A few months ago, my husband and I announced that we'd gotten married on the most wide-reaching publication known to us: Facebook. Yup, we changed our statuses. Everyone knew we were engaged and that we'd been planning a very small destination ceremony, but what they didn't know was that we'd already been married for two years.
Let's back this up. Two years ago, my boyfriend and I had been dating for a little over a year and were head over heels in love. And not the crazy kind of love, where it feels like a self-destructing entity and you're just trying to enjoy it while you can. This was a fully immersive and yet still functional and beautiful relationship.
My boyfriend had some issues with the words associated with commitment, but not the actions. Though we'd only recently started saying "I love you," I knew by how he treated me that he had loved me for quite some time. So obviously, marriage had not even been put on the table and wasn't something I was desperately salivating for. We were happy.
The Big (Quiet) Day
Then life struck -- in two weird ways. First, my boyfriend, who was in the country on a work visa, was facing the fact that it would be running out in about six months. He had been trying to launch a freelance career but knew that as long as he had to satisfy the government, he wouldn't be able to freelance his heart out. Second, I had a pretty severe health crisis, one that I almost didn't survive. My entire life and the way I thought about the future was thrown into chaos, but a beautiful kind of chaos. I felt completely refocused. My man and I were closer than ever and had become close to each others' families.
I don't remember how the conversation began, and I'm sure it was a joke at first, but we started talking about the possibility of getting married. From what we figured, it seemed like both a crazily impulsive romantic thing to do and served the very utilitarian function of keeping him in the country. So, three months after I got out of the hospital, and two months after we'd moved in together, we were married by a Justice of the Peace on a Saturday morning at the courthouse.
Why We Kept It a Secret
The decision to keep it a secret from the rest of the world was an easy one to make. We knew how it would sound if people found out that we'd gotten married -- a couple who'd been dating one year, with one person needing a green card and the other having a near-death experience.
We knew people would think we were rushing into things, and we were, but didn't want the expectation of failure associated with that. Also, after being that ill and having so much of my personal life turned into common knowledge for people who were wishing me well, it felt nice to have something that belonged to me and the people I cared about the most.
Why I'm Glad We Did What We Did
Right after the wedding, when a lot of couples are trying to downshift from the insanity of a large to-do, we were able to relax and, instead of fielding congratulations and questions, enjoy each other and our new titles. It was tricky at first to not tell anyone. We set a timetable of announcing the "engagement" and the "wedding date" that we were both comfortable with, which involved him having to propose to me in a romantic way. A girl's gotta have some girly moments.
Sometimes it felt weird and awkward, introducing ourselves to strangers as boyfriend and girlfriend, and in low-self-esteem moments, I would recite the old adage about not buying the cow when you're getting the milk for free and try to make it apply to our situation, feeling like a sucker somehow.
But mostly, things have been wonderful and intimate, and for the last few years we've constructed a marriage for ourselves that has felt like an actual tangible thing that belongs to us and us alone. Rather than planning the wedding, we've been planning our marriage. I don't judge people who want to plan a big wedding -- in fact, now that we announced our marriage to the public we will be throwing ourselves a fun party full of dancing and fluffy dresses and cake. I'm just glad I have been able to have my cake, eat it too, and share it with my husband.
Beth Brennan is the pseudonym used by Lemondrop bloggers and contributors when we want to write naughty stuff but keep our jobs/boyfriends/dignity.












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Sunday 22 November
By carrie jacobson
My mother in law and her second husband did that. It was over a year before they told anyone. He had some business dealings that a very vindictive Ex was involved in and it could have been a bad situation if she had found out about the marriage. I have never been as shocked (or happy) as when they finally announced their marriage. We always used to tease Mom about how she could never keep a secret. Boy we were wrong!!!! LOL
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Sunday 22 November
By usher
To each it's own....people like you with all these secret's are to mental for me.
I will never forget our lovely open wedding day...the fun...the family..the Love
this.... JUST my husband and me....get's to be shallow and hollow after a while.
But let's face it...your thing....and I would never have anything in common with
you'r personality...as a matter of fact....I can't stand your type.
I am an open book and love it...and so do other's.
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Sunday 22 November
By dirk
This is such a scam marriage to let some low life illegal stay in this country
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Sunday 22 November
By ed
Did someone mention green card?
