real life

"Yes, I'm getting married, now leave me alone."

 

 

 

I’m getting married in April. What’s your immediate reaction to that? Let me help you. Common responses include:

“Oh my God! This is a big year/time/day for you!”

“Ooh… babies are next!”

“Are you on a wedding diet?”

“He’s finally done it!”

For the past few months, some variation of the above is all I hear (yes, even from virtual strangers.) And I’m so over it. It’s gotten to the point where I’m terrified to tell people I’m getting married. I went shopping for wedding shoes the other day, and the sales assistant asked if they were for a special occasion. “Yes, a wedding,” I said. Then I paused. “Oh… well, my wedding,” I mumbled (and the sales assistant thought this was hilarious).

Now, I want to get it out there that this is not an ‘anti-wedding’ piece. My partner is the bomb and I love him. I’ve personally not minded either way whether we get married, and he’s a little old-school and was into it, so why not? Why not have a big party and an excuse to buy a new dress?

So at the end of the day, I don’t have an issue with getting married. I love a good bit of froufrou skirting, a triangle of wedding cake, and seeing people cry in public.

My issue is with everyone’s reaction to it.

“Oh my God, this is a big year/time/day for you!”

If getting married is the most important thing to happen to me, I must lead a damn boring life. I mean, I recently lived abroad; made a big career switch; bought a house; welcomed a second beautiful niece into the world; and have travelled all over the world, but no worries: getting a ring on my finger should be considered a big coup. My partner is wonderful, but he’s my partner – not an extension of me.

“Ooh… babies are next!”

Of course they must be. Because I’m a virgin, and we sleep in twin beds.

“Are you on a wedding diet?”

This question is wrong on so many levels. The fact that it’s incredibly rude and could make most confident woman cower (not me – I’m proud of my guns) aside – why must I be thin on my wedding day? And then what – after that I can all let it go, because I’ve landed my man?

“He’s finally done it!”

I feel that our relationship wasn’t fully recognised by a lot of people until we got engaged – until my partner “made a commitment to me.” We’ve been together for nearly six years, have lived together for three, and co-signed a big fat mortgage nine months ago. Plus, we’re mad about each other. So, neither of us have needed a ring to seal in commitment – we’re committed to each other already. Our wedding should merely be a celebration of what is already known. I’m also bewildered at people who think that deciding to get married is a one-sided decision, from the guy – sorry, does marriage involve two people, or have I been watching too much Big Love?

I am more than my relationship, and my relationship is more than marriage. Commitment didn’t start when he proposed. It won’t start when we sign the paper. It started years ago, and we simply want to have a party to celebrate it.

Ally holds degrees in creative writing and advertising, and works in marketing in the not-for-profit industry. She balances the corporate world with her Brisbane entertainment blog, www.eatdrinkbrisbane.com. You can often find her lurking in the city’s craft beer bars, chasing neighbourhood cats, or upside down in a yoga headstand.

Which do you think is greater: the pressure on couples to get engaged, or the wedding pressure that follows? If you’re engaged or married, what were the most common things people said to you?

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Top Comments

Mandy 10 years ago

i actually love this! we have 2.5 weeks and i keep having a horrible feeling because i m not over the moon excited. I m over the moon excited about seeing my fiance and my step son waiting for me (who woldnt love a 4 year old in a suit who is the image of his dad swoon) but the whole "wedding" has been driving me a little bonkers. I would of loved to have imediate family in a register office and then have taken them to lunch and been done with it. And everyone says if thats what you want to do then just do it.... then comes the guilt trip of well is that really fair on this person and that person etc next thing you know it $10 000 later (which is a very reasonable amount dont get me wrong) and having to plan a whole day on your own as the people who wanted this wedding havent been able to assist and you think to yourself this is really just about our marriage not what we had to do for the families to be happy. Now i am so close though i can see the happiness it brings to the other people in our lives that we chose to have the big hoo ha it kinda of makes it worth the while. I think the best thing to think about is that a marriage is for a husband and wife, the wedding is for the family.


Hannah 10 years ago

Oh my gosh. This makes me feel so at ease! I've been struggling with the "wedding" since we told everyone we were engaged. People soon got the idea that we weren't into anything huge or soon when we hadn't lifted a finger six months later. Or had a wedding ring.
BUT since we got engaged all those "tight" couples and friend-groups that my parnter was practically born into and I, apparently, had no place in, suddenly welcomed me with open arms. Who cares that we'd been together for seven years, we'd just got engaged!
LOVE, LOVE, LOVE reading about this. My partner and I just looking at our wedding board (it's actually a spread sheet of costs that is blowing my mind, in a bad way) and have almost decided NOT to have a wedding. Again.