A Bouquet Toss Alternative I Don’t Recommend

Plenty of brides are opting out of the traditional bouquet and garter tosses these days. Others toss a bouquet and dispense with anything having to do with a garter. The most common reason seems to be an unwillingness to embarrass guests who may feel pressured into participating, or horrified by the thought of  someone they may not know pushing a garter up their leg. This isn’t always fun, and sometimes guests’ hesitance to take part makes it difficult for a DJ/emcee to get people out of their seats for it. And let’s face it, some folks question the tastefulness of a groom putting his head up a bride’s gown to pull off undergarments in public.

With that in mind, some wedding planner has managed to find an even more tasteless replacement. The quote below is from the Wedding Wire site:

One of my couples didnt do a toss they played a guessing game the bride was blind folded and she had to choose her new hubby by squeezing his butt…it was hilarious..the bridesmaids and the groomsmen participated (so it wouldnt be weird) she then had to narrow the pick down until she got to whom ever she thought was her grooom…FYI..she did pick her GROOM.;)

I especially like “bridesmaids and the groomsmen participated so it wouldn’t be weird”.

Won’t that look cute in the wedding video you watch with your kids 15 years from now…

“Giving Her Away”: One of the Best Student-Produced Short Films You’ll Ever Watch

This blog will rarely stray from music-related topics, but I consider this a must watch. “Giving Her Away” is a student-produced 9-minute film that won awards in multiple film festivals in 2006. Enjoy, and have a tissue or two nearby.

Video

Songs You May Have Missed #99

tal

Tal Bachman: “Beside You” (1999)

Tal Bachman is son of Randy Bachman, guitarist of the Guess Who and Bachman-Turner Overdrive. Tal only charted one hit single, “She’s So High”, from the same self-tltled 1999 album which contains this Beatlesque little gem. This one would make for a nice wedding song, if only anyone knew about it.

Wedding Chemistry: The “Trust Molecule” at Work at a Wedding Ceremony (and Elsewhere)

Paul J. Zak’s book The Moral Molecule suggests that a chemical substance in the body, oxytocin, is connected to feelings of trust and empathy. The complete article is linked below, but I’ve reprinted the portion brides and grooms may find of particular interest–an experiment in the chemical’s effect at a wedding:

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…Consider a real-life experiment that I conducted with a bride named Linda Geddes. A writer for the British magazine New Scientist, Linda had been following my research and thought it would be fun to see if the emotional uplift of her wedding would alter the guests’ levels of oxytocin.

I arrived at the venue, a Victorian manor house in the English countryside, with a 150-pound centrifuge and 70 pounds of dry ice. I unpacked my equipment—syringes, 156 prelabeled test tubes, tourniquets, alcohol preps, Band-Aids—and got to work. The plan that I’d worked out with Linda was to take two samples from a cross section of the friends and family in attendance—one draw of blood immediately before the vows and one immediately after.

After all the blood had been drawn, I slipped out with my test tubes nestled in their cushion of dry ice. It took two weeks for the samples to arrive at my California lab via FedEx, but the results showed just what we were hoping for: a simple snapshot of oxytocin’s ability to read and reflect the nuances of a social situation.

The changes in individual oxytocin levels at Linda’s ceremony could be mapped out like the solar system, with the bride as the sun. Between the first and second draws of blood, which were only an hour apart, Linda’s own level shot up by 28%. For the other people tested, the increase in oxytocin was in direct proportion to the likely intensity of their emotional engagement in the event. The mother of the bride? Up 24%. The father of the groom? Up 19%. The groom himself? Up 13%…and on down the line.

But why, you may ask, would the groom’s increase be less than his father’s? Testosterone is one of several other hormones that can interfere with the release of oxytocin, and the groom’s testosterone level, according to our blood test, had surged 100%! As the guests admired Linda in her strapless bridal gown, he was the alpha male.

Our study at the wedding had demonstrated just the kind of graded and contingent sensitivity that allows oxytocin to guide us between trust and wariness, generosity and self-protection. Should I feel safe and warm and cuddly in this crowd, or do I have to be on guard? Or maybe it is a situation in which the best outcome results from oxytocin dominating in one person and testosterone driving the other.

It is the sensitivity of oxytocin in its interaction with a range of other chemical messengers that helps to account for why human behavior is so infinitely complex—and why the bliss of the wedding day (and night) is often hard to maintain. (Consider the old joke about the guy who couldn’t understand why his wife was unhappy. “I told you that I loved you when I asked you to marry me,” he said. “I don’t see why I need to tell you again.”)…

Read more: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304811304577365782995320366.html?mod=googlenews_wsj

Wedding-As-Amateur-Performance Strikes Again: Roger and Olga

Roger Pagoda surprised his bride Olga (a Carnegie Mellon University graduate) with this song during their wedding ceremony. It has gone viral, thanks to promotion through Justin Bieber’s YouTube channel.

(4/29/2012)
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My two cents? I think as a general rule anything you do at your wedding ceremony that reduces the officiant to an awkward spectator and unwitting YouTube co-star is a bad idea.

What do you think?

Video

Bride with Rare Cancer: ‘I Won’t Live in Fear’

Amazing, inspiring story of a bride who not only carried on with wedding plans in the face of cancer, but had her wedding photographer document it.

Image: Joseph Jones shaving Lainie Schultz's hair

Three weeks before their wedding, Lainie Schultz’s fiancé, Joesph Jones, shaves his future bride’s hair.

(Source: msnbc.com)

Story:

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/46724913

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