The Sulla Tips:
Straight forward Rules for Keeping Wedding Planning From Sapping Your Common Sense,
Squashing Your Sense of Humor, and Sucking the Joy Out of One of Life's Most
Joyous Occasions
By Jennifer Mendelsohn
A little
background on the Sulla Tips... The Sulla Tips grew out of my experiences as a
regular on the Knot's message boards while planning my 2002 wedding. Each day,
the boards were littered with posts from brides beside themselves over wedding
planning issues that didn’t even have to cross their radar screens in the first
place, from the woman who needed confirmation that it was ok that her wedding
colors didn't include her favorite colors, to the one who worried whether
serving New York strip at a rehearsal dinner is "somehow wrong?" ("I'm pathetic
for worrying about this, but I'm needing your opinions," confessed the strip
steak bride.) There was the bride who was seriously concerned about whether she
could still order white chair covers if she wore an ivory dress (the horror! The
horror!) and the one who asked in all earnestness
whether her cake needed to match the interior or exterior of her reception site.
There's
such an overload of wedding info out there - they don't call it the
"wedding-industrial complex" for nothing! -- that
it's easy for women who've been prepped since childhood for "the most important
day of their lives" to worry and obsess about the trappings...more so
than they obsess about what it actually means to get married. Bridal tunnel
vision, it seemed, had spiraled completely out of control...and so, the Sulla
Tips were born. And here they are.
My best
piece of wedding advice?
It's
a party, its a party, it's a party.
Don’t let
your obsession with making sure you do and buy all the stuff you’re “supposed”
to suck the joy out of your very joyous day. Just let it roll and make sure that
your wedding is, at heart, a celebration, not a staged production. We’ve somehow
gotten so crazed about all the stuff we’re supposed to do and have and buy, that
IMO, too many weddings have lost that carefree sense of celebration that the
old-fashioned, simple VFW Hall events had in spades.
In other
words, it’s all about feeling, not stuff. (One of my favorite weddings ever was
in a backyard and planned in about three months.) If you want to make your
wedding better, make it richer in feeling, not in stuff.
Let me
say that again.
If you
want to make your wedding better, make it richer in feeling, not stuff.
Too much
“stuff” can actually sometimes bog it down and make it less
enjoyable and meaningful. Plus, you’re front-loading your day with anxiety if
you must have every single little thing controlled and coordinated and (God I
hate this word) perfect. You really don’t have to obsess about
matching the bridesmaids’ earrings and hose, or coordinating the groomsmen’s
ties to the frosting and the bow on the flower girl’s dress. Do not give so much
as a second thought to your uneven bridal party (this isn’t a military parade,
it’s a wedding!) and think about throwing a great, memorable party to mark your
marriage.
Why?
Because it’s really not about whether the sash on your dress matches the favor
boxes and the ink on the save-the-date cards, or about finding the absolute
perfect cake serving set to match your theme. (We didn’t even have favors, STDs,
a serving set or a theme.) It’s about the look on the face of
the woman wearing the sash dress and cutting the cake, even if she uses a rusty
old knife someone found in the back. As my caterer likes to say, your
bridesmaids’ dresses do not need to match the linens unless you plan to use the
bridesmaids as centerpieces. (Hey! It could cut your flower bill.)
Ponder
this for a second: why are second weddings almost always so much fun? Because
their metaphorical hearts are in the right place.
Second-time brides seem much more willing to dispense with all the wedding-y
“stuff” and focus instead on throwing a meaningful, relaxed celebration - a
party. So try to plan your wedding like it’s your second...even if it’s really
your first.
I’m not
saying it’s intrinsically wrong to match everything and obsess about the details
if that really makes you happy and that’s a natural instinct for you. But it
seems like I’ve seen far too many brides make themselves miserable trying to
match everything and make all the little details perfect because they think
they’re supposed to, like the Knottie
who was worried about what color limo would look best against her dress. (Puh-leeze!)
Or they think that the skies will rain fire and their wedding will suck if they
don’t get crazed about having the font on the save-the-dates match the cocktail
napkins. It won’t. If it’s something you don’t care about, but you’re all
uptight that you’re supposed to care about it, or worried that
you see other people caring about, it’s probably not something you should care
about.
