Ok, so my daughter and I have no health insurance... My fiance has health insurance through his work but in order for him to add us to it we have to be married. I have an operation on my eye that's going to be pretty expensive. Last night my fiance suggested we go ahead and get married at the court house and then have the ceremony as we already planned in june. Logistically it makes sense but I don't know how I feel about it. It seems like a ceremony would be superfluous if we're already married but i don't want to not have a ceremony either. Also I don't know if our pastor would be willing to do the ceremony if we were already married. Any thoughts?
We are all a little weird and life's a little weird, and when we find someone whose weirdness is compatible with ours we join up with them and fall in mutual weirdness and call it love
Re: Married at the court house then church wedding later?
I'm not saying all of the above applies to you, by any means. My advice would be, number one, have the wedding you want since you do only get one. If you do decide to go the courthouse route, could you do a low-key party immediately after if you keep the courthouse wedding limited to just family? If there's any way to transition the reception to follow the JOP wedding, that would be my preference. If not, I'd hold off on the vow renewal until your 1 year anniversary, call it a vow renewal with anniversary party to follow, and leave it at that.
No matter what you decide to do, good luck with wedding planning, your surgery, and everything. You have to do what's best for you, so take what I (and everyone else says) from that perspective.
I completely understand the logical side of it - not having health insurance myself, I know how hard it can be. For what it's worth, if there's any way you can put off the surgery until after you're covered, that would be awesome. If not, and it's a huge amount of money, I see no problem with doing a more casual reception after the JOP ceremony. No one will have hard feelings if it's limited to just immediate family as witnesses, and then you can have something in a park, or a backyard BBQ, or even in a restaurant, depending on what you were orginally planning. So maybe it's something to think about? Re-envisioning your whole wedding is hard, but that's the closest I can think of to having your cake and eating it too.
I would get married at the courthouse, not make a big deal out of it and then do a renewal of vow ceremony.
I know, I know. I am going to get nailed with negative comments. But you asked for an opinion, and I am giving you one