logo
L.A. Affairs: I grew up on Disney princesses and fairy tales. Was I ready for my own happily ever after?

L.A. Affairs: I grew up on Disney princesses and fairy tales. Was I ready for my own happily ever after?

Yahoo6 days ago

Marriage has been ingrained in me since I could form memories. That my purpose in life is to get married and have babies. I know this sounds old-fashioned and maybe that has something to do with the fact that I was born a girl in the Soviet Union to a Jewish family, but I've spent my life toggling between the tradition of marriage and the liberal Los Angeles ideologies I internalized. I've often found myself wondering if it is even possible to be a good writer, an artist and be married.
At 11 years old, I was a flower girl at my cousin's wedding in Calabasas. I remember walking down the aisle with a tiny basket of rose petals, a pair of adult-sized breasts and a petrified look on my face, unable to smile even though I was a generally happy kid. The horse and carriage, the vintage bridal kimono, the perky orchids, the flash, flash, flash of cameras, the expectations on everyone's faces, the stressful night's sleep no amount of Valerian root could remedy — I wasn't sure if all this was for me.
But I loved love. I had grown up on an unhealthy dose of Disney princesses and fairy tales and the idea that one day my prince will come. I memorized the entirety of the film "The Notebook." I would often fantasize about lying on my deathbed with the love of my life, hand in hand, like Noah and Allie.
Read more: L.A. Affairs: Oh, how my body wanted my pickleball partner! Then he opened his big mouth
In my teens, I flirted for hours with strangers on AIM. I hooked up with boys in the landscaping at the Century City mall after sharing a bowl of orange chicken at Panda Express. I had boyfriends and friends with benefits and cutouts of my idols: Victoria's Secret models like Adriana Lima taped to the walls of my childhood bedroom. I was fully liberated by the over-sexualized, MTV-obsessed early aughts.
Then I lost my virginity to my high school sweetheart who soon became my boyfriend of seven long years.
In a conversation I don't remember having, my cousin asks me when I think I will be married. I reply matter-of-factly: "By 25." She then scoffs and laughs in my face. "Yeah, right.'
By the time I reached my mid-20s, I had broken up with my high school sweetheart whom I had little in common with other than the fact that we were supposed to get married. I was living alone in a studio apartment in Palms, sleeping in the same room as my refrigerator. I had stacks of books near my bed, a county government temp job in a downtown L.A. skyscraper and a stream of notifications from a dating app lighting up my apartment at odd hours of the night.
Read more: L.A. Affairs: Men who don't understand L.A. won't understand me. What's a city girl to do?
Marriage was beginning to seem impractical, uncool. I was living a life my immigrant parents deemed 'acceptable,' but what I really wanted was to be a writer, although I was too scared to even utter the fact that I was an artist back then. I honed my craft and spent my nights in adult-education writing classes.
Meanwhile, I dated plenty. A musician. A botanist. An artist. An art writer. I fawned over a co-worker, a photographer a decade older than me. Eventually I met someone my own age: a graphic designer from work who I ended up dating for 4 ½ years.
A year into my relationship with the graphic designer, marriage began to follow us around like a hungry dog. I was a bridesmaid in two different weddings, one week apart. I wore a grass-green, floor-length dress. I wore a lace, Champagne-colored floor-length dress. I got my face airbrushed. My lips lined. My eyes powdered. My cheeks contoured. My hair sprayed. I looked like a Russian mail-order bride. I was a reverse mail-order bride, born in Belarus, now an American. Actually, no one had ordered me. I had never been so unlike myself. My graphic designer boyfriend noticed. His knees buckled as he watched me dance the hora and attempt to catch the bouquet again and again.
What's funny is that my own parents didn't get married until their mid-30s. My dad was divorced, and my mom was an old maid by Belarusian standards. But I was raised on their love story: the couple of life-altering years in which they got married after three months of dating, had me and moved to the U.S.
Read more: L.A. Affairs: Nothing scared me more than intimacy — except L.A. freeways. But I had to face them both
The graphic designer and I broke up in 2020. I was a mess, but it was clearer than ever what I needed to do: stop trying to control everything and just let life happen. A few months later, a kind, gentle, handsome, funny, optimistic, wildly creative man replied to one of my prompts on Hinge, agreeing that mayonnaise was indeed disgusting.
Tyler and I fell in love and dated for four years. Together we lived through family tragedies, the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic, my grad school, his grad school, supporting each other's creative practices, quitting jobs, finding jobs, moving in together, adopting our sweet mutt Agnes. In the summer of 2024, he proposed at Crater Lake, surrounded by a swarm of dragonflies.
At first, I felt weird talking to people about the engagement. Some of our friends were newly married, some were single by choice (or not), but most were in long-term monogamous relationships with no plans for marriage. I had never been happier, but I still housed the fear that getting married was too status quo, out of fashion, an uncool thing to do. My favorite writers certainly thought so with the most popular books that year being about divorce and self-actualization: "All Fours" by Miranda July, "Splinters" by Leslie Jamison and "Liars" by Sarah Manguso.
The Paris Review once asked writer Helen Garner whether being a writer and marriage are generally compatible. She replied: 'They probably are, but it probably takes a lot of generosity and flexibility. If you're burdened by a classic idea of the artist as a figure to whom everything is owed and whose prerogatives are enormous and can never be challenged, forget it."
In one of her more judgmental essays titled "Marrying Absurd,' Joan Didion chastises those who choose to get married in Las Vegas. She insists that they are doing it not out of convenience, but because of the fact that they don't know 'how to make the arrangements, how to do it 'right.''
How do you do it right, Joan?
Read more: Joan Didion made her mark on L.A. Here are 10 places she knew and loved
Tyler and I got married in January (nine years after the age I insisted to my cousin I would get married) in Las Vegas, by an Elvis impersonator singing 'Can't Help Falling in Love' at the famous Little White Chapel with three dozen of our closest friends and relatives in attendance, two weeks after L.A.'s devastating wildfires, and the week of Trump's inauguration.
While I had my hair and makeup done in front of the hotel window overlooking the faux Eiffel Tower, with the Bellagio fountain going off every 30 minutes, I was weepy. But not because of the usual suspects: cold feet or the last-minute cancellations or the eczema reappearing after years of dormancy on my arms or the lack of sleep, although I did forget to pack some Valerian root.
At some point, I had convinced myself that getting married was uncool, not what an artist does, but here I was doing it. In fact, I was marrying the man who supported my creative pursuits the most. I had changed my mind about marriage yet again. It's a symbol of hope in a hopeless world, a sacred pact between two people, and it can be whatever the hell you want it to be.
And yes, it might not work out, but also, it might.
Maybe the question isn't: Does marriage make you less of an artist? Maybe the question is: Who gets to be an artist anyway?
The author is a freelance writer from Los Angeles. She's on Instagram: @druzova_.
L.A. Affairs chronicles the search for romantic love in all its glorious expressions in the L.A. area, and we want to hear your true story. We pay $400 for a published essay. Email LAAffairs@latimes.com. You can find submission guidelines here. You can find past columns here.
Sign up for The Wild newsletter to get weekly insider tips on the best of our beaches, trails, parks, deserts, forests and mountains.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Volksbund opens exhibition in Marigny and inaugurates memorial with the Würth Foundation
Volksbund opens exhibition in Marigny and inaugurates memorial with the Würth Foundation