I’m also
most definitely NOT saying that elaborate, fancy weddings can’t be wonderful
ones. (As a matter of fact, I had a pretty elaborate, fancy wedding.) But if
you’re going into it thinking that it’s the fancy, elaborate stuff
that’s going to make the wedding a good one, think again. Wonderful weddings
are the ones that feel wonderful, regardless of how much or how
little “stuff” is involved. It’s a question of emphasis: if you make sure you’re
aiming for a great feeling wedding first and foremost, you can
have as much or as little matchy
matchy “stuff” as you want. But the problem I see so
many brides encountering is that they seem to have their priorities backwards,
and they’re investing the “stuff” and the details with way too much importance,
thinking that the only way to have a great wedding is to make sure all the
“stuff” is perfect. But they end up shooting themselves in the foot because the
obsession with detail becomes so overwhelming and
anxiety-producing (totally understandable, btw, given what we all see in
the magazines and tv shows and on the web) that they
get tunnel vision and completely forget the joyous celebration that this is all
supposed to be about. It’s a party, it’s a party, it’s
a party!
My
brother, a very well-regarded very smartly says there are only two kinds
of wedding, regardless of size, budget, location, style, or anything else: fun
weddings and stressful weddings. Aim to make yours fun and the rest will fall
into place.
In short,
nobody ever leaves a wedding saying, “Yeah, it was soooo
great! The mother of the groom’s dress was the SAME EXACT SHADE as the
bridesmaids’ shoes and the writing on the matchbooks!” People leave a wedding
thinking it was great because it felt great -
because the bride and groom were in love and happy, and the party felt
appropriately joyous, even if there’s not a single Martha Stewart-ish
detail anywhere in sight.
Psst!
You’re in charge. Not the wedding industry. I’m so tired of brides asking “Can I
do this?” or “Would it be ok if I did this?” When it comes to your wedding, YOU
are the ultimate authority, not Martha Stewart, and not a chorus of anonymous
women on the Internet. Of course there are protocols to help guide you, but
that’s all they are: guidelines, not legal doctrines written in stone. Don’t be
afraid to deviate from them and follow your gut. The only way to make your
wedding truly memorable is to make it truly yours, not to make it a carbon copy
of every other bride’s.
While
we’re at it, this also means that asking “Is [insert
wedding detail here] worth it?” is kind of a meaningless question. We all have a
budget, and you have to assign priorities within that budget. If having the most
fabulous Vera Wang or Monique L’Huillier gown is the
most important thing in the world to you, and you are willing to serve your
guests on paper plates to achieve it, then it’s worth it to you. (Of course, I
can’t really condone that one in good conscience, but I’m just trying to make a
point!) Maybe having the world’s best live band is more important to you, and it
means you can’t have a couture gown. Whatever the specifics, I see this getting
asked all the time on the Knot and the answer is that there are no absolute
values assigned here: wearing a couture gown (or having a live band, or engraved
invitations, or a video, or whatever) is “worth” something very different to
every woman, so no one can make those decisions for you. Sure, get some input.
Find out how others made these choices. But know that ultimately, you need to
trust your gut and your budget.
Don’t let
the reception planning overshadow your ceremony planning. It’s really what the
day is about. And besides, nothing puts guests in a better mood to party than
witnessing a meaningful and personal wedding ceremony. I remember a very
very fancy over- the top country club wedding that
must have cost $100,000. But they had an incredibly mediocre, “insert-bride
-and-groom here” kind of ceremony. And to be honest, when I think back on that
wedding, what I remember most is the crappy ceremony, not the vodka shot bar.
This is
tough, but I believe that money does not equal control. Just because your
parents (or whoever) are paying, does not give them the right to steamroll you.
That means that if you want a small intimate wedding, your mother doesn’t get to
invite 100 people just because she pays for it. Your husband’s grandfather does
not get to have a polka band just because he pays for it. (By the same token, if
your mother is paying, and she wants an all broccoli menu, that’s her right,
right?) Think about if you were going to throw your parents an anniversary
party. And you picked the menu that YOU liked, the flowers and music YOU liked
and a guest list of all YOUR friends. You’d be a pretty thoughtless host, right?
Well, though it’s controversial, I believe the same is true of hosting a
wedding. Your parents already were the bride and groom...now it’s your turn.
They don’t get to go again.
