meresal
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Nov 13, 2007
- Messages
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I want to not spend $50,000 on flights and hotels getting all our friends and family to a beach, but this morning when I called my mom, I got the silent non-answer answerDate: 8/12/2008 11:20:52 AM
Author: fieryred33143
We've had friends that did a DW and then another reception when they got home. But they didn't redo their ceremony. I do know of one woman that did a traditional ceremony in the states and then another for her family in Korea. But I don't know how it turned out.
I agree with doing what you want.
Good luck with that. I have no idea and I''m in the same boat. It''s much easier for me though because I''m paying for it myself so I have more ground to say "screw you all, its my wedding" but I don''t have the guts to. I could imagine its even harder when the wedding is funded because you don''t want to hurt their feelings and tell them how you want your wedding to be.Date: 8/12/2008 11:35:23 AM
Author: meresal
I want to not spend $50,000 on flights and hotels getting all our friends and family to a beach, but this morning when I called my mom, I got the silent non-answer answerDate: 8/12/2008 11:20:52 AM
Author: fieryred33143
We''ve had friends that did a DW and then another reception when they got home. But they didn''t redo their ceremony. I do know of one woman that did a traditional ceremony in the states and then another for her family in Korea. But I don''t know how it turned out.
I agree with doing what you want.. I''m one week in and I honestly believe that THIS is going to be the hardest decision about the entire wedding.![]()
And C''s parents told us what we don''t use on the wedding we keep for a house. Uggh!!! I''m so confused.
At what point do I stop caring about pleasing my family. Just liek the living together situation... I''m going to obsess about this until we sign something, but as soon as we make a decision it will be over, and we can just get past it. I wish we could just do that and be done with it!! Sounds easy enough...
Thanks, I think...Date: 8/13/2008 1:33:24 AM
Author: jasontb
I'm just being a party pooper tonight, so this should be my last post. But I, myself, would not attend a second wedding where the bride and group were reenacting their actual wedding. Pick one or the other. (btw, I think destination weddings are self indulgent...weddings aren't just about you...they are about your guests too...although if you are paying for my flight and hotel, well that's a different story...as long as it's not on a Friday...I work on Fridays)
Thank you IG.Date: 8/13/2008 10:00:02 AM
Author: Independent Gal
In much of Europe, if you want a 'religious' wedding, you HAVE to have a civil wedding first because a priest or rabbi or other religious leader pronouncing you husband and wife has absolutely no legal standing. So it is very common to have two-part weddings in countries that take the separation of church and state seriously.
We did something similar, to make it easier for our far-flung international families to attend (each person was invited to whichever required the least travel for them). We had a civil ceremony at the city hall for WP1 in the country where my mother lives, then a religious wedding in my hometown for WP2. It was a little weird, but it saved our friends and family a lot of money and hassle. We just thought of it as one long marriage process. Kind of like when from when you sign the license to when he kisses the bride, see? Only drawn out over 2 weeks. The 2 weeks of limbo were weird though.
Why do you have to pay for everyone else's tickets and hotels? I think in your case if I were you I would invite everyone to the beach (at their own expense) but tell them that in case they can't make it, you will be hosting a reception back at home. Don't do a repeat of the ceremony though, unless you think you can conceptualize it as a two-part thing, rather than a repeat thing. See?
That's my suggestion!
I may have missed it, but is there a particular reason you wanted to have a destination wedding instead of staying at home? One of the trade-offs of a DW is that you usually have much less family and friends there than if you had a traditional wedding at home. We had a DW in Barbados last year, and only had 15 people. Most of my DH's family also couldn't make it. It was disappointing, but at the same time we really wanted something small, intimate, reasonably-priced, and non-traditional, so it worked for us overall.Date: 8/13/2008 11:29:42 AM
Author: meresal
Krispi: Yes, that is an option, however, C and I don't want to be alone. We are HUGE family and friends people and we both know that it just wouldn't be the same if it were just the 2 of us. I'm just trying to think of all the possible options... Thanks for your help!!
ETA: Thanks Trillionaire. The only people that I would expect to show up at the 2nd ceremony/reception would be mainly family, friends, and work related relationships, and all these would be in the Texas area. Most of our families would be going to the destination with us, and the 2nd would be for everyone else. Heck, open bar and it seems that anyone will make time for a party.