Associated Press

time15 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Volksbund opens exhibition in Marigny and inaugurates memorial with the Würth Foundation

Today the German War Graves Commission will expand the Marigny war cemetery into a memorial and learning center – one day before the 81st anniversary of D-Day, which marks the beginning of the liberation of Europe by the Western Allies. A permanent multimedia exhibition provides information about the biographies of the soldiers buried there and shows the history of the Western Allies' landing ('Operation Overlord'). This exhibition combines modern media stations with historical architecture. With the support of the non-profit Würth Foundation, a memorial approximately 3.5 meters tall was designed and constructed, which will be inaugurated today. It honors the US soldiers who fought alongside their allies for the liberation of Europe. A compass rose points to the four cardinal directions from which the Allied forces pushed back the Nazi dictatorship. For Carmen Würth, who founded the Würth Foundation in 1987 together with her husband Prof. Dr. h. c. mult. Reinhold Würth, the memorial is a tribute to those who liberated Europe and, at the same time, a call to everyone to preserve humanity and peace. In front of the memorial, a trilingual plaque commemorates First Lieutenant Nathan B. Baskind and all other US soldiers. The American soldier, who was Jewish, was buried in a German comrades' grave in Marigny in 1944. In 2023, he was exhumed, identified, and solemnly reburied the following year at the American military cemetery in Colleville under a Jewish gravestone. This was carried out by the Volksbund in cooperation with 'Operation Benjamin' from New York. The Volksbund was founded in 1919 to search for the dead of World War I and inform their relatives. It maintains more than 2.8 million war graves worldwide. Even today, the humanitarian organization continues to clarify the fates of war dead. For more than 70 years, it has been committed to a more peaceful future through international youth work and numerous educational projects. The private association finances its work primarily by donations.

‘Sixth Sense' Star Haley Joel Osment Sentenced After April Arrest
‘Sixth Sense' Star Haley Joel Osment Sentenced After April Arrest

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

‘Sixth Sense' Star Haley Joel Osment Sentenced After April Arrest

A California judge has made a ruling after Oscar-nominated actor Haley Joel Osment was arrested for suspected public intoxication, People reported. Sixth Sense star Osment was arrested on April 8 in Mammoth Lakes, CA, on charges of alleged public intoxication and possession of a controlled substance. He was arraigned in a local court on June 2. During his arraignment, Osment requested and was granted a one-year diversion which requires him to attend three AA meetings each week for the next six months. Osment must also meet with his therapist at least twice weekly during the next six months and obey all to the outlet, the Mono County district attorney's office objected to Osment's diversion request because of the actor's previous DUI conviction. They also cited Osment's use of racial slurs towards arresting officers as reason the diversion should not have been granted. During his arrest, Osment accused one officer of being 'a f---ing Nazi' and use an antisemitic slur against another. If Osment completes the diversion program, the court will dismiss all charges related to the most recent incident. However, criminal proceedings will be reinstated if Osment does not complete the program. Osment will next appear in court on Jan. 5, 2026, when the judge will review his compliance with the issued an apology back in April for the 'disgraceful language' he used during his arrest, explaining that 'the past few months of loss and displacement' after losing his home in January's Eaton fire 'have broken me down to a very low emotional place.' "I'm absolutely horrified by my behavior. Had I known I used this disgraceful language in the throes of a blackout, I would have spoken up sooner," Osment said in his statement. "But that's no excuse for using this disgusting word. From the bottom of my heart, I apologize to absolutely everyone that this hurts. What came out of my mouth was nonsensical garbage—I've let the Jewish community down and it devastates me. I don't ask for anyone's forgiveness, but I promise to atone for my terrible mistake."Though Osment is best known for his adolescent roles in The Sixth Sense and Pay It Forward, he's maintained a busy career in subsequent years with over 130 acting credits. Most recently, he appeared opposite Channing Tatum in Zoë Kravitz's 2024 thriller Blink Twice.'Sixth Sense' Star Haley Joel Osment Sentenced After April Arrest first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 3, 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store