1.Don't offend the bride
1.b. When you do, make it up to her
by buying something ridiculously expensive (or super creative, to seem
ridiculously expensive) for her wedding.
(After seeing how expensive cake toppers are, I made this of Kayli & Peter.
Trust me, painting something that tiny is hard! And getting tissue paper to
work when making tiny flowers, a bouquet and the ruffly skirt... impossible!)
2.Buy a zillion silk flowers and
ribbon in the colors of the reception.
2.b.When the bride changes her mind,
buy a zillion more flowers and more ribbon.
3.Try to make the ugly dress you
ordered to wear as mother-of-the-bride work, even though it’s PURPLE and not a
pretty shade of red (raspberry), has tacky rhinestones instead of beading and
it doesn’t fall loosely like the dress online. (Save for fall when someone
might buy it online for Homecoming Dance season.)
3.b. Sew a dress using a cute
pattern. (When it turns out to look very homemade and not fancy enough for a
special occasion, hang in closet to use for summer dress.)
3.c.In desperation find one at JC
Penney with slit sleeves. Order online so it’s in your size. Sew seams together
and attach to the bottom of sleeves to make modest.
3.d.Purchase tattoo cover up since
the back of the dress has a V-neck and your tattoo clashes with the color of
the dress
(One to show my
third dress, with sleeves fixed to be mode st. Actually showing off my
darling grandson - Gavin enjoying a cupcake with his Grammy!)
4. Watch youtube videos to learn how
to make fondant and all that other crap that you swore you’d never do –
anything to please your little “princess!”
5. Find exactly the right
frosting tip.
5.b. When the frosting tip is too
difficult and takes too much frosting, talk the bride into spreading the
frosting by blackmailing her that you will make pretty fondant flowers for the
tops of the cupcakes.
6. When she changes her mind
about using limes in the centerpieces… feel frustrated. Wait. Buy limes, put
them in vases with some of her flowers to show her how much she really wants
them!
7. Make bouquets, including an extra
one to throw. Also, one for the miniature maid of honor.
7.b. Make mother’s
corsages, father’s, grooms and best man’s boutonnieres.
7.c.Make several bouquets from the
remaining flowers to decorate the reception. And DO use all the flowers that are in the wrong colors, because together they look SO BEAUTIFUL!
8. Try not to be sick when all you
want to do is lie in bed.
8.b. Give up and order receptions
items on the internet.
8.c. Worry about how you’ll be at
the wedding in your condition, even if you have to resort to buying a
wheelchair and a cane.
8.d. When you KNOW you’ll never
survive the entire wedding in one day (but your daughter is stubborn and
insists) get creative. Offer the bride and groom a very nice, romantic, theme
suite for their wedding night – they’re choice! Even when they pick one that is
twice what you planned on paying. Check out Romeo's Retreat.
9. When the company who is making
the bridal gown emails you (after taking a month and a half to make the gown)
that the shoulder measurement is an inch and a half too small so they have to
start over, breath. Then email them back saying, “HURRY FAST!” And hope they
get it sewn and shipped as fast as they did for me. We had time to have it
pressed, which took the cleaners a week.
10.b.Somehow ignore the pig mess in
your house when wedding guests come to your very small, wedding-stacked house,
along with the dirty bathroom, to help frost the cupcakes.
(This is my sweet daughter, Laci who was a WHIZ at cupcakes!)
Okay, let’s get REAL. TEN???
Seriously?
11.Try not to show your witchy side
every time the groom is over, which is every day.
11.b.Try to genuinely accept the
apologies he makes when the bride doesn’t appreciate the job you are doing.
11.c. When the
groom tells your
daughter on the Sunday before the wedding that he told his parents t
“they,”
meaning your daughter and him will take care of the wedding luncheon –
DON’T
FREAK OUT! Sure, you thought his family had it handled. Kindly tell you
daughter to go ahead and order a platter and some rolls from Costco.
Accept donations of paper plates, etc from your very kind sister. Try
not to
think about it.
12. Even though you’ve practiced the cake, butter
cream icing and fondant many times, when the REAL cake has every possible
unfortunate thing happen, don’t panic. Yes, you may be heard saying, “I will
NOT be there when she eats that wedding cake!” And you may totally mean it! (Notice my "concerned" look while they cut the cake.) And honestly, when you open the box holding the fondant covered layers to find that
a piece of fondant STUCK to the lid of the box… remember your own wedding day
and all the disasters! Try everything you can think of… then fill in the hole
with white butter cream icing (that you
have handy to assemble the cake and
attach
the flowers) to fill in the hole and hope no
one actually looks at the cake.
13. When you’ve made it past the
wedding and are still alive at the luncheon, feel the joy! At least until you
discover your ankles are as thick as an elephants and you can’t walk, move, or
feel your feet. Kindly ask your other very helpful and loving daughter if she
can quickly get you home! Prop those ankles higher than your heart with ICE for
the remainder of the day and HOPE you’ll make it to the reception.
14. Even though you’re at the wedding
reception with dead feet sitting in a wheel chair, smile and enjoy the abundance
of guests who keep surprising you when they show up! Try not to cry when you’re daughter dances with her daddy to
his favorite singer – Bryan Adams: Everything I Do. Great choice Kayli. You
actually got that Daddy of yours to dance AND cry too!
15.
Live for the day when all wedding preparations, events, decorating then taking
down decorations when the reception is over. Relax.
Breath. Think about being alone with your honey, eating less, having smaller
power/gas bills and enjoying the freedom to see a movie and buy a stake/lobster
dinner.
A NOTE: I am leaving out MANY things.
When I look over the log I kept of money spent on the wedding, I remember the
stress and horrors of preparing... and getting through bridezilla moments. This engagement seemed like
FOREVER, even though it was actually more like 4 months. Okay, this was not
just a wedding. My daughter was going through a rough semester of school, both she and her fiancé looked for new jobs
then changed occupations, there was an entire family involved - not just a bride and groom (my 2 grandkids
were getting a Daddy), and they moved to another city…
(Table displaying "Our Story: Peter & Kayli")
My WHOLE family! All kids and grandkids =)