Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think women who say this think they get brownie points for "not being like other girls" or something.
Yes. You, personally, are the only woman on this earth who doesn't care about weddings.
Or maybe some of us are introverted, don’t like parties, and don’t want to be the center of attention?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s odd if you have happy family and friend relationships, it’s your first marriage, and your early 30s or younger.
If some aspect of that doesn’t apply to you, I get it.
This, except I'm not sure about the age restriction. Even older people love an excuse for a party.
Yes. Especially if it’s your first marriage at an older age. So many weddings celebrating couples in their 20s and 30s who will be divorced in 5 or 10 years. In some ways I think the (especially first marriage) of a couple in their 40s/50s + plus deserves more fanfare and celebration than they typically receive.
Anonymous wrote:As mentioned in the title, is it odd that I don't want a wedding? The idea of even a small wedding with just family isn't appealing with the planning and booking involved in picking a city, venue, food, accommodations, dress, hair, make-up, photographer, etc. I think I would rather elope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s odd if you have happy family and friend relationships, it’s your first marriage, and your early 30s or younger.
If some aspect of that doesn’t apply to you, I get it.
This, except I'm not sure about the age restriction. Even older people love an excuse for a party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got married in a Catholic Church with just two witnesses. It just felt very personal/private to me. A couple friends and family were offended at not being there. But most were fine with it once they knew no one had been invited.
This is my dream wedding. I have the personality for a courthouse wedding but marrying in the Church means something to me. I've never heard of someone having a religious wedding that wasn't a big affair, but this sounds wonderful. Did you have any type of reception?
No, we just took our 2 witnesses out to dinner. 12 years and three kids later we have no regrets. The pre marital counseling our church mandated was helpful, especially wrt finances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got married in a Catholic Church with just two witnesses. It just felt very personal/private to me. A couple friends and family were offended at not being there. But most were fine with it once they knew no one had been invited.
This is my dream wedding. I have the personality for a courthouse wedding but marrying in the Church means something to me. I've never heard of someone having a religious wedding that wasn't a big affair, but this sounds wonderful. Did you have any type of reception?
Anonymous wrote:I had a, by dcum standards cheap by my standards at 25 expensive, wedding and it felt very worth it. I absolutely do not think everyone needs a wedding or would enjoy it but the worth of a wedding sometimes does get lost in the discussion.
For us it was not about having a big party, but all the people who were in attendance. It was really cool getting to celebrate with both sides of our extended families and our different friend groups from over the years all in one place. It really was a once in a lifetime experience for both of us as we will most likely never get to be in a room with all of those people again.
I know well that this would not be a good thing for lots of people (particularly those with strained family relationships) but I just wanted to throw this in as I think some people dumb down weddings to being over the top overly expensive parties. While it can be this, too, it can be a meaningful and amazing experience seeing all of your loved ones around you and getting to know each other.
Anonymous wrote:Not odd. I didn't either and caved. To this day, it makes me mad that we spent so much money on a wedding. Ugh.