The Wedding Register

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Semi-Honeyed Couples


The bored marrieds' "Let's pretend we're strangers in a bar and you ply with me drinks and pick me up" game takes a big evolutionary leap in China. No longer content to confine the games to the bar and bedroom, this version requires separate addresses for married couples:


"Semi-honeyed couples" mean married people living apart in the same city: two persons married to each other but not living together and only cohabiting during the weekends. On weekdays, they will occasionally date like lovers, have dinner, see a movie, but afterwards they will say warm goodbyes like friends and each goes his or her way. continued here

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Prohibition of Ostentatious Display and Wasteful Expenses Ordinance 2000


Oh Pakistan. You just can't turn that proverbial cheek and leave India alone, can you? There's that whole junior high nuclear pissing war over whose got the shinier nukes and the better condos in Kashmir, or was it over who has the better chicken tikka masala? India's got the whole mother in-law burning their new daughters in-law for not making good on the dowry, but your crafty President Musharraf (who somehow managed, in between negotiating border disputes and terrorist allegations from the US) decided Pakistan would not be one-upped in the wedding catatstophe genre and hammered out a ruling. That throws grooms in jail for serving too nice of a dinner...

"Grooms in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province (NWFP) are being sentenced to jail if 'lavish' meals are served at their weddings. Peshawar Civil Judge Asghar Shah Khilji sentenced Sheraz Khan to one month in prison and a fine of Rs.500,000 Saturday for serving a 'lavish' meal at his wedding. The court has so far sent five men to prison for violating the ban.
NWFP is the first province to enforce the Marriage Functions (Prohibition of Ostentatious Display and Wasteful Expenses) Ordinance, 2000, issued by President Pervez Musharraf to curb ostentation during weddings and other social occasions."
STORY CONT. here

All kidding aside, maybe President Musharraf is onto something here, curbing ostentation. Martha Stewart Weddings and the Knot would be sold on the black market. Rehearsal dinners would be raised SWAT team style. And we wouldn't have to stop at weddings. Paris Hilton would be in jail for being Paris Hilton. Barbra Streisand would really stay home and retire. The lady that invented the Bedazzler would have to go underground. And peace would reign forever.

Kidman-Urban Wedding Over-Exposure Highlights!

Breaking news! Nicole Kidman has inlaws! And check that rockin tux!

Breaking News in Wedding Porn

The Summer-Fall Issue of Southern Bride is on the stands, and in between pages of fluffy marshmallow brides and exotic honeymoon locales is me and the Mr. getting hitched in all our lovely, sepia-toned glory. If you are in the South, pick up a copy! If you're not, squint real hard...

From Sunday's NY Times

Forget The Rules. Just grab yourself a whistle and some sardines and whip that husband into shape!

What Shamu Taught Me About a Happy Marriage

By AMY SUTHERLAND
AS I wash dishes at the kitchen sink, my husband paces behind me, irritated. "Have you seen my keys?" he snarls, then huffs out a loud sigh and stomps from the room with our dog, Dixie, at his heels, anxious over her favorite human's upset.

In the past I would have been right behind Dixie. I would have turned off the faucet and joined the hunt while trying to soothe my husband with bromides like, "Don't worry, they'll turn up." But that only made him angrier, and a simple case of missing keys soon would become a full-blown angst-ridden drama starring the two of us and our poor nervous dog.

Now, I focus on the wet dish in my hands. I don't turn around. I don't say a word. I'm using a technique I learned from a dolphin trainer.

I love my husband. He's well read, adventurous and does a hysterical rendition of a northern Vermont accent that still cracks me up after 12 years of marriage.

But he also tends to be forgetful, and is often tardy and mercurial. He hovers around me in the kitchen asking if I read this or that piece in The New Yorker when I'm trying to concentrate on the simmering pans. He leaves wadded tissues in his wake. He suffers from serious bouts of spousal deafness but never fails to hear me when I mutter to myself on the other side of the house. "What did you say?" he'll shout.

These minor annoyances are not the stuff of separation and divorce, but in sum they began to dull my love for Scott. I wanted — needed — to nudge him a little closer to perfect, to make him into a mate who might annoy me a little less, who wouldn't keep me waiting at restaurants, a mate who would be easier to love.

So, like many wives before me, I ignored a library of advice books and set about improving him. By nagging, of course, which only made his behavior worse: he'd drive faster instead of slower; shave less frequently, not more; and leave his reeking bike garb on the bedroom floor longer than ever.

