sajilunni
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- May 5, 2007
- Messages
- 194
I'm about 6 weeks from our V.R. and I'm so stressed/confused!
We've never been to a vow renewal before, and I'm not sure what to expect. (I'm a spoiler reader-- I always need to know what to expect). To make it even worse, I don't think I'm even sure on the basics of a traditional wedding ceremony. I haven't been to any non-religious weddings, so I have only the abbreviated weddings I've seen on TV's to go on. I don't even know what the difference is between "the vows" and "the exchange of rings". We had two wedding ceremonies 10 years ago (Hindu and Catholic), but they were both in our native language which we don't speak so we just repeated the vows phonetically and never found out exactly what we were vowing to each other.
So we heard with vow renewals you could have exactly the kind of wedding you always wanted. But it's hard for me to personalize something I have no concrete understanding of. These are the things we know we want: we want to walk down the aisle togeether, after our kids have already done their processional. We are going to do the sand ceremony with all 5 of us. My husband wants my son to read a paragraph my husband wrote about why he loves me, and wants our daughter to do the same on my behalf. We were going to just keep our rings on and present family pendants to the kids. We were going to write our own vows, but when I look up "write your own vows", it seems more like a paragraph that you recite to your spouse, rather than the segmented repeat-after-the-officiant that I had thought were vows. What is it that people usually write themselves? I'm really confused. Is my vision even possible? Or will it look really weird and chaotic?
So for any of you Escape re-brides, would you let me know what exactly was involved in your ceremony? Or for anyone who's been to a vow renewal, could you tell me what the flow of the ceremony was? Are there readings? Many people have talked about all the nice things the officiant said, when does he say these things? Does he have a speech? Does the officiant do anything besides just guide us along to the next part of the ceremony?
Any input you could provide will be greatly appreciated by me.
Jil

We've never been to a vow renewal before, and I'm not sure what to expect. (I'm a spoiler reader-- I always need to know what to expect). To make it even worse, I don't think I'm even sure on the basics of a traditional wedding ceremony. I haven't been to any non-religious weddings, so I have only the abbreviated weddings I've seen on TV's to go on. I don't even know what the difference is between "the vows" and "the exchange of rings". We had two wedding ceremonies 10 years ago (Hindu and Catholic), but they were both in our native language which we don't speak so we just repeated the vows phonetically and never found out exactly what we were vowing to each other.
So we heard with vow renewals you could have exactly the kind of wedding you always wanted. But it's hard for me to personalize something I have no concrete understanding of. These are the things we know we want: we want to walk down the aisle togeether, after our kids have already done their processional. We are going to do the sand ceremony with all 5 of us. My husband wants my son to read a paragraph my husband wrote about why he loves me, and wants our daughter to do the same on my behalf. We were going to just keep our rings on and present family pendants to the kids. We were going to write our own vows, but when I look up "write your own vows", it seems more like a paragraph that you recite to your spouse, rather than the segmented repeat-after-the-officiant that I had thought were vows. What is it that people usually write themselves? I'm really confused. Is my vision even possible? Or will it look really weird and chaotic?
So for any of you Escape re-brides, would you let me know what exactly was involved in your ceremony? Or for anyone who's been to a vow renewal, could you tell me what the flow of the ceremony was? Are there readings? Many people have talked about all the nice things the officiant said, when does he say these things? Does he have a speech? Does the officiant do anything besides just guide us along to the next part of the ceremony?
Any input you could provide will be greatly appreciated by me.
Jil