Solygamy: These women married themselves, here's why
From left to right, Brittany Rist, Ena Jones, Dorothy "Dottie" Fideli and Danni Adams. | CNN
Audio By Vocalize
Brittany Rist walked
down the aisle in a dress and a white veil to the song, “Girl.”
“Girl, perfectly her, broken and hurt,” crooned artist
SMYL in a falsetto. “Shake off the night and don’t hide your face.”
It was Rist’s wedding. But there was no beaming partner
waiting at the altar.
Wearing a rose-coloured dress, the 34-year-old read her
vows alone in front of a mirror in her backyard. She’d accepted her own
proposal and given herself a ring. Instead
of a spouse, a red velvet cake awaited her, next to a bottle of Champagne.
Rist said “I do” to herself, and committed to loving
herself for better or worse.
“I vow to never settle or abandon myself in a romantic
partnership ever again,” she told her reflection in the mirror. “I vow to honor
my calling and live life as a work of art.”
Rist did not have an officiant or guests at her
self-wedding, and toasted herself at a solo reception.
Months before the event, which she calls a “soul
commitment ceremony,” she had separated from her son’s father after nine years
together. She’d started working on healing her inner self, taken a vow of
celibacy and signed up for therapy.
And that afternoon in November 2021, at her home in Ozark,
Missouri, she punctuated her self-love journey with a statement of
self-appreciation.
“I realized (that) in love and in relationships with other
people, I wasn’t fully showing up and loving myself through that process, which
made it really difficult to receive love from others,” she says. “We pour all
of this time and money and energy into marrying other people, and we don’t ever
pour that back into ourselves.”
As part of her self discovery, she decided to commit
to herself.
“I thought, ‘Why don’t I just buy myself a ring? Why
don’t I just love myself fully during this time, and have a little ceremony?’
It felt empowering to sit in front of the mirror and feel that I love all of me
and my scars and all that makes me feel unlovable.”
The
practice is called sologamy. Its adherents may be on to something, this expert
says
The concept of self-marriage, or sologamy, has been around
for years. In a “Sex and the City” episode that aired in August
2003, Carrie Bradshaw seeks revenge on a frenemy by telling her that she’s
marrying herself and is registered at luxury shoe store Manolo Blahnik.
No data exists on how many people celebrate sologamy
with ceremonies, but the practice has been explored in a handful of recent news
articles.
CNN talked to four women who’ve married themselves.
They describe the act as a symbolic expression of self-love and an affirmation
of a deep, meaningful relationship with one’s self. They also say it has
nothing to do with swearing off future partnerships with a spouse, which they
say is a popular misconception.
About a year after
Rist’s solo ceremony, she tied the knot with her now-husband. She wears her
self-marriage ring on her right hand as a reminder of the commitment she made
to herself.
Critics have slammed the practice as
narcissistic. Sologamy is not legally binding in the US and is not
recognized by the laws of any country. But an expert says people who commit to
loving themselves after working on inner healing are on to something.
“What stands out for me about this trend is that more and
more people are realizing that they need to take responsibility for their own
happiness — that they can have a satisfying, meaningful life without being in a
partnership,” says John
Amodeo, a therapist and author of “Dancing
with Fire: A Mindful Way to Loving Relationships.”
Amodeo describes it as a healthy form of narcissism.
Without self-love, he says, people depend on others to feel worthy and valuable.
“It is actually a lack of self-love that leads to
unhealthy narcissism,” he says. “We are then constantly needing validation from
other to fill our inner emptiness.”
She had a big wedding complete with
bridesmaids
Body image coach Danni Adams had planned to marry herself
several years ago. She wanted a big party, filled with people she loved.
But then the pandemic hit, and she postponed her plans.
Instead of a wedding, she turned to a therapist to focus on improving her
self-esteem.
“I took a couple of years to really invest in myself,
going to therapy, really digging deep into what it means to break generational
curses, process trauma,” says Adams, now 30. “Then when I really felt good
about myself, I told my therapist, ‘I think I want to get married to myself
now.’”
And so
she did, before about 40 guests in December at an outdoor venue in
Sanford, Florida. Adams walked down the aisle to the song, “Self Love,” by
Jayson Lyric, which contains the lines, “I been working on me / I been loving
on me / I had to learn to love myself.”
The wedding cost about
$4,000 and included nine bridesmaids, Adams says. A friend officiated. Like
Rist, she read her vows in front of a full-length mirror.
