Beginning Your Wedding Plan Common Questions Every New Fiancée Asks Themselves
He asked me to marry him yesterday, and I'm the happiest person on earth,
but I know I need to get going if I want the perfect wedding! What do I do?
Oh,
enjoy the feeling first; he'll only ask you to marry him once. In fact, be selfish; keep
it private first for a while, your little secret. It won't last, but savor the intimacy of
having that knowledge just between you and him.
But
do go out with him or by yourself and enjoy the fun of looking at wedding things and
dreaming. Check out wedding bands, think together about what you'd like, and dream about
your perfect wedding. This period is not only tons of fun, but also gives you most of your
best ideas, the ones that will shape your wedding, and in many ways your marriage.
So when do I tell everyone? And how? Should I just
flash the ring?
Tell
your parents first. If you tend to be emotional, tell them one at a time. You can even ask
your fiancé to do it for you. And do everything you can to tell them in person. Sometimes
distance and finances precludes this; if you really can't get back to tell them (for
instance, if you're stationed overseas in the military or you're chained to a rock
somewhere), you can call them and tell them. Never do it with an email.
The
bride should get the opportunity to tell her parents and family first, but forgive your
fiancé if he gets so excited he can't help calling his parents first. It's
understandable; he's marrying you! After telling your parents, inviting all
your friends to lunch and casually flashing the ring is acceptable, and lots of fun when
they scramble over chairs and wrestle over your finger.
What kind of wedding should I consider?
There's
a fantasy wedding in every woman's, and even every little girl's, head. After all,
weddings and beauty pageants are the only time non-princesses have a legitimate reason to
wear a tiara (though I never let that stop me).
Don't
worry about money or practicality right now. What kind of wedding have you always wanted?
Do you dream of marrying in the cathedral in your home town? On the beach in Hawaii? In a
hot air balloon? With huskies on the frozen tundra's of Alaska? It's your wedding, and you
can be as creative or traditional as you want.
After
the wedding you want, you should think about intimacy. Lots of guests, or just your
parents? Should it be formal, should it be religious? Will you have to blend two religions
in your ceremony? If you have a question you're afraid to ask your fiancé, ask it now.
Your
wedding is personal, and yours. It should reflect the two of you, not anyone else.
Okay, I want to marry with my whole family and eighty
friends in Hawaii. How do I pay for it?
This,
alas, is where fantasy meets reality. You won't be able to afford the elaborate perfect
wedding unless you're independently wealthy.
But
that doesn't mean you can't have something really close to it. Work out a preliminary
budget. It'll help you prioritize your wants. You really want to marry on the beach, but
you don't care if Aunt Millie is there? Maybe you can just marry on the North Carolina
shore two hundred miles away. You don't have to put everyone up in a hotel, only the
wedding party. And carpools and roommates can be wonderful things.
What
you should NOT do is go into heavy debt. Light debt is okay. A little debt can be paid off
quickly after the wedding. But you don't want to be paying for your perfect wedding years
into the future!
When should I start planning for my perfect
wedding?
Once
you have a date set and a venue chosen, book the reception hall and church immediately.
Some venues book fast. But the rest of your wedding can probably wait a little while. If
you're having a large wedding, allow at least a year. For smaller weddings,
six months should be adequate. Allowing plenty of time to plan is in your best interests;
a well-planned wedding is a non-stressful wedding.
However you do things, the Ultimate Wedding Planning Toolkit can be your best friend while
you're planning your wedding. Check it out. It may be the most inexpensive and critical
tool in your wedding budget...

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