Now, before I go any further with this, I would like to point out that everything I'm about to say is aimed at the wider societal constructs of the subject, rather than any individuals. I hold no ill will towards anyone who chooses to abide by these "traditions", that is their choice.
What I hate is what society has defined as the wedding. The big, white, expensive dress, the large guest list, the full meal, the dance, the booze, all of the trimmings. My main example of this is the dress. Wedding dresses are huge and tremendously expensive, usually to give the princess experience, to make a dramatic entrance and statement. So help you if you don't abide by this standard, because, if you don't, it's not a wedding dress. I think that the necessity to look like a bride is shallow. And don't get me started on the "if you're against the big white wedding, you have to wear something that looks nothing like a wedding dress" wedding culture. It's just as bad, but on the other side of the coin. There are just as many standards for the off-colour, alternative wedding culture as there are for the Wedding Industry culture. If it truly is your day, you can wear anything and you will look like a bride!
According to a few sources, the average cost of a wedding in the USA is between $20,000 and $30,000. That number boggles my mind. Personally, I believe that all that money is spent on constructing a perfect day, a perfect look, a perfect everything because, if the beginning of the marriage is perfect, then obviously the whole of it will be perfect. Personally, my wedding will be me and my husband in an office, with a friend or two for witnesses, and then a party with friends and family at some time afterwards. No expensive dress, no expensive venue, no limos, because those things will not make me love him any more. That is money that could be better spent on a house, or a dream vacation, or a car...
Now, at this point, let me repeat that I hold no ill will towards those who decide to go the "traditional" route. My problem is against the industry that has decided that all of these expensive constructs are necessary for a successful wedding, and forcing a society to adhere to those ideas no matter the cost to them in exchange for social normality. Today, I was talking to a friend about her wedding (in which I am the maid of honour) and I asked her why she'd decided to spend over a THOUSAND DOLLARS on a wedding dress. Her answer? "I'm not sure... To feel like a bride?" This answer confuses me. If you're getting married... You'll be a bride, no matter what.
I guess I must point out that I fold no special place in my heart for the big white wedding. I never dreamed of it as a little girl, and my family is very, very small, and share my feelings about weddings. Hell, my father is encouraging me to elope by offering to pay for the trip. Every wedding I've ever been involved in has been full of unnecessary drama, exorbitant cost and unrealistic expectations. Every wedding I participate in makes me more and more resolved to never subject myself, my family or my friends to those things either. That definitely colours my perception of the whole idea. But it doesn't make my questioning of the whole industry and construct any less valid.
What I hate is what society has defined as the wedding. The big, white, expensive dress, the large guest list, the full meal, the dance, the booze, all of the trimmings. My main example of this is the dress. Wedding dresses are huge and tremendously expensive, usually to give the princess experience, to make a dramatic entrance and statement. So help you if you don't abide by this standard, because, if you don't, it's not a wedding dress. I think that the necessity to look like a bride is shallow. And don't get me started on the "if you're against the big white wedding, you have to wear something that looks nothing like a wedding dress" wedding culture. It's just as bad, but on the other side of the coin. There are just as many standards for the off-colour, alternative wedding culture as there are for the Wedding Industry culture. If it truly is your day, you can wear anything and you will look like a bride!
According to a few sources, the average cost of a wedding in the USA is between $20,000 and $30,000. That number boggles my mind. Personally, I believe that all that money is spent on constructing a perfect day, a perfect look, a perfect everything because, if the beginning of the marriage is perfect, then obviously the whole of it will be perfect. Personally, my wedding will be me and my husband in an office, with a friend or two for witnesses, and then a party with friends and family at some time afterwards. No expensive dress, no expensive venue, no limos, because those things will not make me love him any more. That is money that could be better spent on a house, or a dream vacation, or a car...
Now, at this point, let me repeat that I hold no ill will towards those who decide to go the "traditional" route. My problem is against the industry that has decided that all of these expensive constructs are necessary for a successful wedding, and forcing a society to adhere to those ideas no matter the cost to them in exchange for social normality. Today, I was talking to a friend about her wedding (in which I am the maid of honour) and I asked her why she'd decided to spend over a THOUSAND DOLLARS on a wedding dress. Her answer? "I'm not sure... To feel like a bride?" This answer confuses me. If you're getting married... You'll be a bride, no matter what.
I guess I must point out that I fold no special place in my heart for the big white wedding. I never dreamed of it as a little girl, and my family is very, very small, and share my feelings about weddings. Hell, my father is encouraging me to elope by offering to pay for the trip. Every wedding I've ever been involved in has been full of unnecessary drama, exorbitant cost and unrealistic expectations. Every wedding I participate in makes me more and more resolved to never subject myself, my family or my friends to those things either. That definitely colours my perception of the whole idea. But it doesn't make my questioning of the whole industry and construct any less valid.
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