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Wedding Party

"Matron" of Honor

So here’s my story and question(s); I apologize that it is long.   I was married in December 2009, and my cousin was my Maid of Honor (and she was the best Maid of Honor I could have asked for; I can’t even tell you how much she did for me). She and I spent a LOT of time together growing up and even lived together for a year or so during middle school when our families were going through a hard time. I consider her to be more like a sister than a cousin. Well, now she is engaged and she asked me to be Matron of Honor. When I told her I would be honored to be, but would prefer to be called “Maid” of Honor (because I really dislike the title “Matron”), she said the problem with that is that she asked her friend to be Maid of Honor, and that she figured I deserved a different title because I really am supposed to be THE honored attendant (stand next to her, hold the bouquet, plan the parties, etc.). The reasons she gave for asking us both to be Matron and Maid of Honor were because the friend will never have another opportunity to be Maid of Honor, and because my cousin and I live in different states (while the friend lives in the same state as her), and that it would be easier for me to plan the shower and bachelorette party with the help of someone who lives in the state.
My thoughts on this are that I will also never have another opportunity to be Maid of Honor, and now I also have to be called something I don’t like. I also will be sharing the responsibilities when, according to my cousin, I should have been the honored attendant. Yes, it would have been more difficult to plan a shower and bachelorette party out of state, but many people have done it (including her for my wedding), and I was excited about doing it because it was to make her happy. I also figured that I would have the help of the bridesmaids who live in the state with suggestions for the parties, but would still be able to manage the majority of the planning without having to figure out how to share the planning with another honored attendant (the Maid of Honor is already emailing me about how we are going to share these responsibilities). I feel as though I’m already missing out on a lot living in a different state (dress shopping – which I did for my wedding with only her [I flew out to visit her, and she came home for Christmas], visiting sites, cake tasting, etc.), and now I’m losing some of the opportunity to plan the parties. I also feel a little hurt because she was my only Maid of Honor, and it feels a little as though she doesn’t trust me to do it without her friend’s help. If that is really the case, or if she just wanted her friend in the first place, I would prefer that she just said that.   So, all that being said, my questions are: Is there another title other than “Matron” of Honor that still distinguishes me from “Maid” of Honor? Am I just being ridiculous worrying about this, especially since she was such a wonderful Maid of Honor to me (honest opinions, please, I promise I won’t get defensive)? Should I just suck it up and be called Matron and share the planning responsibilities? What should I say (if anything) to the Bride about this? What should I say (if anything) about this to the Maid of Honor? Any other thoughts or comments?   I know I’m being a little bit selfish and ridiculous, since my primary concern should be the bride. It would really make me feel a lot better if I could just have a different title, as trite as that may sound. So, if nothing else, could I please just get some suggestions on another title other than “Matron” of Honor. Thank you very much for reading this!

Re: "Matron" of Honor

  • The long and the short of it: yes, I think you're being a bit silly.

    Matron of Honor is the exact same thing as Maid of Honor.  It is just a distinction based on marital status--"matron" is married, "maid" is unmarried.  That's it.  It carries equal prestige.

    She picked her MOH the same way you picked yours.  In all likelihood she couldn't decide between you and the other girl, so rather than hurt anyone's feelings, she is having co-MOH.  Not a comment on you.  Get over it.

    I'm not a fan of the term "matron" either (I feel it ages me about 40 years).  So I do sympathize.  But to read all these things into it is really not normal, so I wonder why you have such little trust and faith in your friend who, by your own account, has been nothing but wonderful to you.
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  • In Response to <a href="http://forums.theknot.com/Sites/theknot/Pages/Main.aspx/wedding-boards_wedding-party_matron-of-honor-2?plckFindPostKey=Cat:Wedding BoardsForum:37Discussion:758dc1c5-3c3b-471b-a978-35589bba3cdfPost:88f8ab33-bd8f-4859-a982-db96187229fb">"Matron" of Honor</a>:
    [QUOTE]So here’s my story and question(s); I apologize that it is long.   I was married in December 2009, and my cousin was my Maid of Honor (and she was the best Maid of Honor I could have asked for; I can’t even tell you how much she did for me). She and I spent a LOT of time together growing up and even lived together for a year or so during middle school when our families were going through a hard time. I consider her to be more like a sister than a cousin. Well, now she is engaged and she asked me to be Matron of Honor. When I told her I would be honored to be, but would prefer to be called “Maid” of Honor (because I really dislike the title “Matron”), she said the problem with that is that she asked her friend to be Maid of Honor, and that she figured I deserved a different title because I really am supposed to be THE honored attendant (stand next to her, hold the bouquet, plan the parties, etc.). The reasons she gave for asking us both to be Matron and Maid of Honor were because the friend will never have another opportunity to be Maid of Honor, and because my cousin and I live in different states (while the friend lives in the same state as her), and that it would be easier for me to plan the shower and bachelorette party with the help of someone who lives in the state. My thoughts on this are that I will also never have another opportunity to be Maid of Honor, and now I also have to be called something I don’t like. I also will be sharing the responsibilities when, according to my cousin, I should have been the honored attendant. Yes, it would have been more difficult to plan a shower and bachelorette party out of state, but many people have done it (including her for my wedding), and I was excited about doing it because it was to make her happy. I also figured that I would have the help of the bridesmaids who live in the state with suggestions for the parties, but would still be able to manage the majority of the planning without having to figure out how to share the planning with another honored attendant (the Maid of Honor is already emailing me about how we are going to share these responsibilities) . I feel as though I’m already missing out on a lot living in a different state (dress shopping – which I did for my wedding with only her [I flew out to visit her, and she came home for Christmas], visiting sites, cake tasting, etc.), and now I’m losing some of the opportunity to plan the parties. I also feel a little hurt because she was my only Maid of Honor, and it feels a little as though she doesn’t trust me to do it without her friend’s help. If that is really the case, or if she just wanted her friend in the first place, I would prefer that she just said that.   So, all that being said, my questions are: Is there another title other than “Matron” of Honor that still distinguishes me from “Maid” of Honor? Am I just being ridiculous worrying about this, especially since she was such a wonderful Maid of Honor to me (honest opinions, please, I promise I won’t get defensive)? Should I just suck it up and be called Matron and share the planning responsibilities? What should I say (if anything) to the Bride about this? What should I say (if anything) about this to the Maid of Honor? Any other thoughts or comments?   I know I’m being a little bit selfish and ridiculous, since my primary concern should be the bride. It would really make me feel a lot better if I could just have a different title, as trite as that may sound. So, if nothing else, could I please just get some suggestions on another title other than “Matron” of Honor. Thank you very much for reading this!
    Posted by wilkesanders[/QUOTE]