Remember
that it’s all good. Wedding stress is undeniably
real. There’s no getting around it. Believe me, I’ve been there. Weddings hit
many uncomfortable hot button issues, and we’ve all had moments where we just
want to kick it all. But you’re planning a wedding, not a funeral or a
fundraiser to help your dying child get a new heart. Which is to say that it’s
really hard to feel sorry for someone overwhelmed by planning a wedding, and
there’s nothing, and I mean nothing, more unattractive than a bride who whines
her way through what should be an exciting, happy process. Because in truth
you’ve done the truly stressful part already: you’ve survived the dating scene
and found the person you want to spend the rest of your life with. And you’re
stressing over planning the ceremony that will bond the two of you and the
wonderful party that will celebrate that bond and perhaps even the fabulous
vacation you get to go on when it’s all over? Poor you. I don’t want to get too
maudlin here, but I just had a 35 year old friend
with three little boys under the age of five die of cancer. His wife’s website
about their daily battle with his illness and her attempts to keep it together
for the boys should be required reading for every bride who’s complaining about
how stressful it is to plan her wedding. Sometimes it helps to take a step back
and remember why you’re a wreck: You’re planning a joyous occasion, and if
you’re letting it make you miserable, you’re doing something wrong.
Guests
only see what’s there, not what isn’t. I actually learned this one on the Knot
when planning my own wedding in 2002. People will never know that you didn’t
choose the most expensive entrée, or that you opted for the trio instead of the
quartet to save money. I desperately wanted the ridiculously expensive
Chiavari chairs for my wedding, but ultimately
realized I couldn’t stretch our budget to fit them. And I stressed and stressed
over it. We had plain white wooden folding chairs instead. Do you think anyone
came away from my wedding saying, “It was nice, but she should have had better
chairs”? If you focus on making the most of what is there, nobody will ever be
the wiser about the options you turned down.
You’re
having a wedding, not a photo shoot. A wedding is an event involving real people
that will also be photographed and often, filmed. You’re not staging an event
just to be photographed and filmed or costuming actors to play a role. Which
means that you really shouldn’t stress about whether your father-in-law’s ivory
tie will clash with the bridesmaids’ champagne dresses in the pictures or if
your fiancé’s shirt needs to be the exact same shade as your dress, unless you
have a Raggedy Ann and Andy theme in play. You’re having a party for people to
enjoy, not a photo shoot with models. Make it your priority to focus on doing
whatever it takes to make the actual event wonderful, and the
pictures will reflect that. If you find yourself asking, “But how will it look
in pictures?”, think again. “Is this what I want for
my wedding?” is a much healthier question. In other words, aim for a great
wedding, not just a perfect-looking record of one. Besides, you
should banish the word “perfect” from your wedding vocabulary unless you’re
talking about your spouse. (And a special footnote about the eternal white
shirt/ivory dress “crisis”: a man in a crisp white tuxedo shirt can never, ever
be out of style, no matter what the woman standing next to him is wearing.)
I think
part of the “photo shoot syndrome” is that too many brides think their wedding
will take place in a fantasy zone that bears no connection to their day-to-day
lives. You think you will arrive, butterfly and princess-like, on the wedding
morning, to discover your friends and family will somehow be more attractive and
caring, your own manners will be better, and all normal human impulses will be
stifled. You think you will be whisked from moment to moment on a sugarcoated
cloud of good will and tulle, as if the wedding zone exists outside the
space/time continuum. Annoying Aunt Edna will miraculously be transformed into
your cool best friend and mosquitoes won’t bite and you won’t sweat when you
dance or snort when you laugh.
As
special and important and meaningful and remarkable and splendid as your wedding
day is, it’s really just a day of your life, the one after the day before and
before the day after. I would recommend you don’t have expectations that it will
be this fantasy perfect day that has nothing to do with your real life. It’s
this fantasy expectation that can breed bridezillas
who won’t allow pregnant bridesmaids or uneven bridal parties or (I am not
making this up) a bridesmaid in a wheelchair because of how it might look. I
think the best weddings are those that reflect, respect and celebrate the
reality of your life, even when that reality is a little imperfect, not those
that feel completely removed from reality, like you’re watching a perfectly
scripted movie. You’re a bride, and that’s very special, but you’re not a
Stepford wife or a Kabuki performer. Keep it real.