We went to a counselor to smooth the edges off our marriage. She didn't understand what we were doing there and complimented us repeatedly on how well we communicated. I gave up. I guessed she was right — our union was better than most — and resigned myself to stretches of slow-boil resentment and occasional sarcasm.

Then something magical happened. For a book I was writing about a school for exotic animal trainers, I started commuting from Maine to California, where I spent my days watching students do the seemingly impossible: teaching hyenas to pirouette on command, cougars to offer their paws for a nail clipping, and baboons to skateboard.

I listened, rapt, as professional trainers explained how they taught dolphins to flip and elephants to paint. Eventually it hit me that the same techniques might work on that stubborn but lovable species, the American husband.

The central lesson I learned from exotic animal trainers is that I should reward behavior I like and ignore behavior I don't. After all, you don't get a sea lion to balance a ball on the end of its nose by nagging. The same goes for the American husband.

Back in Maine, I began thanking Scott if he threw one dirty shirt into the hamper. If he threw in two, I'd kiss him. Meanwhile, I would step over any soiled clothes on the floor without one sharp word, though I did sometimes kick them under the bed. But as he basked in my appreciation, the piles became smaller.

I was using what trainers call "approximations," rewarding the small steps toward learning a whole new behavior. You can't expect a baboon to learn to flip on command in one session, just as you can't expect an American husband to begin regularly picking up his dirty socks by praising him once for picking up a single sock. With the baboon you first reward a hop, then a bigger hop, then an even bigger hop. With Scott the husband, I began to praise every small act every time: if he drove just a mile an hour slower, tossed one pair of shorts into the hamper, or was on time for anything.

I also began to analyze my husband the way a trainer considers an exotic animal. Enlightened trainers learn all they can about a species, from anatomy to social structure, to understand how it thinks, what it likes and dislikes, what comes easily to it and what doesn't. For example, an elephant is a herd animal, so it responds to hierarchy. It cannot jump, but can stand on its head. It is a vegetarian.

The exotic animal known as Scott is a loner, but an alpha male. So hierarchy matters, but being in a group doesn't so much. He has the balance of a gymnast, but moves slowly, especially when getting dressed. Skiing comes naturally, but being on time does not. He's an omnivore, and what a trainer would call food-driven.

Once I started thinking this way, I couldn't stop. At the school in California, I'd be scribbling notes on how to walk an emu or have a wolf accept you as a pack member, but I'd be thinking, "I can't wait to try this on Scott."

On a field trip with the students, I listened to a professional trainer describe how he had taught African crested cranes to stop landing on his head and shoulders. He did this by training the leggy birds to land on mats on the ground. This, he explained, is what is called an "incompatible behavior," a simple but brilliant concept.

Rather than teach the cranes to stop landing on him, the trainer taught the birds something else, a behavior that would make the undesirable behavior impossible. The birds couldn't alight on the mats and his head simultaneously.

At home, I came up with incompatible behaviors for Scott to keep him from crowding me while I cooked. To lure him away from the stove, I piled up parsley for him to chop or cheese for him to grate at the other end of the kitchen island. Or I'd set out a bowl of chips and salsa across the room. Soon I'd done it: no more Scott hovering around me while I cooked.

I followed the students to SeaWorld San Diego, where a dolphin trainer introduced me to least reinforcing syndrome (L. R. S.). When a dolphin does something wrong, the trainer doesn't respond in any way. He stands still for a few beats, careful not to look at the dolphin, and then returns to work. The idea is that any response, positive or negative, fuels a behavior. If a behavior provokes no response, it typically dies away.

In the margins of my notes I wrote, "Try on Scott!"

It was only a matter of time before he was again tearing around the house searching for his keys, at which point I said nothing and kept at what I was doing. It took a lot of discipline to maintain my calm, but results were immediate and stunning. His temper fell far shy of its usual pitch and then waned like a fast-moving storm. I felt as if I should throw him a mackerel.

Now he's at it again; I hear him banging a closet door shut, rustling through papers on a chest in the front hall and thumping upstairs. At the sink, I hold steady. Then, sure enough, all goes quiet. A moment later, he walks into the kitchen, keys in hand, and says calmly, "Found them."

Without turning, I call out, "Great, see you later."

Off he goes with our much-calmed pup.

After two years of exotic animal training, my marriage is far smoother, my husband much easier to love. I used to take his faults personally; his dirty clothes on the floor were an affront, a symbol of how he didn't care enough about me. But thinking of my husband as an exotic species gave me the distance I needed to consider our differences more objectively.

