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adhdnursey · 3 years
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for day one of @zimbitsweddingofficial: a quick little edit about jack’s bachelor party
[ID: An edit of a “Hark, A Vagrant” comic by Kate Beaton called “Surprise”. First panel: Kent Parson comes out of a cake wearing a crop-top of his Ace’s jersey and says “Congrats” to Jack Zimmermann. Second panel: Jack is wearing a sash that says “Groom-To-Be” and says to Kent “I was expecting Shitty” who responds “Twenty years we’ve known each other-” Third panel: Kent, frowning, continues “And now you don’t wanna see me jump outta da cake. You insult me.” /END ID]
(link to original)
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b1ttle · 3 years
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"Why don't you change me at all costs?"
a "Let's Get Married" gifset for @zimbitsweddingofficial cause this song is one of my favorites on my zimbits playlist 🥺
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Zimbits Wedding Event
This event is all about creating and sharing content about Jack and Bitty getting married! The event will be four days with a schedule as follows:
Thursday June 24th: Pre-wedding (#bestmangate, ring shopping, wedding planning, bachelors parties, etc.)
Friday June 25th: The main event! (any works that feature the actual wedding)
Saturday June 26th: Post-wedding (honeymoon, newly wed life, etc.)
Sunday June 27th: Free day (this is your chance to post things that got done late, and/or recommend wedding related works created prior to this event!)
Tag your posts with #zimbitswedding and tag @zimbitsweddingofficial. Any questions can be sent to this blog via ask or direct message.
Have fun!
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montrealmadison · 3 years
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a million miles away
for @zimbitsweddingofficial​ and zimbits wedding week day three: after the wedding! a little slice of life from the first morning of jack and bitty’s honeymoon.
this is the last scene of a much longer fic that i'm hoping to publish someday soon when it’s a little more polished, but for now please enjoy this fluff fest!
Jack wakes as the tide is coming in.
Their slice of the world is blissfully quiet that morning. There’s only the sound of the waves crashing outside, the cries of birds circling high above them. Maybe the private beach was a little bit over the top, but—well. Jack’s last name does come with its occasional perks, and he’s determined to let Bitty enjoy them too.
(He’s still waiting for the right time to tell Bitty that he’d like to change it, though. Someday soon. He’s been thinking that Jack Bittle has a pretty nice ring to it.)
Jack takes his time about coming to life, mostly because he’s tired but also just because he can, luxuriating in the feeling of soft sheets against his skin. He intends to take full advantage of the fact that, for the first time in weeks, he has nowhere more pressing to be than in his husband’s arms.
His husband, now. Jack blinks up at the ceiling. He’s still not the best at putting words to feelings, but the quiet drumbeat of his heart names this one for him: joy, joy, joy.
The husband in question is still asleep on Jack’s chest; the rising sun dapples his back, turns his hair to gold. They’ve woken up together hundreds of times, but everything feels new to Jack this morning: the way their legs are tangled together, the warm expanse of Bitty’s bare skin against his, the soft wash of his breathing. Jack appreciates each sensation as it comes, tries to tuck them away for the next time he’s stuck in a lonely hotel room halfway across the country. After years of short weekends and stolen moments, waking up next to Bitty like this is something he knows he’ll never take for granted again.
He lets himself doze off, enjoying the warmth and the quiet. When he wakes for the second time, it’s to Bitty, who’s regarding him with the most unbearably fond smile Jack’s ever seen on the face of a man who’s only half-awake. God, Jack thinks, he’s beautiful; he’s the sun; he’s the porch light left on after dark.
He hums a little when he sees Jack blinking back at him. It’s a deep sound, appreciative. “Good morning,” he says, sleep-soft and slow.
“Bon matin,” Jack replies, smiling. “You been up long?”
Bitty’s eyes are still tired, but they crinkle at the corners when he smiles back. “Only a minute. ‘Bout ready to drop again, to be honest.”
Jack has to agree. He’s not surprised by Bitty’s exhaustion—feels it himself, the grind of these past few weeks, in the pull of his muscles and the gritty ache behind his eyes. He’d be very happy to stay wrapped up in the circle of Bitty’s arms forever and never have to move again.
