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Site last updated:
1 January 2009

 

My Wedding & Honeymoon

About the Photos:

  • We are in the process of picking out official wedding photos for the professional photo album.  If you want to see this album, you'll have to see it in person after we get it.
  • Here are some snapshots Nancy took.  (Nancy is my mother-in-law.)
  • I have some prints of some snapshots my mom took.  They're not scanned yet, hold your horses.  Scanning is super-boring.
  • I have photos from the honeymoon from my camera.  There are only about a billion of them, excuse me for not posting them just yet. 

Stories:

 

 

 

 

 

Setting out for Portugal

Aquinas and I bought plane tickets to Lisbon on different airlines.  We tend to try to stretch our vacation money.  We used some United miles to pay for his ticket, and then bought the cheapest ticket we could find for me, which was through Iberia.  Maybe you see where this story is going.  Already.

We drive off to JFK, put the car in long-term parking, and head to Aquinas's terminal, since his plane leaves first.  He's flying through Frankfurt.  Go figure.  So, we check him in and then sit down and have a nice relaxing snack in bright shiny terminal 1.  After a while, Aquinas decides it's time to go through the security line and head towards the gate.  I blithely tell him goodbye and go to terminal 8/9 (which is under construction).

I wander up to dim crowded terminal 8 (past the construction), and look for Iberia's counters to check in for my 6pm flight.  I follow a horde of people towards the orange and red sign.  Some Iberia lady says, The 6pm flight is cancelled.  That's all she says.  Then I wait in line with a bunch of people speaking Spanish and Portuguese.  (My flight goes through Madrid.  Ahem.  Was to go through Madrid.)  Nobody in line is quite sure what was meant by "flight cancelled".  I'm hoping there's another flight - no big deal, right?  But some passenger wanders up to the front of the line and back, and she says that the airline is sending everyone to a hotel in New York City for the night. 

Because yeah, that's where I want to be, in New York City, while Aquinas is waiting for me in Lisbon, so we can drive to our hotel 2 hours outside of Lisbon and check in.  On the first night of our honeymoon.  Gah!

But maybe there is another flight, right?  Please?

So I stand in line, resisting the urge to try to sprint back to the other terminal and somehow get Aquinas off the plane, so we can both be miserable in New York City, on account of having forfeited his ticket.  I get more and more worried.  I look at my watch, and think, Okay, his plane is taking off in... thirty minutes.  Okay, his plane is taking off in... five minutes.  Okay, his plane is taking off... right about... now.  Oh bother!

***

Someone says, "Anyone going to Madrid and then to Rome?  Okay, you folks come over here, we'll put you on this other plane we've got going to Rome."  But too bad, I'm going to Lisbon.  Via a hotel in New York City, apparently. 

Finally, I'm about to cry, I'm at the front of the line, I still don't quite know what's going on, but I know it can't be good.  I drag my carry-on bag up to the counter, holding my blasted Iberia ticket and my ID.  I say, quietly and desperately, "Please tell me you're going to put me on a plane today."  She says, "No, we'll send you to a hotel for tonight and put you on the plane tomorrow." 

That did it.  I'd had enough with the almost crying.  I well and truly cried. 

If I'd been someone else, I'd have been hopping mad, but I just couldn't feel mad.  All I could think was: I'm going to be an entire 24 hours late for my own honeymoon. 

"Why?"  She told me that the plane was supposed to be coming from Madrid, but that it had never left.  My plane was stuck in Madrid. 

"Is there another flight you could put me on?  Another airline?"  This is an airport, after all.  Someone has to be going to Lisbon, or Madrid, or heck even Frankfurt.  Then she said, "Are you traveling alone?" 

Sob! Well, yes, that's the whole problem, isn't it.  She didn't know.

Then she asked me, "Where are you going?"  And I said, "On my honeymoon, for God's sake!"

***

Thirty minutes later, she had authorized and printed out an entire new itinerary for me: now I was flying on American, changing planes in London and flying British Airways to Lisbon.  I would still get to Lisbon ahead of Aquinas. 

I gave her five dollars, which she tried to give back.  I made her keep it: I didn't know what else to do to thank her.

I went to the terminal 9 half of terminal 8/9, and found the gate.  Then I realized I should call Mom and tell her my flight information had changed, in case Aquinas noticed that my flight had been cancelled.  I didn't want him to worry -- like I'd been doing for two hours.

