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Main Page › Lifestyle & Fashion › Marriages
 

Planning the Wedding Together

 
Author: Irene Conlan

Some future grooms say early on, Just tell me when to show up and what to wear and leave me alone and he leaves the work of the wedding to the bride. This is not as typical now as it was in past years. More and more men are getting involved in and enjoying the process of planning their wedding. Some men still think that it is a girl thing and not a guy thing. Give me a break! A wedding is a couple thing and should have equal participation of both the bride and groom.

Approaching your wedding as a twosome can give you the best results in less time. It is also a fairly good predictor of how the marriage will be. It answers many questions that will be important to the marriage, questions such as:

Who makes the decisions? Are they joint decisions or does one of you always have to have his or her way? Is one of you always right? (This implies that the other is always wrong). Does one of you usually have to agree just to get beyond the impasse and get on with it? Is one of you The Boss and the other the Bossed? Does that work for you?

Are your management styles compatible? Does one of you micro-manage and one of you use a broad brush approach and does that work for you? Sometimes this is highly effective because the broad brusher generates the creative ideas and the micro-manager can work out the details. It takes both. On the other hand a broad brusher can drive the micro-manager crazy and vice versa.

Are you willing to yield to the expertise of the other? Can you divide up the workload evenly and not second guess each other, but trust that it will be done correctly and on time? What do you do when you have a huge disagreement? Do you have a plan to work things out, to negotiate until you find a common ground of agreement? Does one of you hold a grudge if the decision doesnt always go your way?

How do you handle money? Is one of you tight-fisted with money and the other an impulse spender? Can you agree on an amount you can spend independently without consulting the other? What happens if one of you doesnt abide by the agreed upon amount? How do you resolve the issue?

Do you have similar likes and dislikes? Do you find that you almost always pick the same thing, even though you arent together at the time? Do you, for example, generally like the same colors, music, style? If not, do you know and appreciate what the other one likes? Is it o.k. to like different things? If not, does one of you always have to capitulate or do you find ways to work out who gives in now and who gives in later?

If, as you get closer to the wedding date, you find that you are at each others throats and are playing the blame game or the poor me, the martyr scenario, its time to stop and take a good hard look at your relationship. Marriage is made up of multitudinous compromises by each of you. It requires give and take, yes and no, me and you in equal proportions. If the problem is a matter of exhaustion or the jitters thats one thing. But if you simply cannot work together, take some time to think it over, even if it means postponing the wedding. Some pre-nuptial counseling may be of help before you proceed.

Author Bio:

Irene Conlan

Irene Conlan is an ordained, non-denominational minister who has officiated at weddings in Scottsdale, Arizona and the Phoenix metropolitan area since 1999. She loves working with couples to design a custom ceremony that is uniquely theirs at a venue of their choice. Over the years she has gleaned some information that she can pass along to couples, parents, attendants, photographers and others in the wedding party to help avoid any pitfalls in their ceremony. And she can share the humor.

Irene also has a masters degree in nursing and is a certified hypnotherapist at The PowerZone in Scottsdale Arizona. She was Administrator of Nursing Services at St. Luke's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix and served as Assistant Director of the Arizona Department of Health Services. She was married to former U.S. Congressman John Conlan and has two sons, Christopher and Kevin and three grandsons. Irene has authored three books and is a regular contributor of articles to AZNetNews a holistic health newspaper.

You can search for this article using: Planning the Wedding Together, Lifestyle & Fashion, Marriages, marriage advice, marriage records
 
 
 

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