Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Conversation | 06/16/2008 12:00 am

Advice to Those About to Marry: Don't! Here's Why ...

© Shutterstock

LIZ: Here’s my advice to those about to marry: Don’t. Take the money. Take the money and buy yourself a fabulous apartment and don’t spend the money on the wedding. It is the biggest throwaway and means nothing later. It’s the biggest waste of money and effort that I’ve ever heard of. It’s like a big party where you just blow everything out; you have nothing left. It’s got to cost $30,000.

MARY: That’s what I told my oldest daughter, who is the genius in the family, when she got married. And I went into that in spades, and said exactly what you just said.

JUDITH: And what’d she do?

Click here to read Judith Martin’s note on white weddings.

MARY: She wanted the biggest wedding that New York ever saw.

LIZ: My, God, Mary, that’s amazing. I thought she was smart.

MARY: She is. She has propelled herself through her job and up, up, up, up, by just being so wise. But when it came time to actually get married, something from all those little fairy-tale books that she read when she was little came through. I think you carry that stuff in a backpack in your head. And she just wanted the glamour and the huge … the romance of the whole vision. And we did. She had the biggest dress with the longest train and the most people. We actually had a church wedding; and this is the daughter who probably went to church twice in her life.

But people spend a year putting on something that’s a cross between the Academy Awards and a reality show ...

JANE: Did she stay married?

MARY: Yes. Judith, you’re planning a wedding for your daughter, are you not?

JUDITH: I am. And it’s going to be a dignified, small wedding taking up one afternoon, not a week out of people’s lives, much less a year out of her and my lives. I think Liz is right. It’s become meaningless and, not to say vulgar, and ostentatious. There’s a huge industry promoting that. What drives me crazy is that they’re always promoting expensive things under the name of, “It’s proper to do this,” or “People expect it.” And they’re the very things that are condemned by etiquette, which is not in the business of telling people to go into debt. But the ritual itself, if it could be hacked back to what it’s supposed to be, can be very lovely. And I’m hoping my daughter’s wedding will be; my son’s wedding was.

But people spend a year putting on something that’s a cross between the Academy Awards and a reality show; a romance movie about themselves. And the notions that have been perpetrated such as, “It’s going to be a perfect day.” Well, that’s one way to set you up for a fall. And saying that it’s whatever the bride wants or whatever the couple wants. Rather, it’s a social ritual which can also be religious as well as civic, in which you enter into one of the forms of the society and people value this very much.

JANE: It’s something to remember. You’re creating a memory.

JUDITH: Well …

MARY: Also, I think fantasy is a healthy thing. I don’t think fantasy is such a bad thing. I mean, we’re all hard workers and today people work harder than they ever did, really. And you could see that they respond to fantasy. You see all these crazy fantasy shows on television. Everybody needs some dreams, some beauty. And it’s a feeling that they’re in a kind of a fairy-tale world …

JUDITH: But a lot of their dreams turn out to be nightmares, not only for themselves but for everybody else concerned, because there are things that are dropped from this – such as consideration for one’s guests or living within one’s means. And the brides are overstressed. The guests are often mistreated in various ways …