    If your cousin has two people who she is closest to, she should have two MsOH. I'm sure she didn't think to herself "Cousin Wilkesanders certainly can't handle planning parties for me, so I better have a back-up plan!" She should have the people she is closest to, and it looks like that is what she has done. Wedding are not tit-for-tat. Just because you only had one doesn't mean that she only gets one. Just be happy that she gets two wonderful MsOH standing next to her on her wedding day.

    As far as titles, I don't think it would be out of line to say politely to the bride that the title "Matron" makes you uncomfortable, and would it be okay if she referred to both of you as "Maid of Honor" or as "Honor Attendant" (and just call the bridesmaids "attendants")? If she refuses, I don't think there is much you can do other than decline completely. At that point, though, I would think you were being silly.
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  • Thank you for the quick replies. Perhaps I just needed to get some frustrations out. Having someone tell me I'm being silly makes me realize that I am. I am very honored that she chose me, and I will accept being called whatever she wants me to be called (it is her wedding, after all). I guess the best thing I can do is be the best Matron of Honor possible, so that she's happy, and pleased with her choice of me as an honored attendant.

    Thanks again!
  • In Response to <a href="http://forums.theknot.com/Sites/theknot/Pages/Main.aspx/wedding-boards_wedding-party_matron-of-honor-2?plckFindPostKey=Cat:Wedding BoardsForum:37Discussion:758dc1c5-3c3b-471b-a978-35589bba3cdfPost:fba31ebf-7aa5-4af0-9d5a-613ae26fa64c">Re: "Matron" of Honor</a>:
    [QUOTE]Thank you for the quick replies. Perhaps I just needed to get some frustrations out. Having someone tell me I'm being silly makes me realize that I am. I am very honored that she chose me, and I will accept being called whatever she wants me to be called (it is her wedding, after all). I guess the best thing I can do is be the best Matron of Honor possible, so that she's happy, and pleased with her choice of me as an honored attendant. Thanks again!
    Posted by wilkesanders[/QUOTE]

    No problem. I'm glad you were able to vent those feelings out to us and not to your friend!
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  • Yeah, Matron just means your married. You can't, won't, never will be a "maid" unless you get divorced.
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  • My sister had two maids of honor, me and a best friend. (She had 12 bridesmaids counting us.) Her husband also had two best men, his brother and a best friend (with 12 groomsmen counting them). I plan to only have my sister as my maid of honor (I'm doing searches for whether she could still be my "maid" of honor rather than "matron" since she's married but they don't have kids yet, and it certainly seems fine to use that title of course!), but I think it's silly both for anyone to assume that you can't have two maids of honor, and also to get insulted or upset about the term maid or matron, so I'm glad you got over that, and hope you had a wonderful time at the wedding!
  • Halli620 said:
    My sister had two maids of honor, me and a best friend. (She had 12 bridesmaids counting us.) Her husband also had two best men, his brother and a best friend (with 12 groomsmen counting them). I plan to only have my sister as my maid of honor (I'm doing searches for whether she could still be my "maid" of honor rather than "matron" since she's married but they don't have kids yet, and it certainly seems fine to use that title of course!), but I think it's silly both for anyone to assume that you can't have two maids of honor, and also to get insulted or upset about the term maid or matron, so I'm glad you got over that, and hope you had a wonderful time at the wedding!
    @Halli620 - Your sister would be a matron of honor whether or not she has children because she is married.  Married (children or not)=Matron.

  • I have two sisters, and the three of us are equally close to each other, so when I got married I made them my co-maids of honor.  When one of them got married a couple months ago, my youngest sister was the maid of honor and I was the matron of honor.  (Which made me feel way older than 29 but what could I do, that's the title for a married maid of honor..)  For each wedding, the MOH responsibilities were easily split and shared.  Try not to think of your cousin choosing two MOH's as a slight, it sounds like you guys have a great relationship!  I hope you and your cousin enjoy the planning process and of course, the wedding! :)
  • I was MOH for my sister's wedding last year and she was Matron-of-Honor for my wedding last month. She wasn't super keen on the "Matron" part either but she was also our officiant so that's the title she wanted to be called. 
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