Sending a message through matrimony
Alex Coolman
COSTA MESA -- Douglas Bader and Elizabeth Edwards aren’t sure which is
going to be more difficult: saving the Earth or getting married.
They’re trying to do both, but their top priority right now is
marriage. Today, the activists -- they are the people behind AnyBody’s
Earth Press and the Just One More HUG Foundation in Costa Mesa -- will
tie the knot at a ceremony in Silverado Canyon in the Cleveland National
Forest.
Along the way, they said, they’re trying to turn their wedding into a
sort of textbook for other couples who hope to make sure their marriage
doesn’t become another casualty in a culture of divorce.
“Is it a valid thing to attempt, given that the majority of couples
can’t even do it?” Bader asked on a recent afternoon.
He was sitting along with Edwards in the small 17th Street office of
Marilyn Rothman, a woman who calls herself a “life coach.”
Rothman is one of several counselors that Bader and Edwards have been
seeing since they decided to get married -- part of a grand-scale effort
to become as informed as possible about the potential pitfalls of
marriage.
In a satchel that Bader had brought along to the session with Rothman
was a weighty pile of books with titles such as “How to Stay Lovers for
Life,” “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Families,” “After the Honeymoon”
and “Beyond the Marriage Fantasy.”
All the research is an effort, the couple said, to determine the deep
issues in marriage -- what it means as a societal custom, why it can be
fulfilling, and why it can be difficult to sustain. The idea is that
their study of the subject can be a foundation for other healthy
marriages.
But if there was anything the recent counseling session proved
clearly, it was that the intellectual approach to marriage only goes so
far.
Fidgeting on a couch, their hands linked, the couple sounded less like
a pair of family theorists than two nervous people attempting to grapple
with some of their deepest anxieties about commitment, couplehood and
family.
Edwards, who is 20, admitted her worries about her father’s attitude
toward her marrying a man twice her age. She said she doesn’t think her
family understands the spiritual and emotional growth she has
experienced, that they don’t fundamentally respect her decision.
Rothman, sitting in a leather chair, suggested that she think about
the issue in a different way. Perhaps her father’s attitudes had to do
with his own fears about loss, his own vulnerability as an aging man.
“I know that intellectually,” Edwards said. “But emotionally it’s very
hard not to have the approval of your father.”
These core concerns -- the fears and weaknesses that motivate every
person -- are even at play in Bader’s environmental work, he said.
“When you analyze what my motivation is, it’s to get to the people who
are most emotionally important to me, but spiritually completely foreign
to me.”
The hope, he said, is that by articulating what usually goes unsaid,
the couple can enter the marriage with some degree of honesty.
Whether that will make for happiness is, of course, the book that
Bader and Edwards will have to write for themselves.
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