I enter my condo—no wait for the elevator. And that’s when I
get my first peek. I get excited. I want to read every lead story. I go through
my French press coffee before I’m even finished with the first section. Each
story satisfies even as I curse The Times
for having every article continue on another page. Back and forth, back and
forth I go.
I’m an antsy reader so I don’t get to the lighter sections
until the afternoon. In “SundayStyles”, I glance at Bill Cunningham’s “On the
Street” fashion photos, I read the “Modern Love” essay and then I come to
“Vows”. This is where the hoity-toity couples post their wedding announcements,
usually with a photo of the smiling couple. (I don’t get why some don’t submit
a picture. No doubt, it’s costly but you chose to be in The New York Times. Splurge for the pic and nix the chocolate
fountain at the reception. Chocolate is overrated. Yeah, I said it.)
I’ve never been the guy to steal my sister’s bridal
magazines. With the exception of wanting them to play The Carpenters’ “(They Long to Be) Close to You” for my spouse at my wedding, I haven’t ever thought
much about weddings. I grew up thinking that weddings were for Other People. My
New York Times addiction started
about two years ago and I remember being fascinated by the photos of smiling
male couples in the “Vows” section. Bold. Empowering. While I’d had the right
to marry in Canada for years, marriage equality was still in contention in the
U.S., my adopted country where I lived sixteen years, many in fear in Texas
before coming out in Los Angeles. I read the blurbs about the couples and,
invariably, my excitement and admiration turned to jealousy. He works for a prominent law firm in
Manhattan and graduated from Yale before getting his law degree at Stanford.
The Other He works as a translator at
the UN, after earning a degree at the University of Oslo and a master’s in
public policy at Cambridge. Yes, guys like this existed. Now they were taken.
And here I was considering a possible hookup with an unemployed guy from
Calgary. Damn.
This week’s “Vows” section isn’t so crushing. One lesbian
couple—they could be sisters—and one gay couple. The men live in Indianapolis.
Normal universities. I’m okay. Wedding envy is in check. I can celebrate their marriage.
And the last line in their blurb even offers hope: “The
couple met on a dating website in August 2012.”
Okay, I’m logging in to browse my matches again. Maybe
there’s a reason for all these coffee dates after all…