So I bought a phone card from the newsstand - big mistake.  Horribly expensive.  But I'd left my phone card at home, because who needs a domestic phone card in Portugal?  Since then I've realized how utterly stupid I was, so to make up for it I got a 1800 number and rechargeable PIN tattooed on my arm so that this never will happen again.  Just kidding.

***

Happy to be on a plane!

***

Lest you thought the transportation snafus were over and done, well, they weren't.  Time for round two: Heathrow.

My plane across the pond was fine.  Nice, actually: I sat next to a friendly Indian guy and saw a half-decent movie on my own personal screen.  Reaching the connecting flight was the traumatic bit.

The friendly Indian guy told me that there's this fast train from Heathrow to London, so that I could actually step out and see England for a while, if I had time between flights.  I hadn't computed exactly when my American flight would land, versus when my British Airways flight would take off, but I figured I didn't have enough time to leave the airport and come back.  I like to be where I'm supposed to be well ahead of time, so I probably wouldn't have left even if it had been possible.  But it was a nice idea, I thought.

The idea turned out to be completely laughable.  Layover, hah!

I landed with something like half an hour to get on the other plane.  Me being in terminal 1 and the other plane being in terminal 3, or something like that, this was not as easy as one would have hoped.  It was almost like a reality TV triathlon or something:

First! You must follow the signs for "connecting flights," being careful not to be trampled, elbowed, or even slowed down by the teeming hordes of your fellow passengers, who have also just gotten off  the same bloody huge plane!  This task is made more difficult by the fact that you've only just woken up, it's the middle of the night according to your internal clock, and assuming you've reset your watch properly, it's actually 7am where you are standing!

Next!  You must get on the bus, that's right, the bus to the next terminal!  No efficient little trains here, no way to perambulate to the next terminal, no, there's nothing you can do but wait in line for the bus!  And to get to it, you have to go down stairs that don't even move!  Can you beat the clock?  Look!  Your plane is beginning to board now!

Finally!  You arrive in the terminal where you plane might or might not await you!  But your troubles are not over yet, no they're not!  There's another line!  It's the security checkpoint!  Once you get past, you'll have to sprint toward your gate, which is, naturally, at the extreme end of the bloody terminal!  It's the very last one!  Don't look now, it's time for takeoff! 

But what's this?  There's nobody boarding!  Has the plane left?  Tell me it's not true!

It's not true.  "The plane hasn't started boarding yet, ma'm.  It was late arriving, and it's still being cleaned, so if you could just stand right over there for about fifteen minutes, you can get on as soon as we're ready."

Is this considered a victory or a defeat?  Our contestant had hoped to be just in time, but in fact she was not!  She had plenty of time!  Judges, what say you?

***

Round three.  Lisbon, Portugal.  Thrifty auto rental.

Aquinas and I do not know how to drive a car with a manual transmission.  There are very few automatic transmission cars for rent in Portugal, and they are expensive.  I reserved a small one for us at Thrifty at their Lisbon airport location.

When I met up with Aquinas at the Lisbon airport (after I had explained my traumatic experience and he had complained about his long layover in Frankfurt), we went looking for the rental car desks.  We found them.  But we didn't find Thrifty.  We kept looking.  More rental car desks, but still no Thrifty.

We went back into the terminal and asked at the customer service desk.  The nice guy said, you have to call them, and then they come pick you up.  Okay.  So he gave us the number and sold us a phone card.  Lucy Day, naturally, gets saddled with the actual pay phone phone call.  The person on the other end did speak English, but the phone or the connection was awful and I almost couldn't hear her.  I managed to indicate that we were at the airport waiting, and had a reservation. 

Someone came in a blue shuttle and took us to the Thrifty office, somewhere in Lisbon. 

We filled out some papers, they checked their parking deck.  They didn't have our car. 

They offered us a manual transmission car.  Um, no good.  Stupid Americans!

They said that Thrifty only had four automatic cars in the whole country, and that ours was late getting returned to them.  They said they would take us to our hotel and bring us the car in a couple of hours.  We said, we're not staying in Lisbon.  They said, okay... Where are you staying?  We said, in Obidos.  They said, Great!  That's where the car is! 

So they drove us to the car.  

It was not the small car I had reserved, but they said they would charge us the same price.  Cool, we thought, we're getting a better deal.  So we all drove off happy.