Having
now survived the entire wedding planning process, culminating in a marriage that
has lasted almost seven years, (so we must have done something right), I also
now heartily recommend that you don’t get stressed out about what anyone else
but you is going to wear to your wedding. That means no dictating your
mother-in-law’s dress, or picking shoes or hairdos for the bridesmaids unless
they’re asking you to. Whoever it is you’re worried about could wear a Hefty bag
and a lampshade and I promise you you won’t notice
because you will be so blissfully happy that day. All the people involved in
your wedding are presumably adults and what they wear reflects on no one but
them. It’s just not worth it, because the net result (bridesmaids in matching
shoes, for instance) will really not make your wedding more enjoyable or
memorable or special, but bridesmaids who are happy and relaxed and feel good
about what they’re wearing really will. Just my .02.
I guess I understand the matching bridesmaid dress is very important to some
people, but I have a general rule of thumb that no one over the age of, say,
six, should have their footwear chosen for them.
Let’s
talk about photography. If your preference is for that very natural
photojournalistic look, I urge you to use a REAL photojournalist, not a wedding
photographer who shoots a few candids and calls that
a “photojournalistic style.” How can you tell? Real photojournalists will have
worked for wire services, newspapers or magazines. If you don’t hire someone
with that kind of background, chances are your wedding pictures will not look
that way because they haven’t been trained to shoot that way. When people ask
what the difference is, I say that traditional photographers create perfect
“moments” - not necessarily ones that actually happened—and capture those: they
fan out the bride’s dress in a perfect half circle. They stop the bride and
groom in the middle of the cake cutting and tell them when to smile. They have
the mother and father stand a few steps away and gaze lovingly. In general, they
direct the action. Photojournalists are trained to shoot news, not set up shots
...they capture the day as it unfolds, good, bad, ugly, (well hopefully not too
ugly), but most of all...spontaneous. War photographers don’t head into battle
with a “must take” list, and neither do sports
photographers going to cover a game. They just shoot what they see. So you won’t
get a parents-gazing-lovingly shot from a photojournalist unless that moment
actually happened.
This
doesn’t mean that photojournalists won’t take some beautiful posed portraits for
you, or won’t get the obligatory picture of you with your parents. But their
posed portraits just tend to be much more natural looking, and they will
probably be less willing to do the 900 different family constellation photos.
(Here’s Bob and Jane with Mom. Here’s Bob and Jane with Mom and Dad. Here’s Mom
and Dad with just Jane....) Photojournalists tell the story of your wedding in
pictures. Period. (And for the record, that has nothing to do with pictures of
your shoes!) I also laugh when people say photojournalism is just a “trend”;
tell that to Civil War photographer Matthew Brady, whose battlefield photos can
still rip your heart out 140 years later. Timeless, beautiful
photography will never, ever be out of style. Trite,
contrived pictures will look dated almost immediately.
While
we’re on the subject of photography, nothing irks me more than people who say
they want really unique pictures...and then ask other brides to post theirs so
they can copy poses. The only way to have really unique pictures
is to have pictures that capture what happened at your wedding and your wedding
only. And once again, after many years as a regular on the Knot message boards,
I don’t think I’ve EVER seen a bride say her favorite wedding photo was one she
copied from someone else’s album. They’re almost always something that captured
a unique moment that could never be replicated. Please, please, please, just
stop with the “must take” picture lists - especially when so many of the
pictures you’re trying to copy are candids and
therefore really un-duplicatable. It’s almost
embarrassing to think your wedding album is going to be filled with pictures you
“borrowed,” copying what happened naturally at someone else’s wedding. What
should you do instead? Hire a photographer you trust who’ll
have creative, imaginative ideas of their own. I beg you. It’s fine if
you want to show your photographer a few pictures you like to give them an idea
of the style that appeals to you, but replicating them exactly? Yikes. If you’re
somebody who wants and needs all the “traditional” poses, by all means, use that
checklist they give you on the Knot, but this whole idea of recreating creative
poses is, to me, (as someone whose completely candid photos have appeared in
others’ bios on the must-take list) bordering on, um, creepy.
I’ve also
heard it (incorrectly, IMO) said that the bride and groom somehow need to be
camera savvy to be properly captured by a photojournalist, or that not every
wedding is a good bet for photojournalism. I heartily disagree. Do you think
before publications send photographers out to shoot a feature
story, they first investigate whether the subject is
“camera-savvy?” It doesn’t matter who you are or where your wedding is or what
you look like: every single wedding - a sacred event where two people in love
commit their lives to each other in the presence of friends and family and
(often) God—is going to be filled with countless beautiful, inimitable,
heart wrenching moments ripe for capturing, as long
as you have a photographer who knows how to do it. You shouldn’t need to
“borrow” from anyone.
