If I were to get married, it'd be the cheapest way possible. If my partner were to prefer an expensive wedding, we wouldn't be getting married in the first place anyway.
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My husband and I got married in our backyard with just our immediate family in attendance (10 folks in total - my brother was our officiant), but we livestreamed it for others that wanted to see. I found a legit wedding dress for $70 and didnt bother with alterations cause it fit fine enough and I was only gonna wear it for several hours. I built the wedding arch we got married under, my mama did my hair and makeup, and my mama-in-law and sister-in-law cooked our reception food.
We "got away with it" because it was during the quarantine period of the pandemic (NYE 2020). Even though my mom was pretty pissed at me for not having a real wedding, this is the way.
My wife and I were 6 months into planning ours and so fucking stressed out over making it a great experience for our honored guests. A text from her mother that read "Well if you invite X you have to invite Y or else it's going to be an issue..." was the straw that broke both our backs, but there had been months of this shit prior to that point, to the point where it was affecting my wife-to-be and I's relationship and we never argued like we did over planning our "traditional" wedding.
None of the stress was internal, it was all external...people weighing in with their opinions of our plans, what we should serve, oh this person doesn't like that, you should have this instead, well this person is going to insist on bringing their kids even if they kids are not invited so you'd better plan on having settings for them, dont use that photographer use this photographer or else wedding ruined, dont get this caterer get this other caterer or wedding ruined, dont have it here, have it there, or wedding ruined...
So we both said "Fuck it" and eloped. Found a small bed and breakfast a few hours away that offered a literal Elopement Package....the owner was a certified JP, his wife did all the decorating...they even provided witnesses. All we had to do was show up. The price was just under what the photographer alone was going to cost us.
Happily married for 10 years now. Best decision we ever made.
Hell yea.
Was there drama from the family about this? Story time! Only if you're comfortable sharing ofc.
Oh, tons. Her mom and dad were pissed more than anyone else, her mom for understandable reasons, the sentimentality of it and watching her little girl walk down the aisle, but her dad moreso because he was a major schmoozer that sat on their town board, owned many local businesses, is friends with state-level representatives and was a "VIP" that had already been pressuring us to invite people that neither of us even fucking knew for networking purposes which really pissed me off (less so my wife, she grew up with that shit). He offered to pay for the wedding which in itself was a source of stress as I didn't want to give him any angle with which to dictate the manner in which the wedding was conducted and damn sure didn't want it to turn into some state function.
My wife hated that shit, too, but it caused drama between my wife and I because her parents were up her fucking ass about this shit and she felt like she was in the middle despite being in full agreement with me because she'd given in to this sort of shit so much in her life she was used to it...she'd never had so much as a birthday party that didn't have at least three dozen people there, most of whom were there for her dad, not for her. I was just not going to let her family push her around, and I had zero hesitation in telling them to back the fuck off, which her dad was definitely not used to.
My family is a lot more "live and let live" with that sort of thing. I have some cousins that spent the equivalent of new car money on their wedding, and cousins that did like us and just went to the beach and had a friend of theirs get ordained and perform the ceremony while everyone is in their bathing suits with wet hair, but its very much left up to the people getting married and nobody else gets in the way because that's not their place. We have our own drama but at least in that regards its way better. My parents more or less said "Congrats, go have fun!" lol
We were in our 30s, and neither of us wanted to make a fuss, invite a bunch of people, declare our love, etc. Yuck. So we spent the money on the vacation of a lifetime in St Lucia, and got married in the beach with a nice couple we meant as our witnesses.
When we got back, everybody was just as happy that we got married, and my mom threw a little reception with a small cake. We were comfortable with that.
Know someone who got married by a lake on public land. Cost was basically a dj and catering for 30ish people. We did ours in a butterfly garden with a friend as the officiant and the total cost was a thrifted dress and tickets for the garden. 10/10 would recommend.
We're gonna do a bigger one for family when our finances aren't so fucked, but honestly I wouldn't care if we didn't.
Absolutely! It's the same as the whole diamond ring thing. If my partner doesn't want a malachite ring on one hand with a turquoise or tiger's eye ring on the other, we aren't going to be compatible.
If I were to plan a 'wedding' it would be a series of them. Invite over about 10-20 people at a time every other week for three months (I have a looooot of extended family that I am actually close with, so maybe even for six months depending on how big my partner's family and friends group is). We can split the cost of the food, and just plan some outings at the local sites (depending on where I would be, something like a park, the beach, a mountain hike, etc.). That lets us avoid the classic 'X hates Y, so you can't sit them near each other!' baloney. It also lets us redirect the cost of a venue, catering, photographers, etc. towards food alone, and we can splurge a little while still saving 80% of the costs.
