I recently found out that a friend of a friend was married before her wedding, but I actually found it kind of acceptable. Just wanted to see if I'm in the minority here:
They were engaged and planned their whole wedding. They selected their officiant - a friend or relative or something. A few months before the wedding, their state changed the law, so the officiant could no longer legally marry them. He wasn't a religious official, but before the wedding the state allowed for that (DC has a similar law, where anyone can become an officiant for a day). Because of this, they were legally married the day before the wedding at city hall. Nobody was present (not even family), she didn't wear her gown, and they don't consider it to be their anniversary. It was more a matter of circumstance.
What are your thoughts on this? Like I said, I found it to be acceptable, but I didn't know about everyone else.
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Re: An acceptable reason to get married before the wedding?
dcbride86 said:
Nope. A few days before the wedding is circumstance and I might be a little more forgiving. But with a few months there was still time to find a different officiant to oversee the wedding on the actual day.<a href="
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They don't live in DC, though they do live in another fairly large city.
I agree it isn't the best planning, I just didn't think of it as a big etiquette breach because it wasn't intentional from the outset like many other situations where the couple is already legally married
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I'm sorry, but I disagree. This is not an acceptable excuse IMO. They could have found a new officiant who could have legally married them on the day of their wedding.
The only time IMHO it's acceptable to get married on another day is if the government is denying you the right to legally marry in your home state, ie same-sex marriage. And even then I think the couple should be upfront about what's going on.
Formerly martha1818
I understand what you all are saying. Maybe I would feel different if I had ever actually been to a wedding where this had happened, but I haven't so I probably can't fully appreciate how insulted I might feel.
Also, for the record: I would NEVER do this. I actually already have a backup plan just in case something with the temporary officiant law falls through lol. My mom is good friends with a judge who offered to "team up" with the officiant should anything go wrong. I was just curious on your thoughts about this particular situation because I found it to be different than many other examples I had seen
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If you're going to do something like this, just be upfront about it. People will respect you more than if you keep it a secret from them. They might be a little bummed, but they will be more ok with it if you are upfront about it.
She shouldn't have kept it a secret. I don't understand how people are ok with doing things like this... I understand stuff comes up, but that's not a good reason to lie to the people you love. smh.
I'm the fuck out.
Formerly martha1818
As far as I know, it actually hasn't spread. My friend told me when I was worried about finding an officiant, but as far as I know she hasn't told anyone else. And I don't know any of the brides other friends, so I couldn't spread it if I wanted to.
I'm not saying this makes it right, I'm just saying I don't think it will spread. They got married about 3 or 4 years ago I think, and as far as I know it hasn't spread yet.
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But it was intentional from the outset as soon as they found out the law changed, you know what I mean? Like no one who does this dreams of doing it that way since they were little, but an event happens (lost insurance, military, decide on destination wedding, whatever the benefit is they want to get) and then they decide. So its really the exact same as everyone else who does it. The only time I think this would be fine is if it happened like the Thursday before the wedding. And then there would be no reason to lie about it, because I think most people would understand. But I probably still wouldn't do the fake ceremony.
During a courthouse wedding, people get married. That's what the "paperwork" is about. It's insulting to suggest otherwise just because there's no big white dress, attendants, gifts, cake, spotlight dances, or any other bells and whistles.
@Fran1985 I totally get what you're saying, and you're definitely right. Like I said before, I've never been in a situation where this happened, and I think it's difficult for me to fully appreciate how insulting it would be to attend one.
I never thought it was fully acceptable, I just saw it as slightly different than other PPD situations. But you guys are right - it's not cool. I was just curious about the reaction here
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@CMGragain - I'm NOT saying this was a good reason for a PPD, but I disagree with the bolded. I have a family friend who's mom's cancer relapsed while he was engaged and she died before the wedding. It was really fast acting, and she didn't want him to change the wedding plans (I think the venue had sentimental value to her, and she wanted him to have his wedding there, even if she couldn't be there). They got married at her death bed, with only the two of them, an officiant, and the mom. I'm not even entirely sure if this was a legal ceremony or not, but if it was, I see this as a good reason for a PPD.
They had the wedding, as scheduled, a couple months later, wedding gown and all. They were honest about the situation, and, to my knowledge, nobody side-eyed or groaned about how they shouldn't have a wedding after the ceremony for his mom. The mom wanted her son to have a big wedding, but also wanted to see him get married. This was the only way both could happen. It was such a horrible and sad situation, but I think definitely a good reason for a PPD.
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