I adopted the trainers' motto: "It's never the animal's fault." When my training attempts failed, I didn't blame Scott. Rather, I brainstormed new strategies, thought up more incompatible behaviors and used smaller approximations. I dissected my own behavior, considered how my actions might inadvertently fuel his. I also accepted that some behaviors were too entrenched, too instinctive to train away. You can't stop a badger from digging, and you can't stop my husband from losing his wallet and keys.

PROFESSIONALS talk of animals that understand training so well they eventually use it back on the trainer. My animal did the same. When the training techniques worked so beautifully, I couldn't resist telling my husband what I was up to. He wasn't offended, just amused. As I explained the techniques and terminology, he soaked it up. Far more than I realized.

Last fall, firmly in middle age, I learned that I needed braces. They were not only humiliating, but also excruciating. For weeks my gums, teeth, jaw and sinuses throbbed. I complained frequently and loudly. Scott assured me that I would become used to all the metal in my mouth. I did not.

One morning, as I launched into yet another tirade about how uncomfortable I was, Scott just looked at me blankly. He didn't say a word or acknowledge my rant in any way, not even with a nod.

I quickly ran out of steam and started to walk away. Then I realized what was happening, , and I turned and asked, "Are you giving me an L. R. S.?" Silence. "You are, aren't you?"

He finally smiled, but his L. R. S. has already done the trick. He'd begun to train me, the American wife.

Amy Sutherland is the author of "Kicked, Bitten and Scratched: Life and Lessons at the Premier School for Exotic Animal Trainers" (Viking, June 2006). She lives in Boston and in Portland, Me.

Friday, June 23, 2006

Inflatable Chapel

I know it's a little soon to be dipping into the archives,but since this was on my old snidebride blog, I figure a little spit and shine will make this as good as new.

I present: INFLATABLE CHURCH

All I'm gonna say is that this is real, not photoshopped, and available for purchase through a UK site. I feel the need to snarkily comment, but I think the pic is doing an admirable job in its own.

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Bridezilla vs. Mothra

What's today? Here's a hint: Meterologists bang their drums to the tune of "Hottest _______ on Record," the mosquitos have come out to play, and along with Fox's second season of D-list celebrities squeezung themselves into leotards and tap shoes for the masses' amusement, Lifetime has brought back another season of Bridezillas! Hooray for the first day of summer!

Normally I have a difficult time watching people make utter jackasses of themselves in any medium, but after reading this little nugget in the Chicago Tribune's review of the show, I'm setting my TiVo for as season pass of unsurpassed bridal jackassery:

"One of Dent's brides forced wedding guests to wait an agonizing 90 minutes while she wrote her vows at the last minute. The scheduling problems snowballed from there: By 9 p.m. at the reception, the photographer was still taking photos while the bride screamed at the DJ to stop the music. And to top her own antics, the bride blamed Dent for not having written the vows for her -- never mind that she never asked Dent to do such a thing in the first place."

Now I am the first to admit I have a serious case of procrastination-itis. But not so much anymore. Thanks Scary Bride!

by Tara Swords
Special to the Tribune
Published June 21, 2006

One bride wants to be the "most beautiful bride ever." Another furiously calls off her $80,000 wedding (she later changes her mind). A third banishes her maid of honor from the wedding party -- and calls off their friendship.

These mental meltdowns are par for the course on "Bridezillas," a Women's Entertainment TV program that showcases brides in the time leading up to their nuptials. The show's third season began June 11.

"Bridezilla," an uncomfortable marriage of the words "bride" and "Godzilla," describes a woman who cracks under the stress of wedding planning and the weight of high expectations.

"Those are the moments that a lot of us, as guests, . . . would never see," says Roseanne Lopopolo, the show's executive producer. "The fun of the show is that we let you see it."

But why do we want to?

Reality TV is often about the enjoyment of witnessing public humiliation, says Deborah Nelson, associate professor of English and director of the Center for Gender Studies at the University of Chicago. But "Bridezillas," which she has heard of but never seen, might strike a nerve because it represents a backlash against romance and courtship programs such as "The Bachelor," she says.

"The idea that this is the most significant day of your life and that the memory will take you through to your dying day is such an impossible expectation, so I think [the show] is a reaction against that expectation," Nelson says.

Shows such as "Bridezillas" are partly about the gross exaggeration of gender roles too, Nelson says. "But men don't watch these shows. It's why women delight in their own mockery that's interesting. The cat fights. . . . It's akin to [World Wrestling Entertainment] for women." One thing is certain: Even if the public delights in brides' bad behavior, the vendors who must deal with brides aren't impressed.

