Monday, January 31, 2011
Step 5 for Involving Your Parents in Your LGBT Wedding
And here’s the best one, “I don’t think we can invite the cousins, your friends from work and John and Jane, your next-door neighbors because we just can’t afford it.”
If your parents bite and are willing to contribute, I’d advise asking for a specific dollar amount rather than for coverage of certain expenses. The reason is that if you ask them to pay for the band and the photographer, your parents might feel like they get to pick out those vendors. And you don’t want to relinquish that control to your parents. This is your vision.
Jen said priceless gems such as, “Even though Bernadette’s a wedding planner, it’s still crazy how much things cost when it’s your own wedding!”
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Step 4 for Involving Your Parents in Your LGBT Wedding
This is part four in my series about getting your parents excited about your gay wedding....
OK, you've been patient, you've expressed your own natural enthusiasm, and you've asked them fairly generic and random questions.
Step four: Invite your parents' participation with more emotional details. They may feel like your wedding plans are a runaway train. They may feel like you got engaged out of the blue, are furiously planning a big gay wedding (and they don't know what a gay wedding looks or feels like) and they’re left at the station wondering what the heck just happened.
I believe that excitement is contagious. If you are excited about your wedding, eventually your parents will be. Now is the time to recruit them to be actively involved – and if you are a bride who wants to wear a dress, there is no greater opportunity than dress shopping with your mother. If you are not wearing a dress or are a gay groom, ask for their help on choosing someone to do a reading during the wedding ceremony or ask your mom about her favorite flower or cake flavor. Invite their input and get excited over their responses.
This is the step where Jen’s parents boarded the Coveney-Smith wedding train. Jen’s mom came to town and they went dress shopping. Jen started talking about the bridal shower. During her visit, Jen's mom visited the place where we were to marry and loved it. And when she went back home, she was filled with excitement and then Jen’s dad got excited - because it's contagious.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Step 3 for Involving Your Parents in Your LGBT Wedding
Step Three: Ask for Advice
Asking for advice (not financial help (yet), is the most critical step. Ask open-ended questions about etiquette issues, like who to invite. An example would be, “should we invite all of our second cousins to the wedding?” Or ask for advice about logistical matters: “we’re thinking of having an outdoor ceremony. What do you think of that?” You want to involve your parents without generating guilt.
In our case, Jen asked her mom for ideas on which of her parents’ friends to invite, and whether her grandma could make the trip. These types of questions might strike your parents personally, and may make them feel a little guilty for any lack of enthusiasm.
Photo by Michael Manning
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Step 2 for Involving Your Parents in Your LGBT Wedding
As your wedding plans progress, gradually start sharing your excitement about the wedding plans. Say things like, “we took a look around at venues today and it was really fun,” or “I’ve been looking through bridal magazines for dresses I might like.” This one works great: “I received the sweetest engagement card in the mail today from Aunt Mary! She sounds so excited for us!” My advice is to just say normal, typical, wedding-planning things, as if it’s any other conversation with your parents. Don’t make a big deal out of the plans at first but start to plant the seed that your wedding is for real and that you are taking action.
This is what I urged Jen to do with her mom. Slowly start releasing information about your ideas, just in the normal course of conversation. It piques curiosity.
Keep reading as I share the remaining steps to get your parents excited about your wedding plans.
Photo by Closed Circle Photo
Monday, January 10, 2011
Win a Free Wedding In Vermont (for Military Personnel)
The prize includes a full wedding and reception for 50 guests including food, drink and flowers; professional DJ and photography; and a three nights stay at the Calvin Coolidge Homestead.
You can check out the details over here on the Winc-Vermont website! I am so happy they opened this contest to same-sex couples now that Don't Ask Don't Tell is repealed.
Good luck to any of you who enter!
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Step 1 for Involving Your Parents in Your LGBT Wedding
Step One: Be patient
Don’t get bent out of shape if your parents are less enthusiastic than you’d hoped. Give them time. Don’t get defensive and bitter. Remember that it may have taken you a while to get used to the idea (of being gay or of getting married), so be patient with their process. Your parents may feel like your wedding plans are a runaway train. They may feel like you got engaged out of the blue, are furiously planning and they’re left at the station wondering what the heck just happened. I recall my wife Jen being frustrated and angry with her parents for not being more excited about our wedding. I urged her to have patience. She had no choice. Jen’s parents are incredibly kind people and came around, of course. Yours may, too, but start slow with them...
Stay tuned for more tips!