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With this Ring, I Felt Chosen

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With this Ring, I Felt Chosen

Commentary by Tracy Simmons | FāVS News

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On July 29, I got married in a Japanese garden outside of Chicago.

Eleven guests came. 

None of them were my family.

I’ve written before about my parents and the fractured relationship I have with nearly all my blood relatives. 

My dad left before I was 2 years old. My mom raised me in a cult, where she later met her current husband. About a decade ago, they cut ties with me for challenging their beliefs.

My grandma was the one who kept all my aunts, uncles and cousins connected — albeit loosely. When she passed in 2017, the only thread keeping us together unraveled.

I’ve processed all this loss through therapy, writing, exercise and spiritual practice.

I haven’t felt sad or angry.

That is, until the days leading up to my wedding.

At first I found myself embarrassed. My partner’s family was going all in to help us plan the big day. They picked up our bouquets, had our dress and suit pressed (we shipped our clothes to Illinois), made arrangements for a wedding party dinner after the ceremony and even picked up sparklers for our send off. More importantly, they gave us their support.

I wasn’t sure if my mom even knew I was getting married. Had anyone told her? I’m sure she’d heard through the grapevine. And my aunts, who I was so close to growing up, could only muster a thumbs on social media.

I was ashamed of what I was bringing to the table. No loving in-laws for my wife; just me.

And that turned into anger.

For the first time in a long time I was mad at my mom for choosing the cult, and my stepdad, over me. I was angry she was missing my wedding, choosing not to meet my bride, not to see our house, not to know where I work, not to know the name of my dog, not to know me, anymore.

That, naturally, led to sadness, grief.

Tears stung my eyes when I slowed down enough to let myself feel the abandonment from my family. One never forgets the pain of being discarded. My dad’s rejection polluted my entire childhood and now the smog was back, choking me, reminding me that I was left once again. 

This roller coaster of emotions came and went as the days grew closer to our ceremony.

Then, on July 28, the day before the wedding, my two wedding guests arrived in town. One was a high school friend, someone I’ve known for 23 years. The other, a pastor who I became dear friends with when I moved to the Spokane area. She officiated our wedding.

Together we all had dinner: my then fiance and I, my two friends and my partner’s parents. I looked around the table and was filled with gratitude.

There was no hostility here. No intolerance. No tension. No anger. No shame. No sadness. 

Only acceptance.

This was the family I had found my way to, and the family that had stepped in when everyone else stepped out.

In that moment I remembered just how big and wonderful my chosen family is. Not everyone could be in Chicago for the wedding, but so much love and happiness had been expressed by people who love and support us, it filled me.

It’s too easy to let the negative thoughts take over at times. I’ll always miss my family. They shaped me. They loved me for a time, and we learned important things from each other.

But when my wife slipped a ring around my finger and in front of our 11 guests made a commitment to me, I felt chosen for the first time.

I felt closure.

Tracy Simmons
Tracy Simmons
Tracy Simmons is an award-winning journalist specializing in religion reporting and digital entrepreneurship. In her approximate 20 years on the religion beat, Simmons has tucked a notepad in her pocket and found some of her favorite stories aboard cargo ships in New Jersey, on a police chase in Albuquerque, in dusty Texas church bell towers, on the streets of New York and in tent cities in Haiti. Simmons has worked as a multimedia journalist for newspapers across New Mexico, Texas, Connecticut and Washington. She is the executive director of SpokaneFāVS.com, a digital journalism start-up covering religion news and commentary in Spokane, Washington. She also writes for The Spokesman-Review and national publications. She is a Scholarly Assistant Professor of Journalism at Washington State University.

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16 COMMENTS

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Lace
Lace
1 year ago

A power post, Tracy. You capture so beautifully the human experience of the kind of love that turns heartache into indescribable joy.

Tracy Simmons
Admin
1 year ago
Reply to  Lace

Thank you so much Lace!

Walter A Hesford
Walter A Hesford
1 year ago

Congratulatons and Love, Tracy and Traci! Great photo.

Tracy Simmons
Admin
1 year ago

Thank you Walter!

Liv Larson Andrews
Liv Larson Andrews
1 year ago

Thank you for these moving words, Tracy. Every blessing to you both!

Tracy Simmons
Admin
1 year ago

Thanks so much Liv, and congrats to you on your new position! We’ll have a reporter at your final service at Salem 🙂

Christy Thomas
Christy Thomas
1 year ago

Congratulations! Wishing you and your wife all the happiness in the world! So glad you have wonderful chosen family. ❤️

Tracy Simmons
Admin
1 year ago
Reply to  Christy Thomas

Thank you!

Debra Selzer
Debra Selzer
1 year ago

You captured those emotions so well in words- not a simple thing with such complex feelings. I always feel that some one(s) reading your work & feeling like you’ve put their thoughts on the page. Thank you once again for an excellent read.

Tracy Simmons
Admin
1 year ago
Reply to  Debra Selzer

That’s an amazing compliment and means so much to me, thank you friend

Doug Nadvornick
Doug Nadvornick
1 year ago

Congrats, Tracy! I hope your life going forward with your wife brings you the happiness you deserve.

Tracy Simmons
Admin
1 year ago

Thank you Doug!

Adela Sussman
Adela Sussman
1 year ago

Congratulations to you, Tracy! Such a moving and well written commentary! Too often, we receive our love and acceptance from those who are not members of our family! My heart went out to you! May you and Traci have a long and wonderful life together – that’s the best thing in life!!

Tracy Simmons
Admin
1 year ago
Reply to  Adela Sussman

Thank you so much, and you’re right, it is the best thing in life!

Lynn Kaylor
Lynn Kaylor
1 year ago

Congratulations to you both! May you have many years to come that are full of love and joy and laughter.

You’re not to be blamed for what you were “bringing to the table.” When I married, neither of us had family who came to the wedding. Our local friends didn’t show up either. One would even unfriend me online. Our witnesses entirely consisted of state officials. Having 11 of your chosen family arrive is a blessing indeed.

Tracy Simmons
Admin
1 year ago
Reply to  Lynn Kaylor

It is a blessing, thanks Lynn 🙂

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