My partner and I got married after 8 months of meeting. We're both quiet people with sensory issues, so we got married on our friend's front porch. Found someone to give our wedding for a few hundred bucks, the engagement ring and wedding bands were likely no more than $500 for all three.
All that plus the booze we probably did it for under $1500 total.
We think a lot alike. Few people have asked me 'But what if she wants a big wedding!?' and they never understand the reply of then I wouldn't be marrying her. If I'm going to blow a bunch of money when we get married it's going to be on the honeymoon. I would rather not spend money on a wedding party that most people don't want to go to and no one is going to remember. But to spend money to 'create memories' around the world... Hell yeah.
I think the two of you should get married.
One of the few actually true and relatable stories found in the wild.
Posting this online.. is 'the wife' locked up without contact to other people and without internet access?
And the daughter too
What are you imagining would happen if the wife found out? Likely, the husband told the wife about this whole thing the next time he talked to her. I take it you've never been married?
"Hello everyone I know: Just wanted to let you all know that my daughter's boyfriend is planning to ask her to marry him, but hasn't done it yet. Like, comment, and subscribe if you agree that we should keep this hush-hush!"
Asking a dad for permission to marry a woman is fucking disgusting and needs to go away. Women aren't property. Children aren't property. Fucking toxic shit.
Also boomer-ass "wife bad."
It’s more like “can I be in your family” now a days. If my wife’s dad said no, I would’ve still married her. But knowing that I’m accepted into their family is nice.
If that's the question, why is it always the father they ask?
It's not. I asked their mother. But asked isn't even really the right word. I discussed proposing to their child with them first out of empathy, courtesy, respect, just plain demonstrating the ability to have real life adult conversations. I think using the idiom of "Asking for permission" really has some pedants in this thread in a twist.
Most likely patriarchal society bs. I asked both parents.
Good for you. But whenever I hear about asking for the "parent's" permission, 99 times out of 100 it's the father they're asking.
Amongst my kin it's usually less the dad in particular and moreso that the dad is the embassador for the rest of the men of the family. Basically doing a check before the proper introductions, the women folks have their own rituals.
Or like from dude to guy talking to make sure we don't bother eachother. As you saw in the example, he had a bike coming and he would have disturbed that.
You're taking it way too literal. Some women think it's romantic when you ask their father for permission to marry them. If she wants you to do this, she'll likely tell you. The same way you'd discuss whether she wants her father to walk her down the aisle. These practices aren't necessarily bad or toxic.
If you are in a healthy committed relationship you talk about these sorts of things, there's no right or wrong. On the other hand, I do agree with you that it would be really weird and creepy to ask a father permission to marry his daughter behind her back.
My partner was going to marry me no matter what their dad said, but it meant a lot to them to get his approval. I was going into the military and he was a retired high ranking lieutenant.
8 years later their dad still loves the shit out of me.
I'm not military, but isn't "high ranking lieutenant" an oxymoron? I thought lieutenants were the very beginning rank for officers.
My bad. I shouldn't type while sick.
Lieutenant colonel is what I meant.
Boomers have the time of their life these days, making up stories and having all the attention
If that dude told me to wait for that reason, I would understand. Hell he can walk her down the isle while riding the bike that would be awesome
Well he wouldn’t be walking down the isle then would he?
Idle the bike and push it along your legs, blow all the petal from the flower girls away with the exhaust
ITT: Lemmites can't even take a fun little fake story without getting their knickers in a twist
Bold of you to assume my knickers can be untwisted.
How come he's got a bike "coming" but still needs the money? Has he not bought it? What sort of arrangement is that?
Could have put a deposit down with an agreement he gets to test it before committing to purchase.
Or it's the Internet and is lying
Or it’s the Internet and is lying
Who would do that?! Who would lie on the internet?!
Buster would NEVER
Whenever you order a vehicle, you pay a small bit down, but full purchase isn’t until it arrives. Sometimes you can get deals on custom orders that fell through at the last minute that a person didn’t buy.
Personally I don't need/want to involve the government in my relationship.
~~Is that "asking for hand in marriage" a american tradition, like the "driving license as a rite of passage" thing?~~
Edit: scratch that. I just remembered, that it's likely from a christian origin and is older than iron.
I don't know if it came from elsewhere first, but it's not very common nowadays in the US.
It's old-fashioned, and it's not like the woman's parents have the authority to say 'no'. It's more like a gesture of humility, then a "we accept you into our family" sort of thing. If someone does it these days, it's probably in the south and with a really traditional family who they're trying to impress.