Forgive me Blog Spot for I have lost it. Thrice now have I turned into that which I swore I would not. Bridezilla happened. She took me over and she made me her puppet.
Poor Bridechiller. She sat,
huddled in fear, as the gargantuan monster she so swore to defeat rampaged
across the landscape, destroying all in her path, strewing things in her wake
and leaving a trail of confusion and mayhem.
To be fair, this wasn’t entirely
my fault. And it also was.
BF was prepared to propose and he
was prepared to marry me. Was he prepared to do it when I wanted him to….?
Possibly not. Yes, I will admit reader; I massively pushed him into it.
Anyway, long story short with
minimal naval gazing, BF spent two months getting his head around it. By the
time he had stuck his head up and gone ‘hey up babes, I’m ready to arrange
stuff!’ we’d booked the church, chosen the
venue, I’d practically bought a dress and had picked the colour palette. In all
fairness I had tried to get him involved and he’d just gone a bit angrily vague
whenever the ‘W’ word was mentioned – the way I go when a customer mentions that
they read the Daily Mail. BF acknowledges this. But it doesn’t change facts
that by the time he’d come to terms with it all, M and I had decided quite a
lot of the main things about the wedding. We always checked with BF first of
course (who would shrug and look slightly disinterested), but by the time he
came out of his man cave and actually wanted to be involved, most of the main
stuff had been done.
This hadn’t helped my stress
levels and, having felt rightly or wrongly that I had done a lot on my own, to
suddenly be told I needed to run everything we decided now by him and even find
he disagreed with some things I was
proposing (How could he?! Didn’t he know how IMPORTANT this was to me?! He
doesn’t even LIKE flowers gnash growl flame smash), it only served to fan the
flames building up inside me. All squashed up hidden away because of the
unacknowledged guilt that somehow I had bullied him into all of this. What a
mix of horrific emotions to keep locked up.
Added to work stress (I work in a
stressful place and so does he), family stress (M is wonderful but she likes
what she likes and knows how to push for it which is hard when you have a man
who doesn’t want what she wants but are forced to do all the explaining to both
parties) and trying to maintain social normality (no-one tells you you can’t),
I was a powder keg.
1.
In which
Bridezilla Makes her big Debut
One weekend in November we had
had a wonderful tasting session with Harold who does a kind of Italian German
fusion food – seriously lush. Both of Bf’s parents, BF, M & D and I had
eaten like absolute pigs having polished off 6 courses (and several entrées)
each. Afterwards, we retired to the sitting-room where we all sat around,
slightly glazed, looking stunned at one another, polaxed with over eating.
Suffice to say, I can heartily
recommend Pomegranate Catering
for their amazing taster menu, their willingness to please and their
encouragement that we were important to them. If you are getting married in the
Kent area, go with them. They are great and I can’t wait to eat like a pig
again at the wedding. Reminds me, speak to Mrs McW about putting an elasticated
front on the dress….
So basically, we chose the menu
from what everyone liked that night. Which was fine. Until we had to finalise
it. Skip forwards two weekends when we were back down with my folks…..
I never knew M and would come to
loggerheads over pork, but that’s what we did. M said lots of people didn’t eat
pork. I said more people didn’t eat lamb (the pork was amazing – I wanted the
pork), M said if we had the pork starter we couldn’t have the pork main. BF
said why not. M got a mulish look on. D tried to put a word in and gave up –
don’t think he cared about pork or beef. I said I didn’t want the beef I wanted
the pork. Which is ridiculous, because I live for beef and am frankly
ambivalent about pork.
Holy God, I swear, this is where
it really kicked off.
Before I knew it I was out of my
chair, screaming that everyone was ganging up on me before flouncing out and up
to my room - it took 5 minutes with the word pork mentioned maybe thirty times
and I was apparently sixteen again. I spread myself out on the bed (‘Like a
Disney princess weeping’ I pictured in my mind) until BF came up, calmed me
down and hugged me (which is, boys, what you do when your mad fiancée turns
into a raging tower of insane hormones over beef or pork). It took me an hour
to calm down, at which point I went downstairs and apologised. We all had a
laugh, ha ha ha! And I thought that was it.
I’d never do THAT again!
2. In which Bridezilla doesn’t like the cut or
colour of your gib, Young Man!
BF and I went to look at suits.
More on those later. Suffice to say we got a cracking deal on them at a local
shop in Oxford. Anyway, he’d gone off with his Best Man (Bestie from now on)
and tried a few on. He loved the style I liked too (win win - he looks like an
actual penguin in formal wedding attire so is going for a Prince Edward style).
And he fancied the dark blue. I laughed at this (ha ha ha!) thinking, ‘don’t
dwell on that thought darling’ but he carried on saying it. He liked the dark
blue, wasn’t the dark blue nice?
The colour palette I have picked (poor
BF! I can’t even try and say ‘we’) is going to be stunning. Although the
wedding is in August we are having essentially autumnal colours and calling it ‘harvest’.
Think this.
Then picture dark blue suits. Nooooooooooo.
But understandbly this, from BF’s P.O.V was the ONLY THING he got
complete control of – what he and his ushers wore. Guess what. He still
preffered the blue to the brown.
I went mental. In Oxford High Street. We stood at the traffic lights at
the corner of Cornmarket and Queen’s street and just yelled at one another.
YELLED.