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Sunday 22 November
By Hannah
I don't know about this at all...you've still known each other a relatively short time, and I think most young people in love feel EXACTLY like you guys do at first. Marraige is hard work, years and years of hard work. If you're both willing to do that, then you'll make it. If one of you isn't...well that's just because you moved too fast in the beginning.
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Sunday 22 November
By shannongrnlf
Congratulations to you and your husband Beth, I am very happy for you. I hope your health has improved and that you will live a long and happy life with your man! I don't understand why so many people have such difficulty believing two people from different countries can fall in love with one another and truly love each other. If it was completely impossible for two nationalities to love one another, marry and have kids than many MANY people in the world, including the US, would not be alive today. Most of us here are more than one ethnicity, don't forget that. Also, why does it matter if he is or is not from the middle east? Everybody who gets married all get married for a different reason(s). Rather it be because the couple thinks it is the right thing to do because society expects it, or maybe because marriage goes back to the beginning of intelligent life, some may marry to prove to the other person they love him or her (as crazy as that seems but think of it), people also marry to prove to their friends and family that they love each other and I must say that is the saddest reason to get married. This is why I do not believe in marriage for myself, what do I have to prove? I have a beautiful daughter with an amazing man that I will never marry because we do not wish to be criticized by bitter people whose marriages never worked out so therefore they think nobody elses marriages will. I do not blame Beth and her husband for waiting so long to tell about their nuptuals, if I were them I may have waited longer. Of course there are people who marry out of convience, but I do not believe this is the case with Beth and her husband. She also has a health condition and personally felt that maybe this man was the one she was meant to be with until the end of her life. I don't blame her for wanting to be with the man she loves when she dies, if she so happened to die. She knew there was a chance he could have been sent back from wherever it was he hailed from and she would have never been able to hold him again. They have a love story and got married so that's that and no harm done. Whatever their choice is, just be happy for them OR ignore the article. Have a long and healthy life with your man, have many many babies (if that is what you want), and I hope to be reading about your 50th wedding aniversary on the headlines of AOL.
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Sunday 22 November
By suzycreamcheese
How come you're so worried about what other people think?
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Sunday 22 November
By weezieb
You introduced your selves to strangers as boyfriend and girlfriend? What about immigration??? Sorry, I am just not buying this.
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Sunday 22 November
By katrn5495
My husband and I met at work. He asked me out on a date over a year later. Three days after our first date, he asked me to marry him. Because of family conflicts, we ran away to Reno and secretly got married three months later. We told no one, not even the people we worked with that we were dating let alone married.
Three months later, I found out I was pregnant. We were unwilling to share our marriage news, so we got married again 5 months after the first wedding.
My daughter was born 11 days before our 1st anniversary. (The secret one). To this day, almost 16 years later, our first marriage is ours alone. We are very happy but no one but our daughter knows that we got married way before she was conceived. We have 2 marriage certificates. One in our legal documents and one in our daughters baby book.
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Sunday 22 November
By phiz
I don't understand the saying "You can't have your cake and eat it too". I have yet to eat a cake that I didn't have.
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Monday 23 November
By Edie
While this is all very romantic, no one looks at this from the family's point of view. What about Beth's parents who might have liked to see their daughter get married? Or her siblings who might have liked to be there as well? This exact thing just happened in my family. My daughter, who is 22, called me to say that she had gotten married 2 days earlier to a man we had never met. They had been dating for 4 1/2 months. I was devastated. She is our only daughter. We will never see her get married. Her father will never walk her down the aisle. I am hurt and angry at her and this man that we have never met. Imagine how that feels: I dislike our son-in-law and we have never met him. I don't believe she gave us a moment's thought in her plans for her life. And that is very painful for us.
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Monday 22 February
By beth
It feels terrible for me to read such nasty comments here because I'm in a similar situation, and it's not a selfish decision or hasty or anything. Marriage is only between two people and it's not selfish to want to keep it secre. If you know that you would be judged for doing what you know in your heart is right, it's perfectly logical to want to avoidit all together. And the wedding ceremony isn't to get gifts, it's a celebration of your love together. People really need to learn to stay out of other people's business and we wouldn't have to keep something so big like this a secret.
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