Friday, February 8, 2019

A woman is marrying her dog on Valentine’s Day — but wait, there’s more to it


     We get two daily newspapers delivered at home, the Sun-Times and the New York Times. I always read my own paper first — loyalty — and then turn my attention the Grey Lady.
     On Sundays, I start with the news section, then on to what I still consider “The Week in Review,” then the book section, magazine and business, working my way down through the various substrata of descending significance until I end up at the lowest sub-chamber, Style, with its dubious celebrations of flyspeck fads, grotesque genuflection to tasteless wealth, and enormous full-color Ralph Lauren ads for glitzy sequined, epauletted get-ups that would make Michael Jackson cringe with embarrassment.
     At the back of Style, the marriage announcements — “Vows” — which I don’t read so much as scan, occasionally dipping into one to check the job statuses of the happy couples, tsk-tsking over their well-off parents and gold-plated, The-World-is-Mine careers. I glance at all the photos, skipping past the same-sex couples, pausing at the comfortably hetero duos to reassure myself that the brides-to-be are not as pretty as my wife — Ha! doing better than you, pal! — a vindictive little game rigged so I always win.
     The Times also does news stories spotlighting certain couples about to be married, and last Sunday one stood out: Lilly Smartelli, posed with her arms around her groom-to-be: Bernie, a 9-year-old mixed breed cocker spaniel poodle.
     She is marrying her dog, this Valentine’s Day.
     Let me pause here, to give you time to form your immediate reactions, which I will go out on a limb and predict are: 1) the world is going to hell; 2) people are crazy; 3) the Times has slid into tabloid sensationalism.
     Am I correct? Of course I am.


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4 comments:

  1. Blessed are the perpetually aggrieved, for they shall never say, "I'm sorry."

    john

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  2. At first I thought she was just weird. After reading the entire story, I'm glad she has a companion until the end.
    She's hurting no one!

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  3. "Why don’t more people try to understand instead of choosing to be aggrieved?"

    I don't know, but...They're symbols, not people. They represent ignorance, fear, hate; they're not individuals. They don't deserve understanding.

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  4. Her time is short, but her final days will be spent under the same woof with her loving companion animals...and I hope they go to good homes when she passes away.

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