Luckily, Bitty seems to have the same idea. He curls in close, presses his lips to Jack’s cheek, his nose, the corner of his mouth. They lose themselves in it; ten minutes pass, or maybe an hour, and Jack doesn’t care in the slightest either way.
Finally, though, he huffs out a gentle laugh. “Bits.”
Bitty pulls away to look at him. “Jack.”
“We’re married.”
This time it’s Bitty who laughs, bright and affectionate. “Yeah, we are.”
Jack casts his mind back over last night, over the sequence of events that have led him to the ring on his finger, to this boy and this bed and this golden morning together. He’s a little hungover, but not too much, and there’s a lingering, pleasant burn in his muscles that speaks to a night well-enjoyed. He remembers holding hands on the plane and ordering champagne to the room and laughing a lot, reveling in the quiet magic of being married to each other at last.
“Jack,” Bitty murmurs after a long moment, pulling Jack out of his thoughts.
“Bits.”
“I think we wasted our time with all that lookin’ for a place to go,” he says, and rests his chin on Jack’s chest with a satisfied sigh. “All we really needed was a bed.”
Jack props himself up on his elbows. “Well. We don’t have to get out of it today,” he says. “If you don’t want to.”
“Hmm,” says Bitty, pretending to consider. “Is that a promise?”
Jack has to feign nonchalance as much as he can. This is, he thinks, about to be the best vacation of all time. “Why don’t you come up here and find out?”
Bitty laughs, a breathless sound like the shimmer of sunlight on the water, and then his lips are on Jack’s again, and Jack never wants to let go.
So, at least for today, he promises himself he doesn’t have to.
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3 weeks until the wedding event starts!
It starts June 24th with any works related to pre-wedding activities!
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montrealmadison · 3 years
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drink deeply
or, as they say at samwell, “penitus potes.” shitty gives the toast at jack and bitty’s wedding. for @zimbitsweddingofficial and day two of zimbits wedding week: the wedding itself!
just for fun, a draft version of the beginning of this fic with lardo, ransom, and holster’s “helpful” edits can be found via google doc here. hope y’all enjoy! <3
Good evening, everyone! On behalf of Jack and Eric, thank you all so much for being here tonight, and welcome to what could very well be the most highly anticipated wedding reception of 2019. I mean, this party was planned by the likes of Suzanne Bittle and Alicia Zimmermann. We are in for a treat, folks.
Before we get to all that, I’d also like to extend a particular welcome to those in attendance who are part of the playing, coaching, and/or office staff of the Providence Falconers. Glad you could all make it this evening; I know this past week was a little bit busy for you guys.
[Insert appropriate pause and gesture to the punch bowl, which on closer inspection is actually—oh yeah—the Stanley Cup the Falcs won three days ago. Hold for inevitable applause, general hysteria, and/or hooting/hollering from Tater.]
For those of you who don’t know me, I’ve been trying to decide whether I should introduce myself by my first name, which will inevitably get me mocked by my friends until the end of time, or by my nickname, which will definitely scandalize anyone who has not spent a significant amount of time around twenty-year-old guys who play hockey. However, as I look around the room, I’m realizing that most of you probably either raised, spent significant time around, or were once a twenty-year-old guy who played hockey. To the rest of you, I am profoundly sorry.
So, hi! I’m Shitty, and I’m Jack’s best man.
read more below or on ao3
Being someone’s best man, as I’ve realized over the last few months, should really come with a playbook or an instruction manual or something, because it’s a task unlike any other you’ll ever take on. In addition to being a friend, you have to be a confidant, an expert at bachelor-party debauchery (I think my college resume definitely prepared me for this part) and someone who’s not afraid to step in to make last-minute decisions so the grooms don’t have to. You also have to do all of these things without getting fired from your job or stepping on anyone’s toes, up to and including: the couple getting married, the other people in the wedding party, the grooms’ parents, the wedding planner, and most importantly, Moomaw, whose word is law around here. 
(Seriously. She made the pie tonight, people. Bow down to her.)