Later on, we realized that bigger is not better.  The medieval streets of Obidos were not made for the Ford Focus SE Wagon.  Of course, that would have required quite a bit of insight, but what I mean to say is that the streets were pretty narrow. 

And driving a bigger car means... burning more gas.  In the US, this is not a major concern, unless you drive an absolute hulk.  Gas is just gas.  In Europe, gas is like gold.  Smelly, liquid, flammable gold.  I think the price there was about the same as the price at home - but their price was per liter, not per gallon.  (There are 3.78 liters in a gallon, so their gallon price was like four times ours!)  And the Euro at the time was worth about 1.25 dollars, which only made it worse.

So, Thrifty turns out not to be so thrifty after all!

 

 

 

The Exchange of Rings

Nobody smashed the cake or stepped on my dress. Well, maybe I stepped on my dress a little.  The worst thing that happened, and it was actually pretty funny, had to do with the exchange of the rings. We wrote everything we wanted the judge to say, and emailed him the text. The rings part looked like this:

Repeat after me: I give you this ring
[Aquinas] I give you this ring
as a symbol of our love and commitment.
[Aquinas] as a symbol of our love and commitment.

Repeat after me: I give you this ring
[Lucy Day] I give you this ring
as a symbol of our love and commitment.
[Lucy Day] as a symbol of our love and commitment.

Somehow the judge misunderstood this to mean we wanted to say each part twice, because I had it on the page twice, whereas I only meant for us to say alternating lines. So the exchange of rings was very... *emphatic*.

 

 

 

The Happy Saga of the Dress

It's a long story, actually, what my mom and I went through to find one I liked.

We went to one store that was closed. The next store we went to was really fancy, and there was a "consultant" who helped me with like everything, and the dresses were all fancy expensive designer dresses. But the dresses were mostly all about the same style: strapless or spaghetti strapped bodices with a skirt and some decoration. There weren't any that looked like dresses to me. Like, with an actual bodice, or heaven forbid, sleeves.

The only ones with sleeves were dumb looking ones for fat people, or for weddings that happen in cathedrals where you can't show any skin on your upper body at all. Well, I didn't try any of those on, but they told me "oh, sure, we can add a sleeve onto any of these dresses" and they showed me the kind of sleeve they could add and it looked annoying.

Anyway.

There was one dress I kinda liked, I think I only tried on three there. But get this, the one I picked was a sort of a demo. It hasn't been accepted into the product line. It is being tried out at this one store only.

So, I picked like the weirdest one in the whole store, I guess.

That one was ok, but it was going to be like $800, and it was going to take forever to order it, and there may have had to be alterations on top of that. It had some things I liked, but not all the aspects I was looking for. I didn't want a train, I did want sleeves, I wanted a V-neckline, and a V-waistline.

(The dress we bought has all those things. And lots of pretty decoration. And, it was not so expensive.)

The store we went to after the fancy one was a small place with only one staff person there, and the dresses were really overdone cheap things. I wouldn't have wanted to wear any of them. I tried a couple of things on, and found one with sleeves (sleeves that didn't stay up on my shoulders) but decided my dress had to have sleeves or I wouldn't be happy. Then we went home for the day.

The next day, we went to a store in my neighborhood that had been closed before. They had a large back room with a large selection. Their dresses weren't all the same. They had unique sorts of things, as well as the prevailing style which I had already seen enough of.  I was able to pick several things that were my size (and a couple which were a little big but could be adjusted).

The one we bought was actually the first one I tried on from that set. But there were several that were interesting, and might have worked, and had sleeves and stuff. There was even an Elvin, Lord of the Rings style dress, long flowing white thing. I didn't try that one on, though.

It was nice too, because the 8's fit me pretty well. My dress needs to be taken up a little in the shoulders, but I'm told that won't be a problem. Actually, we are replacing the skirt, too. The skirt it has on it is made out of netting, which is okay, but Mom and I think it would look better if it were cloth, so we're making one (or having one made or something).

Oh, and it has cool covered buttons on the back. That was another thing I wanted my dress to have. They're just decoration, it has a zipper underneath the buttons. Covered buttons are little knob-looking things that are covered with the cloth that the dress is made out of. The hole is on a shank underneath.

So that's the saga of the dress. I more or less plagiarized it from an earlier IM conversation I had, so the sentences might be a little choppy.
 

 

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Site last updated: 1 January 2009