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Kathi Foy's avatar

Hi Siham, I officiated at hundreds of weddings in the 1980s as a liberal member of the clergy. My couples came to me because they were interfaith, interracial, atheists, agnostics, nones queers for a “union” and basically didn’t have a religious home.

We crafted a ceremony together that reflected their worldviews. Our first meeting was a planning and ‘getting to know’ appointment. I’d ask them to tell me their love story, how they met etc. “We met at the zoo, at a coffee shop or another public setting.”

When they’d begin to wind up their story, and we’d made a connection, I’d ask them how they really met. Inevitably, they’d share a look and confess it had been the personal ads. This was before online apps. Sometimes, one of them would pull out a wallet and show me the actual ad that brought them together.

Then I’d normalize their meeting by telling them how many of my couples had two stories, one they told their families and outer circles and another they kept to themselves and those in their inner circles. My hope was to take the sting of shame out of meeting by way of match making ads.

I don’t know if this altered how they told their story in the future, and of course I never outed them, but it did make for a more intimate ceremony.

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Ann Goltz's avatar

My husband and I met on a dating site (before apps, after personal ads) and have been married for over 17 years. Everyone, including our kids, knows how we really met. Everyone, including our kids, responded with some variation of "of course you did" because they KNOW us.

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