We knew that our daughter and the young man she was dating were
pretty much planning on getting married this summer, but nothing was
"official." So here it was March, and I was getting concerned that if
they wanted to "do" a wedding, they were not leaving themselves enough
time.
I
was at work on a typical Wednesday, and I saw that I missed a call from
my daughter. I called her back, expecting to hear some normal,
daily-type, newsy thing. But this is what I heard instead:
"Chris and I are thinking about just going ahead and getting married this weekend."
Pause
"OK. And where were you planning on doing that?"
"Your house."
Pause
"OK."
And
thus began three days of adrenaline-induced living that resulted in a
wonderful, beautiful, I-can't-believe-we-did-this, thank-you-God ending.
Since
that joyful weekend took place, many friends and colleagues (almost all
women) have told me how fortunate I am to not have gone through months
and months of planning and preparation, and some of them have even said,
"I hope my daughter wants to do what your daughter did." Because of
those responses, I wanted to share our experience in the hope that it
will give someone else out there "permission" to buck the system and go
against the flow and "do" a small wedding. Our culture has convinced
young women that they need to spend thousands of dollars and months of
anxious planning to get married. It's not true... every couple is
different, and every family. Don't give in to the pressure if it's
really not right for the ones who are saying "I Do!"
So here are the details from our special day:
1. It was top secret
We
told almost no one. We did not want any feedback from anyone. We didn't
want to see the look on anyone's face that said, "You people are
insane. What is wrong with you?" It felt right from the first moment and
we wanted to move forward in that glow.
2. The Guest List
Immediate
family only, no exceptions. The thinking behind this was that if we
made even one exception, someone's feelings would be hurt. Immediate
family is on one relationship level (the highest), and if we added even
one person from the next level down, someone would feel slighted,
because there are many people on that next level.
3. Flowers
Thank God for a colleague who does flowers as a hobby. She was one of the two work colleagues who
I confided in, because we had already been discussing the potential
summer wedding. We kept it super simple: a table arrangement, a bouquet
for the bride and a boutonniere for the groom.
4. The Setting
From
the time I got home from work on Wednesday right through Saturday
(wedding day) around noon, most of my energy went into cleaning and
decorating. I made wedding programs. The couple brought empty wine
bottles, and we bought candles and made them fit into the wine bottles
(a little tricky, but I got pretty good at it). The dining room
furniture was moved out of the room, a lovely sort of altar/front
table was set up. The hutch became the cake table, and we found every
bit of clear glass or silver that could hold a tea light and put those
in the hutch (replacing my usual stoneware). Another smaller surface
held the champagne in ice and the wedding license paperwork. I was
careful to think about what the background would look like in photos -
even scraping stickers off the windows that had been there for 20 years!
We decluttered like crazy - temporarily putting things in other rooms
(I think I've since found them all again).
5. Food
Because the groom's mother and sister were
arriving from out-of-state just before the ceremony after a long drive,
and because we wanted people to relax before the ceremony, and because
we didn't want to make anyone get a loopy, sugar-alcohol rush from
drinking champagne and eating wedding cake on an empty stomach, we put
out a couple of plates of munchies for the half hour or so before we
actually started the 3:00-ish ceremony. Simple platters of veggies and
fruit with dip, along with punch and coffee, were out on the table so
folks could hang around and relax and chat.
6. The Gown
This
was the one real concession to the standard, very expensive wedding.
The bride wanted a beautiful dress. We were fortunate to have the most unusual wedding gown shop
only 35 minutes from home - and we went there the day before the
ceremony (I would not recommend this - I prayed a lot). After finding
the perfect dress off the rack, the store was willing to sell it to us
immediately, even though it was their only sample of that style and they
would not be able to get another from the designer for a couple of
months.
7. The Ceremony
Part of the
reason my daughter wanted to "get it over with" was because she is very
introverted, and a bit of an anxious soul. She has never, ever wanted to
be the center of attention. For years she told us she didn't want to be
up in front of a bunch of people and that she only wanted a "really
small wedding." We just didn't realize how "small" she meant. She said
just thinking about the potential wedding was making her anxious and
uncomfortable, and that was one of the reasons the couple decided to do a
stealth wedding.
In our state, couples may be
married by a Notary. In looking over the list of notaries in our county,
we were very, very pleased to find the name of a dear friend from our
church, whose son had been a friend of our children. We called him, and
even though he had never done a wedding before, he was very pleased and
honored to be asked. He spoke with the couple regarding what they wanted
for a ceremony. Even with our very small crowd (nine people total!),
the couple did not want to spend a long time up in front of everyone, so
what they wanted was a short ceremony. They settled on a greeting, a
few Scripture verses, a prayer, and the conventional vows and ring
exchange (the moms handed out the rings at the right time). It ended
with, "by the authority vested in me by the state of Maine, I now
pronounce you husband and wife. You may kiss the bride." Less than 10
minutes. Just what they wanted.
8. After the Ceremony
After
happy smiles and hugs, there were photos, and then a champagne toast by
the bride's dad, and the bride and groom cut their 6" cake and fed each
other a piece. Everyone else received a cupcake. The cake and the
cupcakes were ordered from a local shop,
which was very accommodating on short notice, and made a gluten-free,
lemon butter cream frosting, lemon-filled cake and cupcakes.
9. Photographs
The
groom's mom had a quality camera and experience photographing weddings,
so she was able to pose everyone and arrange the bride's gown "just so"
to take lovely photos. I was so relieved not to be the only one taking photos. I set up an ipad to take a video of the ceremony.
10. The End of a Wonderful Afternoon
We all went to a local restaurant
together (we made a reservation) for a delicious, relaxed meal, and
personal phone calls were made to those on the "next level" before
anything was announced on Facebook. After the meal we sent the beaming
couple off to a night at a seaside resort. When I made the resort
reservation online, I mentioned in the comments section that this would
be the couple's wedding night, and the resort had a bottle of champagne
and two champagne glasses waiting for them.
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