Desiree Moore Dent, president of Calumet City-based Dejanae Events, has been planning weddings for nearly six years. She has worked with a few bridezillas -- enough to know she doesn't love them.

Last-minute vows

One of Dent's brides forced wedding guests to wait an agonizing 90 minutes while she wrote her vows at the last minute. The scheduling problems snowballed from there: By 9 p.m. at the reception, the photographer was still taking photos while the bride screamed at the DJ to stop the music. And to top her own antics, the bride blamed Dent for not having written the vows for her -- never mind that she never asked Dent to do such a thing in the first place.

"I can do a lot of things, but I can't write loving words to a man who's not my husband," Dent says, laughing. The bride called to apologize the next day.

Lyle Wilson, owner of A Work of Art Florist in Chicago, has his own way of dealing with unreasonable brides.

"I don't," Wilson says. "You know when they start talking what you have to deal with. If I think they're too crazy, I let them go. [I] look at the calendar and say, 'My calendar is full.' " The pursuit of perfect may be at the root of the problem, as Cele Otnes, professor of marketing at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, discovered while researching the book she co-wrote, "Cinderella Dreams: The Allure of the Lavish Wedding" (2003).

'Perfect' a scary word

"It was frightening to us, when we were looking at brides' magazines, how many times they used the word 'perfect,' " Otnes says. Our culture teaches that perfection is attainable, and when it isn't, we get frustrated, she says.

Kristin Kinser, a 27-year-old administrative assistant from Lake in the Hills, says realistic expectations set her apart from the women she has seen on "Bridezillas." She realizes things may go wrong -- no day is ever perfect -- and that's just fine with her.

The show "makes me feel better knowing that I have a better grip on life and I don't get so worked up over such mundane things," Kinser says. "I think a lot of people forget, when they're planning the wedding, that they're planning a day when they should be planning a life."

When reality falls short of perfection in sight of TV cameras, people can't look away, Otnes says.

"It's like a train wreck. It's cultural rubbernecking," she says. "I've never watched an episode because I find it too depressing . . . to think about meltdowns and semi self-destruction on the happiest day of your life."

But Susan Jablonski, a wedding stylist and owner of The Left Bank boutique in Lincoln Park, has a hunch that the worst in bride behavior -- and perhaps the most outrageous in TV programming -- may be yet to come.

"I think there's a whole new generation that we're going to hit on, that young, fabulous and broke generation," Jablonski says. "They've been given everything, . . . and they're really into luxury items and buying things they can't afford. It should be interesting."

Saturday, June 17, 2006

Caption Me


Caption Me.

Friday, June 16, 2006

Why should all the 15 year olds have fun?


"A 33-year-old from northern Malaysia, Muhamad Noor Che Musa sits next to his newly married 104-year-old wife Wook Kundor at their house in Kuala Terengganu, Monday, May. 1, 2006. It was Muhamad Noor Che Musa's first marriage and his wife's 21st, according to The Star newspaper which cited a report in the Malay-language Harian Metro tabloid." (AP Photo)

Thursday, June 15, 2006

One for the album



Sometimes being a good Catholic and marrying inside a church has its benefits.

Denver is for lovers...and 15 year old jail bait


In other misguided teenage wedding news...

DENVER, Colorado (AP) -- A 15-year-old girl can enter into a common-law marriage in Colorado, a state appeals court ruled Thursday. Younger girls and boys may also be able to marry.

While the three-judge panel stopped short of setting a specific minimum age for such marriages, it said they could be legal for girls at 12 and boys at 14 under English common law, which Colorado recognizes. continued here

The Mother in-Law Voted Most Likely to Break Them

I thought my mother in-law was a gem: she's compassionate and caring, a wonderful listener and a baby nurse to boot. But she's failed to coerce me to obtain a passport, lie to my family and fly to the West Bank to join her son in holy if not highly illegal matrimony, because in this scenario I'm a sixteen year old from Canada who spends way too much time on Myspace. Click here

Monday, June 12, 2006

Very Bad Things: The Equal Opportunity Sequel?


I believe abelone diver, crab fisherman and NY Taxi driver currently rank as the world's deadliest professions, but it appears "Male Stripper" is now running throwing its shiny, greased go-go boots into the ring. Click here

Friday, June 09, 2006

What Happens in Vegas Gets Aired on the Food Network


For you wedding foodies with time to kill this weekend, Roxanne and Philip have decided to pledge their love to one another in the city of Sin while the Food Network cameras roll. I'm sure chef Giada will find an adorable way of incorporating the theme into the food, from the "Bloated Elvis Banana creme puffs" to the "Whacked Mafioso Meatball Surprise."