Autumn colours and BLUE? Are you INSANE MAN?!
Well, mainly I yelled. And then he uttered the words which were sure to
bring out the fangs and the claws; ‘why can’t we just change the colour
palette?’ Oohhh. Ohhhh heck.
I lost it. People actually turned and stared. Poor BF. He whisked me
around the corner to the White Horse and by the time we had got there, the
tears had started. We sat down with a pint and had a little chat. The scales
fell from my eyes.
I felt dreadful. Especially when he said he wasn’t really that bothered
but just wanted to see how I’d react. Epic fail.
This would be the last time. The very last time I swore as we had a
cuddle and went to catch the bus.
Until it happened AGAIN over the
guest list.
3. In which Bridezilla Appears for Act Three
The Guest List is what will test
your ability to remain calm in any situation. Firstly, you know the people you
have to invite. Yes, you WANT to invite them but you also know that you can’t
NOT invite them. They take up half of the party.
Half.
So your 130 (which is massive for
most wedding numbers) is down to 65. Add in a lifetime of friends who you have
met while you were single for 29 years on both sides and then the people who
your parents say you should invite (because there will be at least 10 of them
on either side) and you’re out of space. Leaving 20 people who you actually really wanted to invite out in the cold.
That was one of the most
incredible temper tantrums I have ever had. It took me an hour and a half to
calm down, loose the scales and stop destroying Tokyo. And the sad thing is,
most of it was pure frustration and lack of control. I knew (know) that in fact we will get lots of people who won’t
be able to make the wedding and will therefore manage to invite a few on our
second list, but when you have people asking you when the wedding is so that
they can book their hotel and you know they are on the second list….awkward!
Don’t even speak to me about the
fact that we have said ‘no children’.
The no children thing, to me is
sensible. Not only do you have a more adult wedding but the idea of an enclosed
space with a load of ragingly drunk adults and small breakable people charging
everywhere makes me very nervous. Plus, we just don’t have the money or the
space. We’re in our Thirties – a lot of our friends have children and we just
don’t have the space for them. Plus, when you speak to most parents the idea of
having a night off is much more interesting than having to look after little
Jimmy, hyped up on cake and sweet food all day, then go home early with at
least one of you sober.
So as we have the space and the
marquee for the weekend, we have decided to do a second do on the Sunday for
all people who have families and would rather come with their kids. Bouncy
castle, ice cream van and I even get another frock. It can’t be all bad!
There we have it.
I think I have the solution now.
First I started getting my back and stomach seen to as it turns out that they
are a mess and this has helped my general stress levels. Second, I started
seeing a hormonal reflexologist who is amazing and has serious helped smooth
out the bumps life was causing meaning I take things more sensibly now. Karen
is great. She is in Oxfordshire and is much recommended. You can find her
website here. And lastly, BF and I have slowed down.
We’re trying to spend more weekends at home, more evenings at the gym or
watching Futurama together. Just chilling.
I realised that you just have to sail through things, not just bump up against them until they give way.
So now, when M starts to get angry or pushes something which BF and I don’t want, whereas I would have maybe have reacted and started a fight which would have me looking like this in mere moments followed by a sobbing fit.
In fact I have tried to cultivate
a general attitude to anything wedding related which leaves me feeling like
this:
Look at Zen Bride. She is so relaxed she is doing YOGA in her WEDDING
DRESS on a BEACH. How much more relaxed could you get?
Plus, what the hell?! This is
something which doesn’t sit well with me in our sensible, enlightened culture.
Why does a woman get to behave like an absolute bitch just because she is
getting married? It’s absurd and frankly pretty pathetic for all women. Read
this wonderful blog on Feminism and Bridezilla.
http://feministwedding.blogspot.co.uk/2010/11/bridezilla-is-anti-feminist-concept.html
http://feministwedding.blogspot.co.uk/2010/11/bridezilla-is-anti-feminist-concept.html
It’s not fair on BF either when I
go all Jackie Chang in a rage on him! He was more confused than I was all three
times. M & D were similarly hurt by my increasingly aggressive rages and
bouts of crying as all M wanted to do was make sure her daughter and future
son-in-law had the best wedding they could have, and all D wanted was to not be
yelled at.
Why the heck does it matter
anyway? It’s one day in our lives; one.
The birth of our first child, the day one of us gets that massive promotion,
the day we buy our first house….these are things which are just as important as
our wedding day and you’re not allowed to have stomping, screaming, fire
breathing hissy fits over them. Does it matter if the groom suits are the wrong
colour? Does it matter that the bridesmaids’ hair has fallen out or the only
photo of you looking half decent shows your back fat?
We’re one of tens of weddings,
all white, all as glossy and smoothly run as they can be and all trying to be
perfect on that one weekend in August. There will be hundreds more that month
and thousands that year. Why is our wedding so special? The only people it
matters to are BF and I, with the parentals coming a quick second. Being a
bride is not a right, it’s a privilege which you should treat as such. You are lucky to be doing what you’re doing, not entitled.
It’s certainly not worth
upsetting my fiancée and my mother and my father simply because I can’t (let’s
face it) have whatever the f*ck I want when I want it because I’m wearing a
white dress.
That’s not Bridezilla; that’s
just childish.
This has made me smile! In all the situations I would have felt very much the same! But you're right we need to stay calm and remember why we are getting married xx
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