This "debate" stuff is fun -- and this isn't even the Debate Board!
RUDisney: I had a big, poofy gown with a big, poofy slip under it, and a long train that was fastened up in the back. I successfully peed by myself... and not in a handicapped stall, I might add. Really, it wasn't that hard.
You go girl! I feel sorry for all the other ladies whose dresses were so unwieldly that they needed a flock of attendents to help them use the restroom.
FOJMO: You're right about being CLASSIC -- "classy" weddings usually are. Maybe your "neck of the woods" is precisely that!
Um, I'm confused ... Did you just say that my "neck of the woods" is classy? Isn't that a compliment?
"New-fangled" -- who's being archaic here?
FOJMO, that was a wink to your "old-fangled" etiquette rules. I can see my sense of humor is being lost amidst the rigidity of your wedding day laws. My apologies, ma'am.
I never said that the bride and groom would not/should not visit every table/person. I said they may not be able to get there in a timely fashion. So, the attendants can help greet, talk to people until they can get there themselves.
Okay, agreed. But the comment about the bride and groom being caught up in too many "lengthy conversations" was what got me. The only wedding reception I ever attended had a head table, less than 75 guests (wedding party included), and was held in a somewhat intimate location. Yet I never once got to say hello to the bride outside of the receiving line. She parked herself at the head table having "lengthy conversations" with her wedding party, and left my family and I (who knew no one else at the wedding) feeling like unwelcome outcasts the whole time. In situations where the number of guests is on the lower side, there is no excuse for the bride and groom not greeting -- and particularly THANKING -- all of their guests individually. JMHO.
Attending to the bride/groom is something the attendants should do as their friend/family. It's something they should WANT to be doing. It is never meant to be looked upon as "work". Even though I referred to it as a duty, maybe that's too strong of a word for it. It is part of why the bride/groom asked you to be in their wedding party. Not just to dress up and smile for the pictures.
I highly disagree. When you ask someone to be in your wedding party, it should be because you love them, care about them, and want to share your wedding day with them in a very special way. You should NOT ask because you think you'll need the help and since they're a close friend or family member, they wouldn't mind attending to your every need. I want my wedding party to have fun dressing up, enjoy smiling for the pictures, and more importantly, play an important part in what's sure to be the most amazing day of my life. Asking these people to be servers, greeters, question answerers, dress fixers, bathroom helpers, and a plethora of other roles is unfair. I think of members of the wedding party as
GUESTS first and foremost -- and very special ones at that -- and I would never ask those things of a guest. If I ask my mother to be there with me when I have my first child, it will be because I want her to share in the joy of the moment, not because I want her to deliver the baby herself.
By all means, have a terrific time at your wedding. But if you have attendants that don't see what they need to be doing to help you and the groom, then good luck! Unless you have the patience of a saint, you'de be happy to have someone helping you instead of just being cutouts in matching dresses sitting at your non-existent head table.
I intend to have a terrific time at my wedding someday, thank you. But I'd rather not have attendants at all than have a group of my closest family and friends feeling more like they were hired help than guests.
I sincerely hope that you profusely thanked and hopefully gave gifts of appreciation to each and every person who was a member of your wedding party. Sounds like they deserved it for all the things they did for you.