Click here for the mystic-tanned, Seigfried and Roy-ilicious fun!

Thursday, June 08, 2006

World Cup, Shmerld Cup


The countdown is on to the biggest athletic match up in history. On July 1, 2006 the reigning champions from Estonia will return to battle Finland on the Fin's hometurf in a smackdown sure to thrill and amaze.

The World Cup isn't held in Finland, you say? True. But you know what it is?

The Wife Carrying World Championships.

This ain't no regional footrace, my friends. World-frickin-championships. Of wife carrying. Apparently depriving a country of much sunlight for most of the year results in some serious no holds-barred entertainment.

The Estonians dominated last year's event by blazing through the course in just over 1 minute. Intense speculation over "upside down" technique favored by the champions suggests there maybe some innovation occuring at the 2006 matchup. Over the shoulder? The Basket Carry? The Banana Split? (So I made that last one up, but would that not be worth the price of admission?)The official website offers some intriguing tips: The best methods of carrying one's wife (or a neighbor's), attitude, teamwork and How to become a Wife-Carrying Master. Apparently, it's all in the "eroticism?"

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

Ode on a KitchenAid Mixer


This New York Times article takes an in depth look at what drives young people to get married today. For many, it's the promise and challenge of spending a lifetime with a soulmate. For some, how bout that badass nickel plated Kitchen Aid Mixer? OMG, it comes in pastel!

Like that imperious married friend whose Wedding Was the Blueprint For the New Millenium TM, The NYTimes handily breaks down what they think you really need in the kitchen. Yay for dutch ovens. Boo for terrible yet gorgeously quaint space hogging hand cranked ice cream makers

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Creepy or classy? You decide

Diamonds are a girl's best friend...or your deceased pet...or Beethoven?

Monday, June 05, 2006

I hear those secrets that you keep....

So this isn't exactly the freshest news story as it originally was reported back in March, but my website wasn't done then, and even at 3 months old, it's still a jawdropper, so I'm gonna post it. Just because I can.

Power is tingly.

Fighting with your wife and then taking some meds before bedtime in a Muslim country is ill-advised (click "ill advised" for the link)

Stamp of Approval


Life is hard. Addressing thank you notes shouldn't be. I only wish I had found this sucker when I was in the throes of writing all of mine. Based out of Houston, Three Designing Women have come up with a really attractive, clever customized stamp for all of your addressing needs. Use them for your save the dates, your bills, random scraps of paper that cry out for a good stamping. Just as long as you aren't writing out the damn thing yourself.

The different designs and colors can be found here

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Welcome!

Congratulations! You're here because you're getting married, or maybe you know of a bride to-be and found their wedding registry online and you saw "spatula" and that made you think "spaetzel" which made surf over to dictionary.com whose word of the day was "fez" and you googled it and found Fez is for Lovers, which to you sounded like an excellent name for a blog which made you wonder if maybe there was a wedding blog with a much less catchy name and that in turn magically led you here? No?

Maybe you were curious why, when you're preparing to walk down the aisle, the bride and her family is situated on the left? Or maybe why you were carrying a bouquet to begin with, or had an aisle runner under your feet, or why someone mysteriously praised you for getting married at 5:30 instead of 6? In the throes of tearing your hair out over when peonies are season, you maybe wondered if a bride in Lombok is sweating the same details. Then maybe you relaxed a bit, remembering that Lombok brides are often "brideknapped" by their intended and whisked away to a cabin where they ritually burn herbs and consummate the marriage and are therefore legally hitched? Yeah, she doesn't have to worry about peonies.

In 2003 I was full-on, sleeves rolled-up planning my big, fancy wedding to my beau of seven years, realizing the details of our perfect day, when I got the news that the perfect day wouldn't be happening. I no longer had a fiance, but what I did have was a lot of time to lick my wounds and ponder the nature of weddings and why I wouldn't be having one with my ex. What was the big fat deal anyway? What was so important that it sends millions down the aisle every year in startingly similar fashion? The angst and self-pity turned to genuine fascination. Several years, trips to libraries and the meeting of the one who would rightfully become my husband, I found myself with a treasure trove of quirks and curiosities on why, in fact, such a big fuss is made.

The result is Veiled Remarks: A Curious Compendium for the Nuptially Inclined. The book is coming soon. Wedding funfacts and urban legends and lore and helpful products are coming much, much sooner.