Not that DH and I are planning it any time soon, or even planning at all really, but has anyone on here renewed their vows? What's your opinion on it in general? DH and I had an extremely small wedding, with maybe 14 people max there, in the in-laws living room, and we didn't really get a real vacation-type honeymoon. I got DH out of the deal (win!) so I loved our wedding, obviously, but it'd be nice to maybe go somewhere special and renew in a few years. Anywho. Opinions?
Married since 1/12/12
TTC #1 since 10/1/13
Re: Wedding Vows.. to renew or not to renew?
ETA: We won't be inviting people (but they can come if they want!), it's more for DH and I to have fun and make memories.
Mine may stray a little into UO, but I think they're awfully AW if they're not for a big anniversary (25 or 50). Plenty of people throughout history have long, happy marriages that only consisted of a judge at the courthouse. It feels pretty insulting to me to say that it's a big dress and hundreds of people that makes it a "real wedding." There's no reason to not take a big honeymoon later... DH and I got married this September and chose to put any leftover money into our new house. We missed getting a beachy vacation after all that stress, but we certainly didn't "deserve" one either.
n Chart</a>"http://www.fertilityfriend.com" style="font-size:smaller;" >Ovulation Charww.fertilityfriend.com" style="font-size:smaller;" >Ovulation Chart</a>
Do not renew. Vow renewals are for big anniversaries and/or if you've gone through a significant life struggle. You can't just have a vow renewal because you didn't get the wedding/party you wanted. Well, I guess you can, but everyone will think you're BSC.
Host a big New Year's party or something. Call it black tie, serve food, enjoy yourself. Dress to the nines. Make a speech if you want. Dance the night away. Just don't call it a re-wedding or a vow renewal, because that's silly when you've been married for nearly two years.
Baby GIRL born 9/16/201
BFP! EDD 8/1/2019 CP 4w2d
Over at TheKnot, they call this a PPD... Pretty Princess Day. I realize that it's sometimes done innocently, but to me it screams "I want tax and insurance (or military or whatever) benefits now, but I deserve an expensive party and gifts too." Sorry that this happened to you!
n Chart</a>"http://www.fertilityfriend.com" style="font-size:smaller;" >Ovulation Charww.fertilityfriend.com" style="font-size:smaller;" >Ovulation Chart</a>
We just hit the 5 year mark this year and no plans for a vow renewal any time soon, so if it does happen, it'll probably be at the 10 year mark. Though honestly, the longer it is, the less I care about doing it... The idea is nice, but actually doing it is another story.
Edit: Though I will add, our plans are not to throw a big wedding and invite everyone we know, it would literally just be our immediate family and very close friends in my Mom's backyard. The idea of throwing a giant party and wedding for 10 years sounds terrible. I'm not even a big fan of giant 50th anniversary parties normally.
DD 1 10/2012
CP 9/2013
DD 2 6/2014
CP 3/2016
BFP 12/8/2016
Oscar born October 2011
Miscarriage at 8 weeks (August 2013)
DD due September 1, 2014
EDD- 06/13/2017
**Stinkerbelle-8-27-10 * Mr.P's 2nd Mama 7-27-07**
I'm with a lot of people on the whole "big wedding" do-over. Our wedding was small, and part of me would like some things I missed (the photographs another PP mentioned are a good point), but really, it's just a continuation of devotion. Celebrating a big anniversary in a personal way. Not another scheme to get attention and gifts from a crowd of people. Or it shouldn't be, in my opinion.
I get the "breaking vows" thing, it's definitely valid. And maybe the co-workers situation isn't exactly the same thing, but it was definitely.. different. I don't think I'd want to do it. Sit down in front of DH and ask "So... do we want to stay married, or move on?". Uhm...
Don't even get me started on PPDs. I'm only 6 months fresh off the knot lol it brings back bad memories. The day you get married is your wedding. The end
Edit: I just realized that I just told an internet stranger and drawn out pointless story.. so forgive me... im an over-sharer.
@GhostMonkey It's not the celebration that's being side-eyed. It's pretending you are a bride, when you are in fact not a bride. Sometimes life throws us curveballs and it sucks that maybe the big party that was planned doesn't fit into the works any more, but a wedding day is when you get married. I guess for me, that's a full stop. I have a coworker in another office who had just been hired. She was super excited because she could wear her wedding ring while we were out of state...she and her husband had gotten married for whatever benefits, but they were lying to the family about it. She bragged all weekend about the dress her mom had bought her and how excited they were for the "real wedding" and how they hoped they got enough cash to get a honeymoon. I feel sorry for her guests who got to witness pretend vows. I'm sorry if you disagree, but that is childish and selfish behavior and I would be pissed if I found out.
Big parties later with cake? I'll be there.
n Chart</a>"http://www.fertilityfriend.com" style="font-size:smaller;" >Ovulation Charww.fertilityfriend.com" style="font-size:smaller;" >Ovulation Chart</a>