But as much as the role can feel a little bit like you’re being thrown in at the deep end, it also definitely comes with its perks. Tonight, I have both the honor and the challenge of somehow summarizing how much I love Jack and Eric in a speech that is heartfelt and witty yet also brief so that we can get to the aforementioned pie as quickly as possible. If you’re still following me here, that is a tall order—but here goes nothing!
I met Jack Zimmermann on our first day of freshman year at Samwell, during the bright, hot summer of 2011. I was participating in the time-honored tradition of moving into a dorm on the third floor of a building with no elevator and no air conditioning in the middle of August. It builds character, or so the good folks in Samwell administration probably tell themselves. Anyway, athletes got to move in early for preseason, so I was expecting to be one of the only guys on the floor for at least a couple days. I was just carrying the last box into my room when the door next to mine opened and—well, you can probably guess who walked out.
Now, I grew up in Boston, which means I also grew up around hockey culture. I’d heard the news that Jack was coming to Samwell, so I knew who he was when he stepped into the hall in that same vague way that you kind of-sort of recognize celebrities hustling down the street or through the airport with their sunglasses on. And he gave me that same vibe—“I know you know who I am, and I’d very much like not to be bothered about it.”
Here is something that will not shock you if you know us: Jack was the first friend I made in college. Here is something that might shock you if you know us: That definitely doesn’t mean we were friends at first. By his own admission, Jack wasn’t at Samwell to make friends at all. He told me, much later, that he was only planning to go to play hockey, get his life back on track, and keep his head down as much as possible.
So in retrospect, maybe it was an unlucky thing for Jack that he ran into the one person who wasn’t going to let him do that.
Because no matter who you are or where you’re from, freshman year of college breeds a unique kind of terror I’ve never felt anywhere else. There’s a lot of pressure to completely remake yourself, to become the person you maybe never could have been in your hometown. By coming to Samwell, I wanted to be a different kind of kid than the one that Andover had raised. Jack wanted to be a different kind of kid than the one he’d spent twenty years telling himself he had to be. As much as neither of us wanted to admit it, we both wanted similar things out of our college experience, and we needed a support system to do that. And so, however begrudging the two of us were about it at first, we started to bond more and more.
It wasn’t always easy. For one thing, my idea of a good time was a lot louder than Jack’s—who enjoyed such scintillating pursuits as “watching golf” and “going to bed at a reasonable hour”, neither of which were quite in my vocabulary at the ripe old age of eighteen. Also, if it’s before six in the morning, he has a hard time remembering to speak English, which used to make for a lot of stilted conversations between the two of us as we walked to early morning practice. (On a completely unrelated note, the first and probably only thing I ever learned in Québécois is how to swear.)
I don’t remember the exact tipping point at which Jack and I really became friends; I think it was more of a quiet acknowledgment that we liked having each other around, that we balanced each other out in ways that neither of us initially knew we needed. What I do know is that, slowly but surely, I started to get glimpses of the Jack that exists off the ice. And so began one of the most extraordinary journeys of my life, because the only thing crazier than knowing Jack Zimmermann is actually knowing Jack.
Here are some things that I’ve learned in the process: He’s on his third pair of neon yellow running shoes, which he buys specifically because the color makes him happy. Before either of us tried Eric’s pies, the only thing that could make him cheat on a meal plan was a sleeve of Double Stuf Oreos. (Don’t ask him how to eat them correctly unless you’re interested in a twenty-minute speech on exactly how they have to be pulled apart.) And he loves Captain America, although it is the opinion of this best man that America’s ass has nothing on his hockey butt. Have you seen that thing? It has Internet fans in at least two different countries. 
But I digress.
In our sophomore year we lived next to each other again, by choice instead of by chance, in what I can only describe as the pinnacle of American college living: the Samwell Men’s Hockey Haus. We used to pull the comforter off of one of our beds and climb out onto the roof and clear off the snow so we could share the blanket, look up at the stars, and listen to the bass thumping through the wall of the house next door. On nights when other things felt confusing, this one part of my life was clear. There’s something about sitting out under the open sky that just makes it easier to talk to a guy, you know? 
