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I always just see and hear about nice weddings, where things go well and all, but my own wedding was a disaster from A-Z. Everything that could possibly go wrong went wrong. Am I the only one who didn't have a nice wedding??

Don't get me wrong, I'm happily married, but the wedding itself wasn't nice at all. :| I'm just wondering if that's really this rare, or if people just don't talk about weddings that go wrong.

2006-06-14 01:13:38 · 12 answers · asked by undir 7 in Family & Relationships Weddings

It's not that it wasn't planned well, things just kept going wrong. It's a long story. Some of it is stuff that we can just laugh at now, other is stuff that makes us kind of sad.

First, my fiancee got second thoughts two days before the wedding and we nearly called it off, but eventually went ahead with it.

His family couldn't make it to the wedding.

On the way to the ceremony he ate a little chocolate and got a very bad toothache, so he was in pain during the wedding.

When it was time to put the rings on, his ring finger had gotten swallen, so his ring didn't fit. Then when it was time for the kiss, he stumbled over something and nearly fell. Ok, this part is what we already laughed at a couple of days later.

But what really bothered me was that only ONE out of all the guests was happy for us. ONE! My family, all my relatives and half of my friends didn't seem to be happy for us at all. Only one of my friends was. The rest seemed to think we were making a big mistake.

2006-06-14 02:33:30 · update #1

Almost noone talked to the groom the entire day and those who did only said a couple of words and then ignored him. He truly did not deserve that, he's a good guy, but my family has always been suspicious of him.

And the timing of the wedding wasn’t exactly good, although we couldn’t have foreseen that. The war in Iraq started the day before we got married, so during our wedding there were heavy airstrikes on Baghdad and that’s what was on everyone’s mind and that was what people talked about all the time, the horrors of war. They even switched on a TV and watched the airstrikes live in the wedding, and this whole thing totally killed the moral and having been against a war in Iraq it just didn’t feel right to be celebrating while I knew a war was getting started.

Our wedding day was basically a crappy day and neither one of us enjoyed it. Once it was over we felt so bad that we weren’t even in the mood for sex or a nice wedding night, we just went to sleep.

2006-06-14 02:35:49 · update #2

12 answers

I am lucky that I can laugh about the things that went wrong with my wedding. My husband and I are very close and have a wonderful relationship. We are like best friends!

The best part was that the rain, which was COMPLETELY unexpected (like snow in August) was heavy. We planned an outdoor wedding, which was ruined - and we couldnt bring it inside. the canopy was so heavy from rain that it burst all over me, leaving to look like a dripping rag - running mascara, limp hair... UGH! the guests all went inside to warm up and landed up eating all the buffet food, so that was none left by the time we came in from the ceremony. my orincess style traditional dress streched from the weight of the water and was stood on a million times, and eventually tore off a few inches below my knees, my cloth shoes broke so i went bearfoot or with black shoes. the pictures are horrendous :)

2006-06-14 06:06:51 · answer #1 · answered by Leah S 3 · 1 0

Well, I feel you have to come blank and inform her what you've got heard. Recruit different dependable household individuals to talk approximately this. Consider hiring safeguard for the occasion. You do not have got to have an armed police officer on the door, however you'll be able to rent a bouncer from a neighborhood membership or anybody who has revel in with crowd manipulate. Keep an overly near eye on who is allowed within the church and the venue. Make definite there's one open front to each and make the reception venue. You do not desire someone coming via again doorways. Keep the employees on the reception venue mindful that if folks have not been invited, they're to be escorted off the estate. If you might have written threats or are being burdened previous to the marriage ceremony, you'll be able to continuously name the police and get a restraining order. EDIT: Anytime you believe like you're being harrassed or threatened, you'll be able to name the police. Take the tapes to the neighborhood police station and allow them to recognize you're being harrassed. All the threats say it, "I'm going to smash your marriage ceremony day." Even even though it does not say how, violence and even feasible vandalism and destorying of a different's estate would be implied by means of that. So, I could talk to anybody at your neighborhood police station. Either approach, no person has the correct to name you in many instances and make any style of threats.

2016-09-09 01:21:50 · answer #2 · answered by kearney 3 · 0 0

Okay... I played in a "wedding band" for 16 years.

Over that time I played (no exaduration) 800 weddings (an average of one a week, more during wedding season, less in the winter and near the holidays)

In 800 weddings there were GREAT WEDDINGS... and HORRIBLE WEDDINGS... Great GUESTS, GREAT TOASTS, GREAT ROOMS, GREAT CROWDS... and not so great ones.

If I had been involved in planning your wedding... it would have been MUCH MORE "perfect". But here's the good news...
I just saved a ton of money by switching my car insurance...

Oops sorry... Wrong line...

Here's the good news REALLY... The longer the time between the cerimony and the present moment, the less bad stuff will be remember, and the less you'll care about it.

2006-06-14 01:23:17 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's not that things don't go wrong in other people's weddings, but personally, I focus on the positive. Yeah, we had things go wrong, but it wasn't going to ruin our day.

Seeing as you got married right after the war in Iraq started, it is understandable why it was on people's mind. It was (is) a major thing. I'm sure they were happy for you, just distracted with that.

2006-06-14 05:25:41 · answer #4 · answered by bluez 6 · 0 0

weddings are difficult b/c you work so hard towards them that you don't want nothing to go wrong but at the end something is always bound to disapoint you b/c it wasn't what you pictured it being or how you pictured it happening. every wedding has a disaster. what matters is that your marriage is good forget the wedding it's just a party you can always remarry your hubby and have another wedding. not to worry.

2006-06-14 01:17:56 · answer #5 · answered by mylittlemela 5 · 0 0

Ive DJ hundreds of weddings only had about 4 that was a disaster out of my control. like bride and groom fist fighting, because the groom wanted to go home with and shag the maid of honor etc. at least you didn't end up in jail.

2006-06-14 04:46:52 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'm sorry that happened to you, but remember this:

Weddings are one day, a marriage is a lifetime.

Granted, your wedding is a big deal, and preserved for posterity, but it doesn't make or break the rest of your life.

2006-06-14 01:18:36 · answer #7 · answered by zippythejessi 7 · 0 0

I'm sure some things go wrong at most people's weddings, but not usually everything. What happened at yours?

2006-06-14 01:21:23 · answer #8 · answered by Rachel 7 · 0 0

It's a sign of goodluck! It's a good way to plan and anticipate all the good and bad times you and your hubby will have, plus when you celebrate your 20th anniversary, you can look back and laugh about it.

2006-06-14 01:16:48 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

my aunt's wedding... it is really a disaster... from the groom down to the souvenirs.....

even the relationship after the wedding went wrong.....

2006-06-14 01:20:17 · answer #10 · answered by babymikmik...... mwahhh 3 · 0 0

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