, because of the fog. I was already half-panicking,
and as I had my own pastor act as one of our ninongs, I had to say
"kahit isa sa kanila, dumating.. please! matuloy lang ang kasal"...
the fog was thickest during the wedding. The guests could see nothing
but pure white outside the windows of the hall. They couldn't see
Taal in the far background, nor the flowers and trees around the
area. They couldn't see that the cottages and the summer houses
were so grand. They couldn't see anything but white fog... but of
course, the show still went on... and they said the ceremony was
so beautiful, a lot were crying, especially through our vows. Mike
and I were caught up in the emotion of it all we practically didn't
notice anything (or maybe we decided in our minds we're not getting
to let this dampen our spirits and our love)... but later our guests
said that God gave us the fog so that nothing would distract anyone
from the essence of the whole affair -- that this event was a union
or two souls, and not just an occasion or a show. And that's what
happened... all the guests' attention were on us, listening to our
every word, laughing with us, crying with us... sighing, because
of what they witnessed...
And oh my gosh --- there were so many photographers.
I had only three official ones, but they (our relatives and friends)
just wanted to record the whole event for themselves, and didn't
stop clicking the cameras, nor have the video tapes stop running...
my aunt said she felt like it was a press conference, more than
15 people documenting the whole affair!
Was I tired? Oh yes... was I stressed! You
bet. I cried to Mike, afterwards, just simply releasing the stress
and fatigue... fact is, nothing we had planned came through... truth
of the matter is -- looking back, it was the most perfect canvass
for the Lord to unite us... we had witnessed Him in the middle of
it all, no doubt all of it was His doing. And in the end we praise
Him for the good things He has, and only He could have done.
= = = = =

About the author: Grace
Posa is US-based who planned her wedding from overseas.
She got married to Mike Ibay in July 7, 2000 at Canyon Woods Resort. |