Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

WOMAN TO ‘MARRY’ HER DOG

- CASSIDY ARAIZA The New York Times VINCENT M MALLOZZI

LILLY Smartelli dreams of marrying her best friend on Valentine’s Day.

“Bernie and I have been looking for just the right wedding venue to stage our big Italian wedding,” said Smartelli, 55, who lives in Phoenix, Arizona.

Smartelli marks February 14 on her calendar, not as a romantic holiday, but as a day defined by comfort, happiness and a different sort of true love.

She found all of those things in Bernie, who happens to be one of the main characters in a book she selfpublis­hed last October called The $5

Dog Wedding.

He also happens to be a dog.

“I love Bernie to death and I know he’s going to make quite a handsome groom,” Smartelli said. “But there is one problem where our wedding is concerned.”

The fact that Bernie is a dog?

“No,” she said, laughing. “The fact that we simply cannot afford the wedding we have planned.”

Smartelli, a former travel nurse, is terminally ill with a form of pulmonary fibrosis, a respirator­y disease in which scars are formed in the lung tissues, leading to serious breathing problems that worsen over time.

“My doctors tell me I have maybe one or two good years left,” she said, “so Bernie and I are racing against the clock.”

Two years ago, Smartelli was enjoying life in San Diego aboard her two-bedroom boat, a 14m, 1980 longrange cruiser, with Bernie, a hazeleyed, sandy-haired, 9-year-old mixed breed cocker spaniel poodle, and her other dog, Spinner, a cream-coloured, 8-year-old Maltese-Shih Tzu mix who will serve as Bernie’s best man. She had rescued Bernie and Spinner a week apart in October 2011, from the annual Riverside County adoption fair hosted by the Humane Society of the Desert in Palm Springs, California.

She eventually began suffering from shortness of breath, dizziness and fainting spells, which led to a diagnosis of pulmonary diffusion defect, a subcategor­y of pulmonary fibrosis. She sold the boat and moved to Phoenix, where she began evaluating her life, not knowing how much of it she had left, and came away with one final wish: to know the joy of a wedding day.

“By marrying Bernie in a symbolic way, I could draw attention to organ-donor groups and local animal welfare shelters that lack proper funding,” Smartelli said between laboured breaths.

So her potential big day will serve as a fundraisin­g awareness moment for the two causes close to her heart. “It’s all in good fun,” she said.

“I know I will never be married, but I would still love to experience the kind of wedding, even if it’s a fake wedding, that I’ve been dreaming about since I was a little girl.”

Smartelli chuckled when she said: “I’ve been involved in just one-and-ahalf relationsh­ips my entire life,” and sighed when she added, “I’ve been single for quite a while.” She needed a significan­t other to make her bucketlist item a reality, so she turned to Bernie, her best friend, to play the role of groom.

“I can’t think of anyone in the entire world who loves me more than Bernie does, anyhow,” said Smartelli, who said she dated a man for two years before the relationsh­ip ended in 2007. (She refers to that experience as “only half of a relationsh­ip,” she said, “because he wasn’t half the man I expected him to be.”)

Smartelli grew up in Detroit, where 12 years ago she spread some serious love of her own, coming to the rescue of a childhood friend by donating a kidney to him.

“I thought, if I could do something to help this person extend his life, then why not do it,” she said. “He’s doing pretty well today and he sends me a card once a year thanking me for what I did for him.”

Chris Stewart, the manager of the Sun City Pet Market in Sun City, Arizonia, has seen her kindness and unselfishn­ess in his store. “She’s really no different than anyone else who comes in here and treats their dogs like members of their family,” he said. “When she’s with Bernie and Spinner, I can see the love she has for them just pouring out of her.”

Smartelli graduated from Wayne State University in Detroit and holds a doctorate in chiropract­ic medicine from Cleveland Chiropract­ic College in Kansas City, Missouri, as well as a nursing degree from Excelsior College in Albany, New York. She says the experience of sacrificin­g a kidney “really, truly highlights the importance of donor organisati­ons.”

Before her illness, Smartelli was working as a travel nurse throughout the US.

Though there is no cure for her condition and no sacrifice that will put time back on her earthly clock, Smartelli said she still hoped to help save the lives of humans and dogs by raising awareness, and money. She has already been donating a portion of her book’s proceeds to Donate Life America, a nonprofit organisati­on working to increase the number of donated organs, eyes and tissue.

“Any ‘wedding gifts’ I receive,” she said, “would go straight to both of those causes.”

She began considerin­g a faux marriage to Bernie in October 2017, when she brought him to a dog groomer and mused: “I may as well marry Bernie. He’s always there for me. He listens, and he loves me no matter what. What more could a woman want?”

The groomer took note. When Smartelli returned later that day, she found Bernie wagging his tail, freshly blow-dried and fluffy and sharply dressed in a sequined blue bow tie, with a blue ribbon on his collar and a plastic wedding ring and engagement band attached, along with a note that said “Marry Me”.

The moment inspired her. “Just because I didn’t have a fiancé didn’t mean there couldn’t still be a groom,” she wrote in her book. “It might be a little unorthodox, but so had many other choices in my adventurou­s life. I don’t need to find a man, not when I have Bernie.”

The reality, however, is that there will be no actual event, as Smartelli is barely able to keep up with the costs of her medical bills.

With her parents dead and no family members or friends to turn to for financial support, she has managed to keep a sense of humour as she copes with her debilitati­ng disease.

“People who see only a headline that says I want to marry Bernie will think I’m totally insane,” she said, laughing. “So I hope they take the time to learn more about my whole story and the reason I want to do it.”

In the meantime, Smartelli said, she will continue to dream of actually walking Bernie down the aisle, with Spinner as best man, and celebratin­g with virtual family and friends.

But no matter how the reality of her Valentine’s Day unfolds, Smartelli will ultimately find the true meaning of the day in the company of Bernie and Spinner, just as others who do not necessaril­y mark February 14 as a romantic holiday on their calendars might instead choose to spend the day in the company of a good book or by watching a sunrise.

“It’s kind of ironic, but Bernie and Spinner, who are just a couple of rescue dogs, have actually rescued me from a life of loneliness. I really love those two guys. It wouldn’t be Valentine’s Day without them.”

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 ??  ?? LILLY Smartelli with her dogs, Spinner, left, and Bernie. Smartelli always wanted a “big Italian wedding”. But with no fiancé in sight, she’ll symbolical­ly marry her dog Bernie, hoping to draw attention to organ donation and supporting dog shelters. |
LILLY Smartelli with her dogs, Spinner, left, and Bernie. Smartelli always wanted a “big Italian wedding”. But with no fiancé in sight, she’ll symbolical­ly marry her dog Bernie, hoping to draw attention to organ donation and supporting dog shelters. |
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