real life

'My wedding sucked.'

by JO ABI

My wedding sucked. It was just horrible. I’m trying to think of something positive to say about it but the only positive I can think of is that it ended and I got to go home and try to forget it happened.

So much went wrong and it’s going to sound really bad. Disclaimer: my husband and I love each other very much and we are a very happy family. But….

We weren’t planning on getting married but when I fell pregnant (we were actively trying for a baby at the time) I freaked out and insisted we get hitched before baby number one arrived. He was caught off-guard but tried to get on board for my sake. He failed, miserably.

It rained. We were meant to be married outdoors in front of the harbour and we were forced inside the hotel in a cramped little room. My brother-in-law’s mobile phone rang in the middle of the ceremony. Our kiss was bad. He came in wide and I came in narrow. We should have practiced.

Mum didn’t want me to tell anyone I was pregnant but I was twenty weeks and a proud mummy-to-be. When I explained that everyone would be able to tell she asked me to wear a dress that didn’t emphasise my bump any more than it had to. So I ended up looking fat instead of pregnant.

I bought our rings. My husband was very stressed at work and didn’t have a moment to spare. I bought my engagement ring and the wedding rings for a total of $800. I called the ‘diamond’ on my engagement ring a ‘cognac bubble diamond’ because it was slightly yellow and had a bubble in it. I’m happy I lost it during our last house move.

My boobs were expanding and contracting dramatically (the joys of pregnancy). During my final fitting they were quite impressive but on the day of the wedding they had deflated and didn’t quite fill my dress. The ‘money shot’ of the night ended up being a photo of us bending down to cut the wedding cake with one of my nipples hanging out for all to see.

The cake tasted disgusting. Somehow the cake maker heard ‘lots of alcohol’ instead of ‘only a little alcohol’ and one spoonful had me worrying about fetal alcohol syndrome.

No-one danced, including us. My husband didn’t want to do a bridal waltz and instead of forcing him into it like any other respectable bride-to-be I gave in. I even know the song I would have chosen – Bon Jovi’s Always.

I didn’t know what ‘carpaccio’ was. I thought it must be some kind of schnitzel. Like a scene out of a bad wedding movie most of my relatives got out their cigarette lighters and tried to cook the meat at the table. There was a poached egg in the salad. The rolls were old. Our usual Italian wedding food parade of antipasto, seafood, pasta, steak, gelato, cake, more cakes, coffee, chocolates and a prawn supper was nowhere to be seen.

It’s our ten year wedding anniversary next year. We were enjoying a night in when I mentioned the idea of renewing our vows to my husband and he said, “What a good idea,” without a hint of sarcasm. I added that I might like a proper engagement ring chosen by him and he said, “Definitely!” I have been repeating the words ‘princess-cut, platinum solitaire’ ad nauseam ever since. Our ten-year wedding anniversary falls on a Saturday next year and although we are already disagreeing on the exact location of the blessed event we’ve at least managed to pick two venues in the same part of the city. Bondi Beach vs Centennial Park. Feel free to vote (Bondi Beach!).

My bridal waltz choice has changed. The Verve Sonnet is my choice now. Love and marriage isn’t perfect. I want something beautiful but reflective of the journey as well. Marriage is excruciating at times but so lovely as well.

We’ll have good food and mud cake. We will practice our kiss. Everyone will clap. IT WILL NOT RAIN.

I will forget all thoughts that wedding vow renewals lead to divorce. Seal and Heidi Klum, Jon and Kate Gosselin, Vicki and Donn from The Real Housewives of Orange County,  Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony, LeAnn Rimes and Eddie Cibrian (oh wait, they haven’t broken up yet!).

For us it’s a redo. It’s a wedding renovation.  Nobody loves a fixer-upper more than my husband and I. I think I’ve made more of a case for doing it right the first time than I have for the renewing of wedding vows but whatever. Hip hip hooray!

Jo Abi is the author of the book How to Date a Dad: a dating guide released by Hachette Livre Australia.  You can read more about her many and various exploits here and follow her on Twitter here.

Have you ever been to a wedding where everything went wrong?

Related Stories

Recommended

Top Comments

Maria 11 years ago

Ha, yeah, I found our wedding way too stressful. The meal ran over by an hour and a half, so our reception guests were waiting around for that long. We forgot about our piper, who sat around for an hour and a half doing nothing, needlessly. We felt so bad when we realised. There was nearly a fist fight between two of our female guests and to combat all the stress I got way too drunk and now actually can't remember the better half of the wedding (the half that I think I probably enjoyed!)


KJ 12 years ago

My hubby and I had both been previously married so decided on what we thought was a small intimate garden wedding with only 30 family and friends. We had quite a few things that weren't the way we expected....
1-a friends mum offered to make my dress, should have known it would come with conditions it had to be in a style she liked. It ended up being two piece, nothing like I wanted and the top was too short. 
2-we didn't have a bridal party we both had close male friends sign our certificate as our witnesses. So instead we opted for our parents on the bridal table. Would have been fine except the in-laws went home between the service and reception and changed into tshirts jeans and trackies (no I'm not joking, the photos oh the photos nothing like the mother in law in a parker and my parents still dressed to the nines)
3-the mother-in-law decided to make a speech( you know the type everything is always about her, yes even her sons wedding) our parents had met the night before and mother in law decided to reference the meeting to the movie "meet the fockers" hmmm I know whose parents are like the fockers and it ain't mine! She also decided to voice her opinions on our relationship and how we hadn't spent a lot of time with my hubby's friends and family(funny  she didn't mention that we lived 700kms away both worked fulltime and had children as well.)
4 I loved our intimate wedding reception it was in a gorgeous marquee in my parents yard, wasn't so chuffed when a guest said "when we get married we are going to have a proper wedding not a backyard jobie! But then you have done it before"
5-the in laws brought hubbys daughter to the wedding. That's no biggy- but them insisting that we be home at 730am the next morning so they could leave to go home and we could take her on our honeymoon kinda was. 
6-we got home at 7am to ensure said in laws could leave on time and they stuck around until lunchtime! Mother in law had to view all the presents. 
Oh I could go on but it doesn't change any of it. And on the plus side we have been married now for 5.5 years have 3 gorgeous kids and still talk to the in laws.