Sulla’s Wedding Day advice
After all
my months and months of planning everything in meticulous detail, one warm
summer morning I woke up and it was actually my wedding day. I had done
everything I could to make sure it went off as seamlessly as possible. Now all I
could do was actually enjoy the fruit of all my labor. The day was going to
unfold as it unfolded and it was basically out of my hands at that point. The
only thing I could control was making sure I got down the aisle, said the vows,
and got the ring on my finger.
My take
on the wedding day?
You won’t remember 20 years from now if they messed up and served broccoli
quiche instead of spinach, but you will remember it if you freak out over it and
cause a scene and hide in the bathroom in tears over the quiche, the wrong
flowers, the wrong chairs, the missing organist, or whatever it is. Just let it
all roll off your back that day, no matter what. You can deal with suing your
baker when you come home from the honeymoon, but nothing kills a party more than
watching the guest of honor be demanding and/or stressed, barking orders and
snapping at everyone. (Think of some of those Bridezillas
from the Fox show. Shudder. Shudder.) Guests take their cue from you, and you
should be the happiest guest of all.
In other
words, you set the tone of your own wedding and that IS something you can
control, even if every single one of your vendors flakes out on you. Which won’t
happen, by the way. The wedding isn’t in the flowers or the linens or the cake
or the DJ. It’s in the feeling. So even if none of the “stuff” is right, it can
still be the best wedding ever.
Just in
case, DO assign someone to deal with snafus. Under no circumstances should you
be involved with figuring out why the hors d’oeuvres are late coming out or the
cake has a bash in it. You should do nothing but laugh and drink and dance
because you just got married, which should make you happy
regardless of what kind of flowers are on the tables or what color the rosettes
on the cake are. I’m not saying you have to be superwoman and you won’t be
disappointed or shaken if things go wrong, but you have to deal with them
appropriately. Which means AFTER your wedding. You’ll never get that day back,
so why ruin it pouting and complaining? I’ll confess that I got a little bit
upset when I realized that the light-strewn trees I had paid extra for as a
ceremony backdrop had been put all around the room instead, and our ceremony
backdrop was going to be an ugly screen that my brother had specifically told me
I should cover. But when I began to make a little fuss about it, I could see the
unflattering way people were looking at me, and I could tell I was becoming that
bridezilla I swore I wouldn’t be. I immediately
backed off. What-ever with the trees! Were they
there? Were they not? I couldn’t even tell you. Look in my bio and tell me if my
day was ruined by the placement of the trees.
You know
what else happened at my (August) wedding? The air-conditioning wasn’t working
in the cocktail hour room. What was I going to do about it? I don’t know how to
fix air conditioning. (Besides, I was a little dressed up to doing hard labor.)
I knew the venue was trying to fix it, and making a big thing out of it wasn’t
going to get it fixed any faster or better. None of my guests was going to
assume that I was somehow responsible for the broken air conditioning. So I just
pretended it didn’t happen. The guests were, well, probably a little warm. But
they didn’t complain to me. And they didn’t form a posse to find the bride who
had allowed this Terrible Thing to Mar Her Perfect Wedding. Everyone had a great
time because they were celebrating the fact that my husband and I had just
married each other, a fact whose worthiness of celebration was not dependent on
whether they were in an air conditioned room, or anything else for that matter.
I have mentioned this fact to several guests and I swear that not one of them
actually remembered that the AC wasn’t working. Now had I made a big deal and
confronted the caterers angrily or run off to a private room in tears, I’m
sure they would have remembered that.
Here’s
what one Knot bride had to say about her wedding. I saved it because I thought
it was such an important lesson. “The only thing I regret [about my wedding] is
not being able to enjoy myself,” she wrote. “I was TOO worried. TOO stressed.
TOO everything. I pretty much was a nervous wreck and didn’t enjoy my party.
Everyone told me it was the best one they ever been to but I was too stressed to
enjoy it.” Could there possibly be a worse ending to the months
and months of planning? Don’t let it happen to you.
My take is that you’re allowed to be particular - but not neurotic -- about as many wedding details as you want throughout the planning process. It’s a big job and not one to be taken lightly. But the morning of her wedding, as soon as you open your eyes, you must let it all go. Stop. Basta. Enough. You’re there. You made it. Have fun. As long as you end up married to the right guy, the day was a success. Everything else is just details...Got it?