Some nights the conversations we had were funny. Some nights they were serious. Some nights we said nothing at all, just sat secure in the knowledge that someone cared enough to exist alongside us for a little while. There was always an unspoken agreement between us on nights like these: I got your back. For me, Jack’s friendship became a rock, a refuge. It’s something that I came to depend on that year and still do to this day.
As for the content of those late-night conversations—well, some things do have to stay between friends. I’m sure Jack will agree, especially because he has so graciously allowed me to get up here and lovingly roast him just a little bit.
So let’s skip ahead again, to yet another August, the start of our junior year, and the arrival on the scene of one Eric Bittle. This kid burst into our ranks like a ray of Southern sunshine and turned pretty much everything upside down in the process. In the first five minutes of being in the Haus, he somehow made us a pie? Folks, I'm not kidding, it was the best thing I’ve ever eaten. We were a bunch of guys who didn’t know what we were missing until we had it, and let me tell you, it was one hell of a semester after that. In pretty short order we had curtains on the windows and baked goods on the counters, and Samwell Men’s Hockey started to become not only a team but a family.
That was off the ice, at least. On it, things were a little more complicated. As our dear friend and former goalie John Johnson said to me, Jack and Eric hadn’t gone through their character development yet—whatever that means. 
Take our third or fourth practice with the full team that year, for example. It had gone… uh. Poorly, would be a word. Later that night I heard some rustling on the roof outside, and God knows I was willing to do just about anything but my homework—so I stuck my head out the window and there was Jack, watching the stars. I asked him if he wanted a buddy, and he said alright, so I slid out and sat down next to him.
That was pretty usual for us at this point. What wasn’t usual was the topic of conversation. The first thing Jack said to me was, “Bittle’s gonna get eaten alive when our schedule starts.” (Remember, people, they’re married now!) The second was, “I want to help.”
Here’s another thing about Jack: Underneath the veneer is a guy who just cares so intensely it’d shock you if you knew nothing else about him. It shocked me a little that day. I think it even shocked him to admit it, to the point where I had to say, “Jack, it’s not a criminal offense to care about other people. Even if it feels like you’re doing it for yourself.”
So he helped. He offered an olive branch, and Bits took him up on it. I’d hear the two of them get up in the morning, hours before the rest of us had to be at Faber, for checking practice. None of the rest of us ever knew exactly what went down, but one thing was for sure—Eric put in a ton of work to overcome some of the fears that had followed him to college. He got better, and Jack relaxed. The two of them really started working as a team, and things started looking up from there.
The day that they told us they were dating was pretty amazing. Eric is so full of light no matter how bleak a situation may look, but that day he was literally almost glowing. And I’ve seen Jack in moments after victory and loss, at his best and at his worst. But I’ve never seen a Jack who was so happy, possessed of such confidence in a decision he’d made, as I saw him that day at brunch. And that’s when I knew this relationship was really special. 
From there, many of you know the story. You watched it play out on ESPN and social media and the front pages of every single gossip magazine on the supermarket shelves. But if you’re sitting here with us tonight, you also watched it play out between Jack and Eric themselves. You’ve watched them handle expectations as a united front. You’ve watched their unfailing dedication to each other while they navigate the pressure of being some pretty big firsts. You know that, behind the scenes, these are two incredibly genuine people who  bring out the best in each other and are dedicated to doing that every single day.
In the last four years, I’ve watched Eric become self-possessed and confident because he was given the space to do so. In the last six years, I’ve watched Jack grow from a kid with a chip on his shoulder and something to prove to a guy who finally believes that he deserves all the good things the world has given him and then some. If you take nothing else away from this speech, I want you to know this: I’m incredibly proud to call myself a friend to both of them.
Jack, Bits, you’re always gonna be my brothers, my best friends, and two of the finest damn men I’ve ever had the pleasure to know. I wish you both a long and happy marriage. Take care of each other, be good to each other, and never forget where you started—as a team.
So please join me in raising your glasses, everyone, and as they say at Samwell—penitus potes to Jack and Eric!
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1 week to go! If you have any questions feel free to send an ask or dm to this blog
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