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Wedding
Planning: Involve your Fiancé in 10 Easy Steps by Blake Kritzberg
He's popped
the question. You've chosen a date. And now, you're swimming in
a sea of euphoria with no horizons. Good thing, too, because
there are literally a thousand things to arrange before the big
day.
You do the
research, buckle under and dive in. But you find your fiancé's
ardor for the event itself seems to have cooled. It's not that
he isn't mad about marrying you; after all, he is a great guy,
even if he can't tell a Vera Wang from a Gunny Sack. It's that
his preparation style is hands-off, to say the least. And
planning a wedding isn't a job built for one.
So what to
do? Here are ten ways to involve him without increasing both of
your stress loads:
1)
Delegate areas that have a prayer of interesting him.
The worst
thing you can do is expect him to match your ten to twenty years
of feminine wisdom on the relative merits of buttercream vs.
fondant.
Here are
some probable no areas when roping in a reluctant wedding
planner:
-
Selecting the cake frosting
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Choosing the favors or favor packaging
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Selecting the wedding colors or floral arrangements
Then there
are the potential maybes, fraught with fewer hazards:
-
Choosing the photographer
-
Choosing the videographer
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Arranging the rehearsal dinner
-
Arranging the all-inclusive honeymoon
-
Renting big, tricky items like outdoor tents
These are
probable yeses, well worth running by your guy:
-
Selecting the DJ or the band
-
Setting up and maintaining your wedding website
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Researching and selecting charities, if you choose to
donate instead of giving out favors
-
Setting up the carriage, limo or other transportation
arrangements
2) If you
ask him to help you choose vendors and styles, narrow down the
choices first.
It's a
jungle of options out there, enough to give the most
natural-born party planner pause. So if you want his opinion on
photographers, invites, flowers or cakes, narrow down the
options to three or four. He's less likely to feel overwhelmed,
and more likely to feel like an important part of the process.
At times,
it'll feel so good to share the load that you'll be tempted to
drag him into the buttercream debate despite your better
instincts. At these times, take a deep breath, count to ten, and
call your mother or your maid of honor.
3) Ask him
directly for help. Let him know how important his input is to
you, and that you can't do it without him.
Guys like
to be needed. Your frank request for help may be enough to pull
him out of his comfort zone and onto your team.
4) Try the
Art Director/Production Staff approach.
If you
think your guy wants to help, but feels uncomfortable playing
"art director," give him "production staff" tasks. Have him make
the payments, pick up the food or decor, handle the rentals, do
online comparison shopping, or reserve the hotels and reception
halls. These are all jobs that will take a load off your
shoulders, while freeing up time for the aesthetic stuff you
probably enjoy and he doesn't.
5) Get a
calendar and put all the planning in black and white.
Your
fiancé probably doesn't have the first clue in what goes into a
wedding.
Get your
wedding planner, write it all down, and show him. Once he gets
over the shock, you'll both probably be able to identify areas
that interest him. Make lists of the things you've each agreed
to do, and cross them off as they get done. At the very least,
he'll be far more supportive when he sees what you're going
through.
6) Weave
his family heritage/ethnicity/traditions into the ceremony.
What did
his parents do? He might be surprised at the question, but it
could lead somewhere valuable. He might ask his parents about
their wedding, and find your wedding consequently enriched. Look
through their wedding album together. Are his ancestors German,
Polish, Italian, Croatian, Asian? Incorporate some old-world
traditions into your ceremony.
7) Don't
bring him in too early.
Treat your
fiancé as a bit of a pinch hitter. Sure, you may be fully aware
that you can shave 5K off your costs by starting your favor
crafts and reservations 18 months ahead of time. But if he's
like most guys, the wedding won't become real to him until it
draws closer. Expect him to jump in about six months before the
actual ceremony, and break into a (relative) frenzy of activity
about one month in advance.
8) Talk
about something besides the wedding.
Guys
aren't the only ones who complain about brides-to-be talking of
nothing but upcoming nuptials. Sometimes, even girlfriends get
overwhelmed by all the wedding chatter.
Spend some
time alone chatting about anything but the wedding. See a silly
movie, split a hot fudge sundae, or watch a basketball game. Do
something spontaneous that reminds you both of why you decided
to marry in the first place.
9) Check
your subtext for hidden meanings.
Tempting
as it might be, make sure you're not using your fiancé as a
coin-toss tool (ever noticed how people flip coins to find out
what they really want?). When you ask for his opinion, take it
seriously. And when you give him ownership of a task, don't
second-guess every step.
Imagine
that your fiancé has told you he's going to draft a dream team
in his fantasy football league, and it's going to cost him $20K
to participate. Now imagine that he's told you your help is
supremely important to him.
You'd be a
little hesitant to give opinions, right? Some of your ideas
might sound feeble, even to your own ears. Hopefully he'd
welcome your thoughts, however odd it felt for you to venture
them. Now imagine your fiancé feels kind of like that when it
comes to the wedding.
10)
Remember that men become wedding experts by having one.
Chances
are, your sweetheart will open his eyes to the wonder of a
wedding by the time the rose petals are tossed. Forever after,
he'll be examining friend's receptions with a practiced eye, and
anticipating the next excuse for a Really Big Shindig.
So keep
him around, and count on throwing a first-rate anniversary
celebration ten years down the road. In a way, that'll be the
party that really matters, won't it?
Blake
Kritzberg is the proprietor of:
www.favorideas.com. Visit the site for easy, elegant,
unusual, and affordable wedding favor ideas, wedding favor FAQ,
and free wedding screensaver.
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