The ceremony took six minutes. The marriage lasted about the same amount of time though we didn't get a divorce for almost a year.
Let me first state that I believe that marriage is a sacred union between one man and one woman.
I have never been given to envy - save for the envy I feel toward those people who have the ability to make a marriage work and endure happily.
I think that if I were in a satisfying marriage, I would probably choose monogamy, but I wouldn't want that to be a requirement.
In all seriousness, I don't get people who need to make a proposal a bigger deal than marriage already is.
The bottom line is, whether you're in it or you're searching for it, I believe marriage is an institution worth pursuing and protecting.
You've read the Torah, right? So you know the Torah defines marriage as being between one man and one woman.
Marriage is like a game of chess except the board is flowing water, the pieces are made of smoke and no move you make will have any effect on the outcome.
There are more than 30 states, who either by statute or constitutional amendment, have defined marriage as being between a man and a woman.
For me it's also - the music is equally as important. I mean I think as somebody who writes music, there just has to sort of be the marriage between both.
Daddy was real gentle with kids. That's why I expected so much out of marriage, figuring that all men should be steady and pleasant.
They say that when a woman wants to end a relationship, she cuts off all of her hair. I've done that twice in my marriage but am still married.
My worldview, my philosophy, my attitudes, my relationships, my parenting, my marriage - everything has been transformed by my relationship with Christ.
I am a big, confident, happy woman who had a loving childhood, a pleasant career, and a wonderful marriage. I feel very lucky.
I do support a constitutional amendment on marriage between a man and a woman, but I would not be going into the states to overturn their state law.
Since 1970, relationships can be more volatile, jobs more ephemeral, geographical mobility more intensified, stability of marriage weaker.
But the key to our marriage is the capacity to give each other a break. And to realize that it's not how our similarities work together; it's how our differences work together.
I'm not that big a fan of marriage as an institution and I don't know why women need to have children to be seen as complete human beings.
I'm a little skeptical about using the Constitution this way, but I also believe marriage is between a man and a woman and that the courts shouldn't legislate this matter.
What I increasingly felt, in marriage and in motherhood, was that to live as a woman and to live as a feminist were two different and possibly irreconcilable things.
You won't believe it, but for the first two years of our marriage I lived off my wife. Like every self-respecting man, I hated it.