Wedding Etiquette Forum

Been reading about the dreaded PPD -- would this be one?

As background, I'm currently a PhD student in the UK, and my partner is a PhD student in the US.  We're both US citizens, and we're already aware of visas and other fun stuff we would need if we got married while I was in the UK.  Just to get all that out of the way -- we are at the very beginning of planning.

Basically, our wedding is probably going to be somewhere between very small (under 10) or just a straight-up elopement.  Part of the reason for this is because the partner has a large, Southern family where fifth cousins expect invitations.  I'm NY area raised, and my side is decidedly less....family-oriented after the first cousins.  The two of us are also huge introverts, and after seeing the drama-rific fustercluck his brother's wedding was (and that was still under 50 people!!), elopement sounds marvelous.  We currently don't have a big budget either -- as above, students.  We're not having a shower or reception, as we don't have anywhere to put items one would normally receive while setting up house.  The only thing we would have would be dinner and brunch for us (and for our petite sub-10-person-party, if we have any one else).

At some point, I will be moving back to the States and we'll live together.  He's super traditional, and he refuses to cohabitate before the wedding; this is why the wedding has to happen as soon as or before I move back.  I've told him I'm fine with 'living in sin' as an Anglican-who-was-raised-Catholic, but he's not as a born-and-raised-Church of Christ person -- even if he's moving away from the organized religion itself, the priorities remain the same.  So here's my concern:

Once we have the money, we would like to have a wedding reception for our mutual friends - not family, not strangers to either one of us.  This may not occur for over a year after we get back; at least one of us needs a job in order to accommodate our guests.  We would probably be wearing our wedding clothes -- nice suit for him, a vintage white lace cocktail dress for me -- because, in part, budget, but also, we want to wear those clothes as a yearly anniversary gig rather than just once in a life time. (Essentially, our plan in buying our wedding clothes is that we want to wear our wedding clothes and go out every year on a big date for our anniversary.  Might sound hokey, but we like it. Gives us incentive not get fat as well as old together!) 

We would not be claiming that we weren't already married.  There would not be a ceremony.  We would probably have a registry because it would be our shower/reception/housewarming all-in-one.  We would probably have a fun cake or cupcakes - probably not a super traditional 5 tier white monstrosity.  Again the reason for the delay is that at least one of us needs a job to do this right for the guests, plus we would actually have a house/apartment to put these gifts in at that point; we're currently in two apartments under 700 ft sq and separated by an ocean, ha. 

So again, I'm not sure if this is a PPD or not.  I know a lot of problems would be solved if he was ok with us living together before we got married -- we'd just wait another few years for when we could afford doing everything at once --  but that's a non-negotiable for him, and I respect that. 

Re: Been reading about the dreaded PPD -- would this be one?

  • huskypuppy14huskypuppy14 member
    2500 Comments Fifth Anniversary 500 Love Its First Answer
    edited May 2014
    You can always throw a party as long as you don't reinact the ceremony. I would nix the registry. You would already be married. So no shower. Also, no one should be doing a registry for a house warming.

     Eta: don't call it a wedding reception, it's a party to celebrate your marriage or anniversary.
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  • No registry, but I'm on board with all the rest of it. 
    What did you think would happen if you walked up to a group of internet strangers and told them to get shoehorned by their lady doc?~StageManager14
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  • Skip the registry, party is fine.

    You should buy dinner for whoever attends your ceremony.
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    Anniversary
  • phiraphira member
    5000 Comments 500 Love Its Second Anniversary 5 Answers
    Yep, I'd be on board with everything except the registry. I'm extra on-board with cupcakes.
    Anniversary
    now with ~* INCREASED SASSINESS *~
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  • I was going to ask if you were confident that you were the mother, then I stopped myself.  :D
  • KGold80KGold80 member
    500 Love Its 500 Comments Name Dropper
    I had the cake tasting long before the food tasting. I guess it is easy to see where my priorities lie. :)
    Wedding Countdown Ticker


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  • @guitarslayer

    Indeed you did, my bad!

    Have a kick ass time and yay cupcakes
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    Anniversary
  • kmmssg said:


    AddieCake said:



     But I think cupcakes are crucial to the success of a marriage, so there will be those. 



    You are my new best friend. 

    And mine.  Cake is essential to life.  (Says the MOB who said NOTHING when her bride DD said NO CAKE, just dessert buffett)  Well, I may have volunteered to make a couple of kitchen cakes which she said was fine, but my genetic offspring said no to wedding cake.  I blame her father.

    Your restraint was admirable. Had I said that, Mama HisGirl would have had rather a lot to say on the topic, none of it pleasant.
    Anniversary

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    I'm gonna go with 'not my circus, not my monkeys.'
  • Jen4948Jen4948 member
    Knottie Warrior 10000 Comments 500 Love Its 25 Answers
    Except for the registry, your plans sound great.

    Cake is a necessity. :-)
  • AddieCake said:
     But I think cupcakes are crucial to the success of a marriage, so there will be those. 


    You are my new best friend. 
    And mine.  Cake is essential to life.  (Says the MOB who said NOTHING when her bride DD said NO CAKE, just dessert buffett)  Well, I may have volunteered to make a couple of kitchen cakes which she said was fine, but my genetic offspring said no to wedding cake.  I blame her father.
    Your restraint was admirable. Had I said that, Mama HisGirl would have had rather a lot to say on the topic, none of it pleasant.
    I am trying to maintain my reputation as the MOB who hosts the weddings her DDs envision.  The lips stay zipped unless there is an etiquette violation.  However, notice I did volunteer, from the very bottom of my heart, to make a couple of kitchen cakes......  I have a chocolate cake (well really it is Ina Garten's) that is to freaking die for and everyone always asks for it.  Gonna throw some raspberry filling in that sucker!
  • Mmm, cupcakes.

    Not sure how everybody will take this, but you could always just make an Amazon wish list (I always have one, for birthdays or whatever) and only direct people to it if they ask.
  • Mmm, cupcakes. Not sure how everybody will take this, but you could always just make an Amazon wish list (I always have one, for birthdays or whatever) and only direct people to it if they ask.
    Yes, I was just going to say this.  Personally I keep one from year to year for Christmas ideas and add to it as things come up; a book I want to read, a set of beer glasses I saw on a friend's wedding registry, etc.  I also keep a secret one that I might move to my public one after I buy a house which includes lots of stuff I just don't have space for in my tiny apartment but would love.  That way, when Christmas (or another gift-giving event) comes up I'm not wracking my brain for things I thought I'd want over the last few years.  And I also use it to buy cute gifts for myself when I'm especially deserving.
  • KaurisKauris member
    500 Love Its 500 Comments Second Anniversary Name Dropper
    I think @Jells2dot0 had an elopement and a very small registry, but only after more than a few people asked her for one.
  • At some point, I will be moving back to the States and we'll live together.  He's super traditional, and he refuses to cohabitate before the wedding; this is why the wedding has to happen as soon as or before I move back. 
    Is living together really the tipping point to legally bind yourself to someone? You're rushing to get married so you can live together? "Once one of us gets a job" is also a little eh. What is the rush to wed? You can move back, both live in your own separate places, be together, get settled, get your professional lives straight, and then get married. Being unemployed was the most stressful time in my life. Having no money is stressful. Why do you want to jump into a marriage just so you can live with someone? You were willing to live together without being married, so you were okay without getting married. If you were my girlfriend, I'd invite you over for a glass of wine and a grrrrrrrl, slow it down. 
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