I loved my wedding. ADORED it. It was a golden-hued love fest set to Polka music and I wouldnāt change a thing about itāwhich is saying something, because (looks around and lowers voice to a whisper) the truth is that my wedding came to feel more like a duty than a dream day. I wanted it over just as badly as I wanted it at all, because planning the damn thing was so hard for me. Itās something that I feel almost ashamed to talk aboutāwhich is why Iām writing this piece. This is a high-five in solidarity to anyone out there who may be feeling like I did: a lost soul wondering why they just canāt fall in love with this whole wedding thing.
My story is this: I went into wedding planning optimistically and naively. I had never been much of a wedding person, as in buying the magazines or keeping the Pinterest boards, but I figured Iād get into the swing of things. After all, Iām a graphic designer who creates prettiness for a living. A wedding would be fun, right? I glossed over the fact that some of my personality traits (introvert, scatterbrained, doesnāt like being fussed over) didnāt really seem to jive with what a modern wedding inherently is (social whirlwind, detail-driven, the brideās special day) but somehow I figured this would all be OK. Cultural expectation and internet research had planted the (rather invasive) seed that this would be a joyful time for meāthat Iād love creating the beautiful day that was to be an expression of Bās and my love and style.
This turned out to be a gift-wrapped box of crap.
First of all, as many of you know, a lot of the wedding planning process is just plain hard. Wrangling unruly family members, figuring out finances, evaluating friendships, taking on massive DIY projects, communicating about sensitive issues⦠doing any ONE of these can be a challenge on a normal day. But wedding planning throws all of this stuff together at once onto a foot-long shit sandwich that you find yourself eating at every mealāfor like a year. I was totally unprepared for all of the work and all of the feelings that kept coming up. I felt like an alien for struggling with a process that the rest of the planet apparently found fun, and then I felt guilty for feeling bad at all, since many people have far bigger problems to deal with. I quickly became emotionally exhausted and overwhelmed.
Adding to my personal shit sandwich was the icky realization that those personality traits I mentioned before (the non-wedding-friendly ones) actually matteredālike, a lot. They had a bad habit of announcing themselves unfeelingly and inflexibly at nearly every turn of the planning process: my Type B brain couldnāt keep up with all of the wedding details and I had post-it notes about sweets tables and dress fittings stuck to every surface of my life; the people-pleaser in me had a hard time determining where to draw the line on the intervention of loved ones; that āplease donāt go to any trouble!ā part of myself was embarrassed by the wedding-related attention and felt bad anytime someone went out of their way for me. I turned into the poster child for the anti-APW saying: āMy wedding IS an imposition and Iām so, so sorry about that!ā
And to top it off, I felt conflicted about the wedding details themselves. Although alt-wedding blogs were helping me keep my sanity, I also felt like they were advocating a certain type of wedding⦠an event that was hyper-personalized, self-interest driven and filled with DIY crafts and transcendent moments. I sorta got the feeling that if my wedding didnāt look like that, I wasnāt being true to myself. But, as I came to realize, being true to myself meant compromising on my vision in order to accommodate family wishes and budgets. My large and loud family in Chicago wanted a large and loud wedding in Chicago. I love my family and in many ways I wanted the same thing, so I honored that request, even though my partner and I may have come up with a different plan if left purely to our own devices. The choice we made left me with dissonant feelings of gratification mixed with obligationālike the wedding wasnāt quite mine and never really could have been, given that every choice has trade-offs. But I puzzled over where that left me in terms of authenticity and I wondered if I was the only bride out there planning an event that they sometimes felt ambivalent about.
I thought about eloping⦠well, letās be frank: no I didnāt. I felt I couldnāt. I read about other people eloping or having small weddings in lovely articles that seemed to be called āSet Your Boundaries and Assert Your Autonomy by Calling an End to the Wedding Madness!ā They featured stirring photos of couples whose eyes shone with independent spirit as they shared a moment of divine peace at their nine-person yurt wedding. But I didnāt want to disappoint my family and yurts are hard to find in Chicago, so a small wedding was off the table. I couldnāt change those facts, nor could I change my personality (try as I might). And so, the wedding morphed its way from a dream day to something of a necessary evil. Something that would (hopefully) be worth it in the end, but wasnāt a whole lot of fun to get to. Like, you know, studying for the GRE or doing P90X.
Not surprisingly, no one knew how to respond to the fact that I was comparing my wedding planning process to sweating through a heinous DVD workout, so I stepped around the issue or just lied through my teeth when asked how excited I was, lest I come off as a whiny ingrate. I began to see how thoroughly Iād bought into the cultural expectation that āall girlz love ze weddingz!ā and I really wanted to roundhouse kick that expectation in the nuts. Why did I think that I would find magical wedding zen when Iād never cared about weddings before? Why did I think that Iād be able to change myself and my partner from laid-back people-pleasers to energetic party planners? APW has often repeated the very wise phrase āPeople will not stop being who they are for your wedding,ā but Iād like to posit the reminder that YOU also donāt change into someone else for your wedding.
In the weeks before the big day, when stress was at its worst and I was singlehandedly supporting Neutrogenaās line of acne products, I wondered if my planning process would have been easier if Iād made different choices in the beginning. Like if Iād hit on the right personal formula for venue and guest list (Clue-style: 25 people, IN the ballroom WITH punch & cake!), everything leading up to the wedding would have been more fun. But now, with the benefit of hindsight, I can say that I donāt think thatās true. I donāt believe changing the details would have made a difference. I think wedding planning just wasnāt my bag, baby.
And it may not be yours either.
The fact is that because of compromises, budgets, families or personalities, your wedding may just be a royal pain-in-the-ass to coordinate. The event itself may not be redolent of your personal style and aesthetic. It may be in a hall when you would have preferred a mountaintop. It may involve 30 people when you had envisioned 300. And thatās all right. Itās all right if the process gives you both pain and pleasure. Itās all right if youāre not able to come to terms with the compromises you had to make. Itās all right if you donāt fall in love with the details and the visionsāit doesnāt mean your wedding wonāt be wonderful, nor does it mean youāve failed at life. It all just reinforces the fact that a wedding IS life, in all its messy and conflicting glory.
As my beautiful wedding photos come trickling in, Iām working on owning this roller coaster of a wedding year. How do I unpack an experience that was supposed to be amazing, but was mostly shitty with a happy-ending exclamation point? Iām starting by focusing on the moments of joy and gratitude that did happen along the way. And by reflecting on the fact that Iām now married to a splendid person and weāre blessed in a million starry ways. I am thankfulāthankful that the wedding was loverly and especially thankful that itās time to slide the day into frames and albums and memories⦠and move on to the rest of our lives.