As Adams walked down the aisle, she thought about what led
her to this moment.
“Everything that has happened to me in my past as a child,
all the things that have harmed me, I was like, this is a restart at life. I
get to own my life, my own joy, my own choices. And that’s what it was about.”
After her self-wedding, Adams treated herself to a
honeymoon in Tulum, Mexico. In addition to a ring, she also gave herself a
necklace and two bracelets with the words, “beautiful girl, you were meant to
change the world and focus on the good.”
Adams says critics have described her choice to marry
herself as a cry for help.
“A lot of people have said that I have some type of mental
health concerns that need to be addressed,” she says, adding she finds it
interesting people “are weaponizing mental health at the time we’re saying
everyone needs access to mental health services.”
Adams says if she gets married in the future, she’ll slip
the wedding band right next to the one she gave herself.
“Everyone always asks, ‘Will I have to divorce myself to
marry a man?’ But the real question is, ‘Why do I need to lose me in order to
be married?’”
She married herself at age 77 – decades
after her divorce
Dorothy Fideli never remarried after her divorce nearly
five decades ago.
But this month, at age 77, she married herself in front of
her three children and two dozen people at her retirement community in Goshen,
Ohio.
Fideli wore a white gown, a short veil and white sneakers
as she pushed her decorated walker down the aisle. Her favorite song, Celine
Dion’s “Because You Loved Me,” played in the background.
“I felt beautiful, like
I had won a lottery or something. I felt like a queen,” she says. “I felt
important to myself … like I was somebody. It’s hard to explain the feeling –
you have to feel it in your soul.”
Fideli had never worn a bridal dress. Her 1965 wedding to
her husband was held at a courthouse and ended in divorce nine years later.
Fideli’s message to younger women struggling with
self-esteem issues: It’s never too late to love yourself.
Her daughter, Donna Pennington, recalls the day her mother
told her she wanted to marry herself.
“She didn’t have a lot of confidence growing up … But
she’s come a long way in the last few years,” Pennington says. “There’s this
feeling that came over her, this feeling that told her she’s enough.”
Pennington picked out a Goodwill dress for her mom and
came up with a menu that included potato salad, punch and cookies shaped liked
wedding bells.
The family worked with Rob Geiger, property manager of the
retirement community, to plan and officiate the wedding. Geiger says he was
stunned when Fideli, known affectionately there as Dottie, told him she wanted
to marry herself.
“My eyes got real big and my mouth dropped open. I was
like, ‘What?’ That was until she started explaining the reason why,” Geiger
says. “Knowing Dottie and the challenges she had growing up, it’s like she
finally discovered how to love herself, which most people do not discover in
their lifetime. I took it as an honor.”
She plans to renew her vows to herself in
a few years
Ena Jones married herself on her 50th birthday in September
2020. The three dozen guests thought they were attending a milestone birthday
party. Then she emerged in a tiara and a knee-length white dress, carrying a
bouquet of sunflowers, walking down the aisle on the arm of her husband’s
father.
A three-tiered chocolate cake waited at the end of the
aisle.
Jones says she’d wanted to marry herself since her husband
died of cancer in 2016.
“Is it in the county
marriage records that I married myself? No,” she says of her wedding in
Kenansville, North Carolina. “But it’s something I felt I needed to do. This is
my most important relationship … It symbolizes my love for myself for the rest
of my life.”
Jones gave herself a sunflower ring. If she gets
remarried, she’ll move it to the right ring finger and wear her new ring on her
left hand. Either way, she plans to renew her vows on her 55th birthday.
Amodeo, the marriage and family therapist, says while
sologamy can help people with their self-esteem it should not preclude
connecting in a deep way with another human being. Self-love, he says, creates
a solid foundation for intimate, healthy and more fulfilling relationships with
others.
But the search for self-love is a lifelong process that
doesn’t end with a self-marriage, he says.
“We don’t have to be perfect at it,” Amodeo says. “If we
wait until we fully love ourselves before loving another, we might be in a
nursing home before we feel ready for a deep intimate relationship.”
The women who spoke to CNN get that. They say they also
recognize why some people don’t understand sologamy.
“I think often we are triggered or confused by things that
we don’t fully understand because we haven’t experienced that,” says Rist, who
now helps other women plan their self-weddings.
But she and the other women who spoke to CNN say they’re
unfazed by criticism.
They say they’re proud of the inner work they’re doing to heal themselves – and they would marry themselves all over again.


Leave a Comment