99 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Peggy Sue
and…….?
By Peggy Sue on 06/16/2008 8:24 am
Frank Peterson
Peggy: and? lessee, 30 loving years, one beautiful daughter, and then Anne was gone and I’ll never see her like again.
By Frank Peterson on 06/16/2008 8:44 am
Peggy Sue
Oh Frank, I bet the thirty years went too quickly, along with Anne with her time on this planet. Sorry for your loss. Many writings today have brought tears to my eyes.
By Peggy Sue on 06/16/2008 9:28 am
Dona Howlett
Frank, I lost my beloved husband Richard 6 1/2 years ago after 37 years of a wonderful marriage…….It’s so hard to lose half of who you are! I think that’s the hardest part. Getting acquainted with the new YOU! Yes, Peggy……..today has been a thoughtful day for all of us.
By Dona Howlett on 06/16/2008 11:00 pm
gulliver fourmyle
i know we have our differences—-but listen to Fleetwood Mac’s “Don’t Quit Thinking About Tomorrow’—-ie: do not, as i , become some ‘monk-in-a-bunker’—-open up—-only the past is gone—-You Do Have a Future—-She will come, just don’t be a fool—-grab tight—-
By gulliver fourmyle on 11/06/2008 9:40 pm
Lin Chapman
We met when I was 33 and married 2 months later. The wedding cost $25 (canadian license) plus taxi fare for the wedding officiator and the 15 min. ceremony was outside, by the water, with a handful of friends to witness and toast our dubious success. After a glass of champagne we left our guests and found a romantic restaurant, had a mountain of clams and got a little drunk on Meursault (Ca$130 with tip) Of course there were no wedding presents to speak of (considering the time frame, probably not a worthy investment) but 20 years later we are still madly in love and given the opportunity to do it over, I wouldn’t change a thing.
By Lin Chapman on 06/16/2008 8:17 am
Frannie Em
Lin, I love that.
By Frannie Em on 06/16/2008 7:43 pm
gulliver fourmyle
and some people win lotto—-but how many lose? congratulations—-
By gulliver fourmyle on 11/06/2008 9:53 pm
Katy O
Instead of a big wedding, my husband and I had a “pot-luck” party with a 94 year-old justice of the peace who stopped by for the ceremony and a piece of cake. That day our friends and relatives shared recipes and stories, and all signed on the back of our wedding certificate. With the money we saved, we spent the next month touring Europe. Thirty three years later, after making my daughter’s wedding dress, we both agree that it was a perfect wedding for us.
By Katy O on 06/16/2008 8:33 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
FROM A JOURNAL ENTRY: The P—M [names withheld]: Sitting in the parking lot–sun streaming through the windows of the car while waiting for the bewitching hour when the church doors would open and he said: What about just going to the service and then going home and I said, no, we couldn’t do that to B.and S.–the temptation was great but the obligation was greater. We enter–sterile church–an almost puritan feel about it. I am taken down the aisle to the pew by a young lad who grabs another lady on the way, saying, “I’ll take the both of youse.” As weddings go it was lifeless except for the lovely singing from above by two talented young women. The old priest, meaning to be humorous, went on and on about how husbands should treat their wives–––he should know–––and then the endless religious claptrap–up and down, up and down–––the endless waiting until all the good Catholics had their wafer and wine–––more waiting in line in order to greet parents and the newly weds. On to the reception: so thirsty and so hungry–––downed a double gin and tonic, gobbled up some clams and shrimp balls–got another drink and settled in. The music was dreadful. There was the usual father and daughter dance only this time the bride couldn’t stop weeping which made her mascara run and when the dance was finished she looked like a wilted raccoon. Many of the women in their expensive outfits, their lavish jewelry, sat around the little tables looking like lovely mannequins on an outing. How long did we have to hang around, I wondered, before we could make a discreet exit and then the bridegroom’s mother, while dancing some kind of fancy dance, slipped, slid across the floor, dress up to her crotch, stopped the ceremony because of a twisted ankle. We left shortly after. Another wedding like this and I’ll spit nails.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 06/16/2008 9:09 am
K O
Hi Phyllis, All the good Catholics only get a wafer. Only the priest gets the wine - which may explain why he went on and on, and thought he was funny. If the rest of the good Catholics got wine, they might have thought he was funny, too.
By K O on 06/16/2008 10:48 am
Frannie Em
Kitty O’Keefe I always look for your comments, you make me laugh.
By Frannie Em on 06/16/2008 1:37 pm
Dona Howlett
Phyllis, Thanks for the wonderful laugh……….as they say ” I needed that”
By Dona Howlett on 06/16/2008 11:08 pm
CAROLINE MuLVEY
this was my husband and mine second wedding. I wanted just family close family. We did it outside my husband built an archway and we decorated it, I had a day care at that time in my house so he put a large piece of wood for dancing. We did not have a back yet so we had stairs there. We had a justice of the piece who married us. My daughter was the flower girl and my son was the ring barrier, I had one of the parents to make the cake for a free day of day care I had a girl friend who French braided my hair. We had the food on a table that was catered by one of the parents for two free day care days. We spent $1,000.00 and we got in gifts the same amount. And the wedding was perfect. I even had a parent taking pictures for two days of free day care. We danced, ate, drank, and played football in my $18.00 gown.(My mom gave me this beautiful off white gown but it was for the winter time and it was too big for me so I had a seam stress fix) I had a blast !! And when I look back at the pictures it brings sch joy and happiness. In July we will be celebrating our 20th anniversary.
By CAROLINE MuLVEY on 06/16/2008 9:26 am
Frannie Em
Caroline, I love that. What a great day, and he has loved you ever since because you are worth it.
By Frannie Em on 06/16/2008 1:40 pm