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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

C A Rose
Frannie what a great time and place for a wedding. It had spirit. That’s what I like to see ‘Spirit.’ Mom and I have been considering some Wine Cruise/Motor Coach trips where you cruise from San Francisco and then travel by motor coach and cruise back to San Fran where we would stay at the Huntington Hotel & Nob Hill Spa for 2 nights and being totally spoiled. They operate in the Fall and they just sound soooooo fun. The staterooms are reasonable and include great food, wine, and pampering. What a great way to spend 5 nights!
By C A Rose on 06/17/2008 4:15 am
Brooklyn Gal
I think Hollywood has spoiled wedding days with their million dollar events. But recently some celebrities are opting for smaller, private celebrations which is a good thing. In the NYC/tri-state area weddings are so big that out of town attendees are usually under-dressed. They have never seen such an event where they live. Maybe they have the right idea. Young couples are also opting for expensive honeymoons. I so tried to talk my niece out of that one, but failed. So, they are still paying that one off. If a person wants a large wedding, that’s up to them, but please make sure that the food and music are good. That is not the place to skimp.
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/16/2008 12:54 pm
Barbara
yes - you need to rephrase the question. Getting married is lovely when it’s the right person to pledge yourself to for a lifetime. it’s the wedding thing that has gotten out of hand
By Barbara on 06/16/2008 1:01 pm
Brooklyn Gal
Lily, I first misread your post and thought you wrote “I have attended both the do and the do-over”. :>) Usually the “do-over” is not as big as the original “over-do”
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/16/2008 4:47 pm
Donna H
I’m single. Always have been, & I expect I always will be. I love being single. There’s nobody to grumble when I paint the library for the fourth time in a year, spend an entire day in my pajamas just because I feel like it, buy even more books I have no room for (but will read & cherish just the same). Recently, I was watching a TV program about weddings, & one bride mentioned that she had “only” 30K to spend on her wedding. ONLY 30K? I was absolutely appalled. For 30 K I could have my wiring updated, do all the work I want done on the outside of the house finished, remodel at least one bathroom, & build shelving for more books. There are much better things to spend money on than what, to me, boils down to a photograph album & a few trips to exchange the unneeded gifts from cheap &/or weird relatives.
By Donna H on 06/16/2008 1:25 pm
Gretchen Perkins
I think you are completely wrong. Marriage is a wonderful. Though I do agree spending thousands of dollars is a waste. Instead, consider having a small wedding with close family, or if this is a 2nd or 3rd marriage why not have a JP do the honors instead. Do save your money and put it into a nice honeymoon (or vacation for those of you who have been together for a while) or put your money into savings or into something that will gain value with time.
By Gretchen Perkins on 06/16/2008 1:35 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Um, are we confusing marriages with weddings? You know, I shouldn’t wonder that there is a great legal argument to be made in states where there is common-law marriage that we fairy people who have lived together for seven years are married. I photographed a lot of these Hollywood set designed $$$$ weddings, and the best ones were the “We-can’t-afford-it-friends-and-family” ones. As long as there’s a big enough place for the old folks to sit and the younger ones to dance and the kids to play; enough good food so no one needs to stop at MacDonalds on the way home, and people think this marriage is a good idea, everything else can be figured out. Unless your name is Williams and you actually live in Sonoma, who really cares if you spend $500 renting a limo when your cousin Nancy has a Jag you could borrow?
By Mugsy Peabody on 06/16/2008 2:38 pm
K O
Hi Mugsy, I’m slow. Who are the Williams?
By K O on 06/16/2008 4:07 pm
Brooklyn Gal
Kitty, It was a play on words—Williams Sonoma. Every major mall has one.
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/16/2008 4:43 pm
sandee means
Carol, Every major mall, except El Paso, TX. Probably due to the demographics. We do sport the most $ spent per sq. ft. of mall space, in the nation, though.
By sandee means on 06/16/2008 5:50 pm
Brooklyn Gal
Thanks for sharing that. Are there WS locations in other area malls in Texas? It’s not near me unless I go into Manhattan, Long Island or New Jersey—and only at the “high end” malls. But then I thought Fortunoff’s was everywhere too. Not so. And, many of the items in the WS catalog are usually sold-out at their store locations, so you wind up going on-line. Thank God for on-line shopping. :)
By Brooklyn Gal on 06/16/2008 6:27 pm
K O
Thanks, Carol. I AM slow…
By K O on 06/16/2008 6:59 pm
Mugsy Jr. Peabody
Williams-Sonoma….
By Mugsy Jr. Peabody on 06/16/2008 7:53 pm
Frannie Em
Kitty Williams Sonoma?
By Frannie Em on 06/16/2008 7:56 pm
Count Snarkula
I just want to option to marry my partner. I don’t care if we decide to spend $3.00 or $300,000. I just want the option to marry in my own home city. It will not come soon. Sad.
By Count Snarkula on 06/16/2008 2:41 pm